Researcher profile

Ulrich Schramm

Ulrich Schramm contributes to research discovery and scholarly infrastructure.

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Published work

5 published item(s)

preprint2026arXiv

Adaptable phase retrieval for coherent transition radiation spectroscopy based on differentiable physics information

Coherent transition radiation (CTR) spectroscopy is a critical diagnostic for characterizing the longitudinal structure of relativistic electron bunches in laser-plasma and conventional accelerators. In practice, recovering the bunch profile from a measured CTR spectrum is an ill-posed phase-retrieval problem. Traditionally, this is addressed using Gerchberg-Saxton (GS)-type iterative algorithms. However, these implementations often rely on explicit inverse propagators, making them difficult to adapt to sophisticated experimental forward models. In this work, we introduce a flexible gradient-based framework for CTR phase retrieval. By leveraging a differentiable forward model, we propose a phase-only gradient descent (GD-Phase) approach that enforces the measured spectral amplitude as a hard constraint while optimizing the Fourier phase under physical real-space priors. Using synthetic CTR spectra spanning multi-peaked and strongly modulated profiles, we benchmark GD-Phase against traditional GS and a real-space amplitude-parametrized gradient descent (GD-Amp) algorithm. Unlike traditional methods, this formulation allows for the seamless inclusion of arbitrary differentiable experimental effects into the reconstruction loop. We demonstrate that this physics-informed approach not only reproduces the fidelity of GS methods but also establishes a robust baseline for incorporating multi-diagnostic constraints and uncertainty quantification. This enables the systematic extension to higher-dimensional, multimodal, and uncertainty-aware diagnostics, facilitating fast and scalable phase retrieval in realistic experimental settings.

preprint2026arXiv

Patch-MLP-Based Predictive Control: Simulation of Upstream Pointing Stabilization for PHELIX Laser System

High-energy laser facilities such as PHELIX at GSI require excellent beam pointing stability for reproducibility and relative independence for future experiments. Beam pointing stability has been traditionally achieved using simple proportional-integral-derivative (PID) control which removes the problem of slow drift, but is limited because of the time delay in knowing the diagnosis and the inertia in the mechanical system associated with mirrors. In this work, we introduce a predictive control strategy where the forecasting of beam pointing errors is performed by a patch-based multilayer perceptron (Patch-MLP) designed to capture local temporal patterns for more robust short-term jitter prediction. The subsequent conversion of these predicted errors into correction signals is handled by a PID controller. The neural network has been trained on diagnostic time-series data to predict beam pointing error. Using the feed-forward controller compensates for system delays. Simulations with a correction mirror placed upstream of the PHELIX pre-amplifier bridge confirm that the predictive control scheme reduces residual jitter compared to conventional PID control. Over a 10-hour dataset the controller maintained stable performance without drift, while standard pointing metrics showed consistent improvements of the order of 10 to 20 percent. The predictive controller operates without drift, and therefore may improve reproducibility and operational efficiency in high energy, low repetition rate laser experiment conditions.

preprint2022arXiv

Optimized laser ion acceleration at the relativistic critical density surface

In the effort of achieving high-energetic ion beams from the interaction of ultrashort laser pulses with a plasma, volumetric acceleration mechanisms beyond Target Normal Sheath Acceleration have gained attention. A relativisticly intense laser can turn a near critical density plasma slowly transparent, facilitating a synchronized acceleration of ions at the moving relativistic critical density front. While simulations promise extremely high ion energies in in this regime, the challenge resides in the realization of a synchronized movement of the ultra-relativistic laser pulse ($a_0\gtrsim 30$) driven reflective relativistic electron front and the fastest ions, which imposes a narrow parameter range on the laser and plasma parameters. We present an analytic model for the relevant processes, confirmed by a broad parameter simulation study in 1D- and 3D-geometry. By tayloring the pulse length plasma density profile at the front side, we can optimize the proton acceleration performance and extend the regions in parameter space of efficient ion acceleration at the relativistic relativistic density surface.

preprint2020arXiv

Laser-plasma proton acceleration with a combined gas-foil target

Laser-plasma proton acceleration was investigated in the Target Normal Sheath Acceleration (TNSA) regime using a novel gas-foil target. The target is designed for reaching higher laser intensity at the foil plane owing to relativistic self-focusing and self compression of the pulse in the gas layer. Numerical 3D particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations were used to study pulse propagation in the gas, showing a nearly seven-fold increase in peak intensity. In the experiment, maximum proton energies showed high dependence on the energy transmission of the laser through the gas and a lesser dependence on the size and shape of the pulse. At high gas densities, laser energy depletion and pulse distortion suppressed proton energies. At low densities, self-focusing was observed and comparable or higher proton energies were measured with the gas.

preprint2020arXiv

Spectral and spatial shaping of laser-driven proton beams using a pulsed high-field magnet beamline

Intense laser-driven proton pulses, inherently broadband and highly divergent, pose a challenge to established beamline concepts on the path to application-adapted irradiation field formation, particularly for 3D. Here we experimentally show the successful implementation of a highly efficient (50% transmission) and tuneable dual pulsed solenoid setup to generate a homogeneous (8.5% uniformity laterally and in depth) volumetric dose distribution (cylindrical volume of 5 mm diameter and depth) at a single pulse dose of 0.7 Gy via multi-energy slice selection from the broad input spectrum. The experiments have been conducted at the Petawatt beam of the Dresden Laser Acceleration Source Draco and were aided by a predictive simulation model verified by proton transport studies. With the characterised beamline we investigated manipulation and matching of lateral and depth dose profiles to various desired applications and targets. Using a specifically adapted dose profile, we successfully performed first proof-of-concept laser-driven proton irradiation studies of volumetric in-vivo normal tissue (zebrafish embryos) and in-vitro tumour tissue (SAS spheroids) samples.