Time Resolved Detection of Infrared Synchrotron Radiation at DAΦNE

2007 
Synchrotron radiation is characterized by a very wide spectral emission from IR to X‐ray wavelengths and a pulsed structure that is a function of the source time structure. In a storage ring, the typical temporal distance between two bunches, whose duration is a few hundreds of picoseconds, is on the nanosecond scale. Therefore, synchrotron radiation sources are a very powerful tools to perform time‐resolved experiments that however need extremely fast detectors. Uncooled IR devices optimized for the mid‐IR range with sub‐nanosecond response time, are now available and can be used for fast detection of intense IR sources such as synchrotron radiation storage rings. We present here different measurements of the pulsed synchrotron radiation emission at DAΦNE (Double Annular Φ‐factory for Nice Experiments), the collider of the Laboratori Nazionali of Frascati (LNF) of the Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare (INFN), performed with very fast uncooled infrared detectors with a time resolution of a few hundred...
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