53 research outputs found

    Beam Coupling Impedance Contribution of Flange Aperture Gaps: A Numerical Study for Elettra 2.0

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    The accurate analysis of any possible source of beam instability is mandatory for the design of a new particle accelerator, especially for high-current and ultra-low emittance synchrotrons. In the specific case of instabilities driven by the coupling between the charged particle beam and the electromagnetic field excited by the beam itself, the corresponding effect is estimated through the beam coupling impedance. The modeling of this effect is essential to perform a rigorous evaluation of the coupling impedance budget able to account for all devices present in the entire machine. To deal with this problem, this paper focuses on the estimation of the contribution of the joints lying between the different vacuum chamber sections, by performing a comparative numerical analysis that takes into account different aperture gaps between the flanges. The results point out the criticality of many small-impedance contributions that, added together, must be lower than a predefined impedance threshold

    BEAM ORBIT STABILITY AT ELETTRA

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    Abstract The top-up operation established since 2010 at the Elettra third-generation synchrotron light source has solved the problems related to thermal drifts and beam current dependence, and a series of feedback loops acting on the machine optics and radio-frequency systems made easier to setup and operate the ring. Those systems together with the fast orbit feedback in operation since 2007, contributed to very high electron beam orbit stability. A description of the active systems and their performance, future perspectives as well as some still open issues will be presented and discussed

    TOP-UP OPERATIONAL EXPERIENCE AT ELETTRA

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    Abstract Since May 2010 Elettra, operates in top-up at both 2 and 2.4 GeV user energies. In this paper the experience during more than a year of operation in top-up is discussed and the machine up time statistics are presented and compared with the before top up period

    Diagnostic relevance of spatial orientation for vascular dementia: A case study

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    Background: Spatial orientation is emerging as an early and reliable cognitive biomarker of Alzheimer’s disease (AD) pathophysiology. However, no evidence exists as to whether spatial orientation is also affected in vascular dementia (VaD). Objective: To examine allocentric (map-based) and egocentric (viewpoint-based) spatial orientation in an early stage VaD case. Methods: A spatial test battery was administered following clinical and neuropsychological cognitive evaluation. Results: Despite the patient’s complaints, little evidence of episodic memory deficits were detected when cueing was provided to overcome executive dysfunction. Similarly, medial temporal lobe-mediated allocentric orientation was intact. By contrast, medial parietal-mediated egocentric orientation was impaired, despite normal performance on standard visuospatial tasks. Conclusion: To our knowledge, this is the first in-depth investigation of spatial orientation deficits in VaD. Isolated egocentric deficits were observed. This differs from AD orientation deficits which encompass both allocentric and egocentric orientation deficits. A combination of egocentric orientation and executive function tests could serve as a promising cognitive marker for VaD pathophysiology

    Bioinorganic Chemistry of Alzheimer’s Disease

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    Influence of longitudinally tapered collimators on a high brightness electron beam

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    This article presents the design and operation of a longitudinally tapered collimator in a single-pass S-band linac driving a high brightness electron beam. Measurements were done for the transverse emittance growth induced by the collimator wakefield as a function of the lateral displacement of the beam inside the collimator and the energy acceptance provided by an identical collimator installed in a dispersive region. The measurements demonstrate that: (i) the proposed design allows very precise and reproducible motion down to the micron level of the compact, four-hole collimator; (ii) the collimator does not degrade the beam emittance in the presence of standard trajectory control; (iii) the measured kick factor and energy acceptance are in agreement with the theoretical expectations. These measurements were made using 500 pC, 2.4 ps long bunches at the FERMI@Elettra free electron laser facility
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