7 research outputs found
LES TECHNIQUES POUR AMELIORER L'ERGONOMIE LORS DE L'EXERCICE DENTAIRE
NANCY1-SCD Pharmacie-Odontologie (543952101) / SudocPARIS-BIUM (751062103) / SudocSudocFranceF
Engineering Design of a Multipurpose X-band Accelerating Structure
Both FEL projects, SwissFEL and Fermi-Elettra each require an X-band RF accelerating structure for optimal bunch compression at the respective injectors. As the CLIC project is pursuing a program for producing and testing the X-band high-gradient RF structures, a collaboration between PSI, Elettra and CERN has been established to build a multipurpose X-band accelerating structure. This paper focuses on its engineering design, which is based on the disked cells jointed together by diffusion bonding. Vacuum brazing and laser beam welding is used for auxiliary components. The accelerating structure consists of two coupler subassemblies, 73 disks and includes a wakefield monitor and diagnostic waveguides. The engineering study includes the external cooling system, consisting of two parallel cooling circuits and an RF tuning system, which allows phase advance tuning of the cell by deforming the outer wall. The engineering solution for the installation and sealing of the wake field monitor feed-through devices that are integrated in the accelerating structure are presente
Single Bunch Wakefields in the CERN-PSI-ELETTRA X-band Linear Accelerator
FERMI@ELETTRA and PSI-XFEL are 4th Generation Light Sources that require high quality electron beam at the entrance of the undulator chains. In this context, a specially developed X-band structure with integrated alignment monitors will be used to mitigate the nonlinearities in the longitudinal phase space due to the second order RF time curvature and the second order momentum compaction term of chicane compressor. The knowledge of the transverse and longitudinal short range wakefields in the X-band structure is essential to evaluate the beam quality in terms of longitudinal energy spread and transverse kick spread. We have used the ABCI code to numerically evaluate the transverse and longitudinal wake potentials for short bunches in this structur
RF Design of Traveling-Wave Accelerating Structures for the FCC-ee Pre-injector Complex
The linacs of the FCC-ee (Future Circular Electron-Positron Collider) injector complex will provide the drive beam for positron production and accelerate nominal electron and positron beams up to 6 GeV. Several linacs comprise different traveling-wave (TW) accelerating structures fulfilling the beam dynamics and rf constraints. Notably, high-phase advance large-aperture structures accelerate the positron beam at low energies. All TW structures are rotationally symmetric for easier production. Long-range wakes are damped by HOM detuning. Operating mode and HOM parameters were calculated based on lookup tables and analytic formulas, allowing for rapid scanning of large parameter spaces. In this paper, we present both methodology and realization of the rf design of the TW structures including their pulse compressors
The FCCee Pre-Injector Complex
International audienceThe international FCC study group published in 2019 a Conceptual Design Report for an electron-positron collider with a centre-of-mass energy from 90 to 365 GeV with a beam currents of up to 1.4 A per beam. The high beam current of this collider create challenging requirements on the injection chain and all aspects of the linac need to be carefully reconsidered and revisited, including the injection time structure. The entire beam dynamics studies for the full linac, damping ring and transfer lines are major activities of the injector complex design. A key point is that any increase of positron production and capture efficiency reduces the cost and complexity of the driver linac, the heat and radiation load of the converter system, and increases the operational margin. In this paper we will give an overview of the status of the injector complex design and introduce the new layout that has been proposed by the study group working in the context of the CHART collaboration. In this framework, furthermore, we also present the preliminary studies of the FCC-ee positron source highlighting the main requirements and constraints
SwissFEL: The Swiss X-ray Free Electron Laser
The SwissFEL X-ray Free Electron Laser (XFEL) facility started construction at the Paul Scherrer Institute (Villigen, Switzerland) in 2013 and will be ready to accept its first users in 2018 on the Aramis hard X-ray branch. In the following sections we will summarize the various aspects of the project, including the design of the soft and hard X-ray branches of the accelerator, the results of SwissFEL performance simulations, details of the photon beamlines and experimental stations, and our first commissioning results