99 research outputs found
Concept for controlled transverse emittance transfer within a linac ion beam
For injection of beams into circular machines with different horizontal and
vertical emittance acceptance, the injection efficiency can be increased if
these beams are flat, i.e. if they feature unequal transverse emittances.
Generation of flat electron beams is well known and has been demonstrated
already in beam experiments. It was proposed also for ion beams that were
generated in an Electron Cyclotron-Resonance (ECR) source. We introduce an
extension of the method to beams that underwent charge state stripping without
requiring their generation inside an ECR source. Results from multi-particle
simulations are presented to demonstrate the validity of the method.Comment: 23 pages (preprint style), 14 Figures, submitted to PRST-A
Beam formation
The quality of a charged particle beam is determined during the generation of the beam. Because the normalized emittance of the beam cannot shrink, beside using special techniques like electron cooling, stochastic cooling, or laser cooling, it is important to avoid errors which are responsible for emittance growth. The speci c boundary conditions for the beam formation of different charged particle sources will be described
Investigation of the Afterglow Mode with the Caprice ECRIS for the GSI Heavy-Ion-Synchrotron operation
The Caprice-type ECRIS of the High Charge State Injector (HLI) of GSI predominantly has been operated in DC mode so far to deliver high duty cycle beams for the experimental area of the LINAC (UNILAC). The increasing demand of the Heavy Ion Synchrotron (SIS) for high intensities of heavy ion beams at very low duty cycle favours the application of the afterglow mode by pulsed operation of the ECRIS in these cases. Experiments with O, Ar, Xe and mainly with Pb were performed at the new ECR injector setup (EIS) which is a copy of the HLI injection beam line. Different RF pulse lengths and repetition rates were compared to optimise the respective afterglow intensities. For Pb two different types of ovens were investigated and modifications of the extraction system were applied. Thus peak intensities in the afterglow for 208Pb27+ of up to 200 emA could be obtained. Stable operation for time periods of several days could be achieved at reduced intensity level. Operational experiences are reported under the aspect of adaptation to SIS injection
High Current, High frequency ECRIS development program for LHC heavy ion beam application
A research program with the aim of producing pulsed currents with hitherto unequalled intensity of Pb27+, with length and repetition ratecompatible with those desired by CERN (1 mAe / 400 ms / 10 Hz in the context of future heavy ion collisions at LHC) is organised in acollaboration between CERN/GSI/CEA-Grenoble and IN2P3-ISNG.Two main experimental programs will be carried out : (i) tests with the LNS-Catania team on the SERSE superconducting source with a 28 GHzgyrotron, (ii) tests on a non-superconducting source (new source at Grenoble) with a 28 GHz gyrotron. For this purpose CEA/DRFMC hasborrowed from CEA a 28 GHz - 10 kW gyrotron transmitter.The project includes also the construction of a source body, by ISNG, with conventional coils and permanent magnets for working at the frequencyof about 28 GHz and biased up to 60 kV. This source called PHOENIX will run on a test bench at ISN. PHOENIX is an improvement of thepresent ECR4-14.5 GHz/CERN source, having a mirror ratio R=2 at 14.5 GHz, and R=1.7 at 28 GHz (possibly reaching 2.1 T on the axis of thesource), and with a plasma volume up to 2.5 larger.Experiments at 28 GHz will be performed on the SERSE source in Catania at INFN/LNS where both the axial and the hexapolar fields will bevaried so that the mirror ratio is continuously varied up to R=1.6 ; the SERSE source will be also operated at lower magnetic fields such as thosewhich can be produced by conventional magnets (less than 2 T axial field at injection - far from the 28 GHz High-B mode)
Modelling
Modeling of technical machines became a standard technique since computer became powerful enough to handle the amount of data relevant to the specific system. Simulation of an existing physical device requires the knowledge of all relevant quantities. Electric fields given by the surrounding boundary as well as magnetic fields caused by coils or permanent magnets have to be known. Internal sources for both fields are sometimes taken into account, such as space charge forces or the internal magnetic field of a moving bunch of charged particles. Used solver routines are briefly described and some bench-marking is shown to estimate necessary computing times for different problems. Different types of charged particle sources will be shown together with a suitable model to describe the physical model. Electron guns are covered as well as different ion sources (volume ion sources, laser ion sources, Penning ion sources, electron resonance ion sources, and H-sources) together with some remarks on beam transport
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