Comparison Between, and Validation Against an Experiment of, a Slowly-Varying Envelope Approximation Code and a Particle-in-Cell Simulation Code for Free-Electron Lasers
L.T. Campbell, H.P. Freund, J. Henderson, B.W.J. McNeil, P., Traczykowski, P.J.M. van der Slot

TL;DR
This paper compares a Slowly-Varying Envelope Approximation (SVEA) code and a Particle-in-Cell (PiC) simulation for free-electron lasers, validating both against experimental data and demonstrating their effectiveness in modeling FEL interactions.
Contribution
It provides the first direct comparison and validation of SVEA and PiC simulation codes against experimental results for FELs, confirming their accuracy despite different underlying formulations.
Findings
Good agreement between SVEA and PiC codes.
Both codes match experimental measurements.
Validation of simulation models for FEL design.
Abstract
Free-electron lasers (FELs) operate at wavelengths down to hard x-rays, and are either seeded or start from noise. There is increasing interest in x-ray FELs that rely on Self-Amplified Spontaneous Emission (SASE), and this involves increasing simulation activity in the design, optimization, and characterization of these x-ray FELs. Most of the simulation codes in use rely on the Slowly-Varying Envelope Approximation (SVEA) in which Maxwell's equations are averaged over the fast time scale resulting in relatively small computational requirements. While the SVEA codes are generally successful, the predictions of these codes sometimes differ in various aspects of the FEL interaction. In contrast, Particle-in-Cell (PiC) simulation codes do not average Maxwell's equations and are considered to be a more complete model of the underlying physics.Unfortunately, they require much longer run…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Accelerators and Free-Electron Lasers · Physics of Superconductivity and Magnetism · Photocathodes and Microchannel Plates
