Propagation of a Gaussian Wigner Function Through a Matrix-Aperture Beamline
Ilya V. Pogorelov, Boaz Nash, Dan T. Abell, Paul Moeller, and Nicholas, Goldring

TL;DR
This paper develops a Gaussian approximation model for the propagation of partially coherent radiation through a simplified beamline with apertures, providing insights into coherence properties and a practical computational approach.
Contribution
It introduces a Gaussian aperture concept and a method to approximate the Wigner function after apertures, enhancing beamline modeling accuracy.
Findings
Derived coherence properties of Gaussian Wigner functions.
Presented a Gaussian approximation method for far-field Wigner functions.
Developed a software implementation for the proposed model.
Abstract
In the framework of statistical optics, a Wigner function represents partially coherent radiation. A Gaussian Wigner function, which is an equivalent representation of the more commonly used Gaussian Schell-model cross-spectral density, may be defined in terms of its covariance matrix and centroid. Starting from the relationship between Gaussian Wigner functions and the Gaussian Schell model, we derive coherence properties of the Gaussian Wigner function, including coherence length and degree of coherence. We define a simplified beamline called a matrix-aperture beamline composed of linear transport sections separated by physical apertures. This is an idealized form for a transport beamline in a synchrotron light source or X-ray free electron laser. An envelope model provides a basic foundation for understanding the optics of a given beamline, in a manner analogous to how linear optics…
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Taxonomy
TopicsOrbital Angular Momentum in Optics · Laser-Matter Interactions and Applications · Advanced X-ray Imaging Techniques
