You have a very similar design problem as with something I'm working towards. And no, I haven't really come up with a waveform capture solution yet either.
You might find some useful information here:
http://w140.com/tekwiki/wiki/P6015It occurs to me that the P6015 with its Freon liquid insulator was probably designed before the availability of silicone oils. Also I don't yet understand why other high voltage insulator oils aren't suitable. Why Freon? Perhaps it's necessary to use a non-polar molecule, otherwise energy from the electrostatic field goes into rotational movement of the molecules - which won't be a constant drain over time - thus causing signal distortion.
The central problem with dividing a high voltage fast waveform down, is that whatever resistive structure you use will have unevenly distributed capacitive and inductive parasitics, thus forming a horrible RC/RL 'distortion box'.
And yet for high voltages you _have_ to use large geometry, high value resistances to avoid arc-over. Or in general exceeding the dielectric breakdown strength of the resistive material, or even its substrate.
For very fast pulses perhaps a purely capacitive divider could work. But that has to avoid field variations, propagation delays in the electrode structures, and so on. I've heard somewhere there is a HV probe physicists use, that is mostly a pair of concentric metal spheres, insulated with Freon. But don't have any more info on it, not even the manufacturer.
I plan to wire the whole circuit point to point, and I anticipate it's going to be a nightmare laying it out to balance avoiding inductance while preventing arcing. One of my ideas for prototyping it is to embed most of the circuit in paraffin wax.
What's wrong with oil? One BIG advantage: it's 'self healing'. Secondly you can drain it off to work on the circuit.
I'm nowhere near beginning construction on the HV part of my project, but I'm expecting to be using coaxial transmission lines operated in an oil bath. Suitable oil yet to be determined.
I do have a Tek P6013A probe, though it's utterly inadequate for the project needs. Amusingly, it came with the large arc burn marks you see in the pic. Something vaporized some of the diecast metal of the probe compensation box, grounding to the scope frame. It doesn't seem to have done the probe or compensation box circuitry any harm, but I bet it gave the operator a surprise. They hadn't made any attempt to clean it up either. I filed the worst of the burnt metal jaggies off, and it works fine - within it's specs.
Hopefully the other electrode for those arc burns wasn't the operator.
I also have a 7104 and 7A29 modules, but a) the mainframe is currently dead, and b) really it's useless for single shot waveform capture. The microchannel plate screen is for beam intensity enhancement, not a storage tube. Coupling it to a CCD sensor sounds like a good idea! Did you try any fast single shot captures yet?
The HP 54120T 20 GHZ digitizing scope I have - same problem, in that it can't capture single shot waveforms. Plus the very amusing +/- 2V MAXIMUM voltage limit on the 50 ohm sampler inputs. Or you destroy the GaAs input circuitry. Oh right, I'm sure I can get that working safely nearby something generating multi-kilovolt impulses - not. Well theoretically it's possible with good shielding/grounding, but as the sampler modules for the 45121T are no longer made, there's not much margin for trial and error.
What might be usable: the Tek 7912AD, which is a really weird and cool thing. Lots on the net about it. But I don't like my chances of getting one at all, let alone getting it operational. I did get a couple of 7A29P plugins so far though, just in case.
The 1985 Tek catalog lists 'destructive testing' as one application for the 7912AD. Which um... as I understood it, it was developed for use in nuclear weapons testing. So yeah...
Hey, if anyone has a 7912AD they don't want, I'd be delighted to give you some freed-up space in return for it.