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MASH, a Framework for the Automation of X-ray Optical Simulations

Sondhauss, Peter LU (2014) Conference on Advances in Computational Methods for X-Ray Optics III 9209. p.92090-92090
Abstract
MASH stands for "Macros for the Automation of SHadow". It allows to run a set of ray-tracing simulations, for a range of photon energies for example, fully automatically. Undulator gaps, crystal angles etc. are tuned automatically. Important output parameters, such as photon flux, photon irradiance, focal spot size, bandwidth, etc. are then directly provided as function of photon energy. A photon energy scan is probably the most commonly requested one, but any parameter or set of parameters can be scanned through as well. Heat load calculations with finite element analysis providing temperatures, stress and deformations (Comsol) are fully integrated. The deformations can be fed back into the ray-tracing process simply by activating a... (More)
MASH stands for "Macros for the Automation of SHadow". It allows to run a set of ray-tracing simulations, for a range of photon energies for example, fully automatically. Undulator gaps, crystal angles etc. are tuned automatically. Important output parameters, such as photon flux, photon irradiance, focal spot size, bandwidth, etc. are then directly provided as function of photon energy. A photon energy scan is probably the most commonly requested one, but any parameter or set of parameters can be scanned through as well. Heat load calculations with finite element analysis providing temperatures, stress and deformations (Comsol) are fully integrated. The deformations can be fed back into the ray-tracing process simply by activating a switch. MASH tries to hide program internals such as file names, calls to pre-processors etc., so that the user (nearly) only needs to provide the optical setup. It comes with a web interface, which allows to run it remotely on a central computation server. Hence, no local installation or licenses are required, just a web browser and access to the local network. Numerous tools are provided to look at the ray-tracing results in the web-browser. The results can be also downloaded for local analysis. All files are human readable text files, that can be easily imported into third-party programs for further processing. All set parameters are stored in a single human-readable file in XML format. (Less)
Please use this url to cite or link to this publication:
author
organization
publishing date
type
Chapter in Book/Report/Conference proceeding
publication status
published
subject
keywords
X-ray optics, synchrotron light source, ray-tracing, heat load, calculation, finite element analysis, MAX IV
host publication
Advances in Computational Methods for X-Ray Optics III
volume
9209
pages
92090 - 92090
publisher
SPIE
conference name
Conference on Advances in Computational Methods for X-Ray Optics III
conference dates
2014-08-18 - 2014-08-21
external identifiers
  • wos:000344012500010
  • scopus:84922880437
ISSN
1996-756X
0277-786X
DOI
10.1117/12.2061007
language
English
LU publication?
yes
id
09d52fb3-884d-46f0-8d40-7a0af26577eb (old id 4875921)
date added to LUP
2016-04-01 10:07:56
date last changed
2024-01-06 08:29:39
@inproceedings{09d52fb3-884d-46f0-8d40-7a0af26577eb,
  abstract     = {{MASH stands for "Macros for the Automation of SHadow". It allows to run a set of ray-tracing simulations, for a range of photon energies for example, fully automatically. Undulator gaps, crystal angles etc. are tuned automatically. Important output parameters, such as photon flux, photon irradiance, focal spot size, bandwidth, etc. are then directly provided as function of photon energy. A photon energy scan is probably the most commonly requested one, but any parameter or set of parameters can be scanned through as well. Heat load calculations with finite element analysis providing temperatures, stress and deformations (Comsol) are fully integrated. The deformations can be fed back into the ray-tracing process simply by activating a switch. MASH tries to hide program internals such as file names, calls to pre-processors etc., so that the user (nearly) only needs to provide the optical setup. It comes with a web interface, which allows to run it remotely on a central computation server. Hence, no local installation or licenses are required, just a web browser and access to the local network. Numerous tools are provided to look at the ray-tracing results in the web-browser. The results can be also downloaded for local analysis. All files are human readable text files, that can be easily imported into third-party programs for further processing. All set parameters are stored in a single human-readable file in XML format.}},
  author       = {{Sondhauss, Peter}},
  booktitle    = {{Advances in Computational Methods for X-Ray Optics III}},
  issn         = {{1996-756X}},
  keywords     = {{X-ray optics; synchrotron light source; ray-tracing; heat load; calculation; finite element analysis; MAX IV}},
  language     = {{eng}},
  pages        = {{92090--92090}},
  publisher    = {{SPIE}},
  title        = {{MASH, a Framework for the Automation of X-ray Optical Simulations}},
  url          = {{http://dx.doi.org/10.1117/12.2061007}},
  doi          = {{10.1117/12.2061007}},
  volume       = {{9209}},
  year         = {{2014}},
}