161 research outputs found
Helical channel design and technology for cooling of muon beams
Novel magnetic helical channel designs for capture and cooling of bright muon
beams are being developed using numerical simulations based on new inventions
such as helical solenoid (HS) magnets and hydrogen-pressurized RF (HPRF)
cavities. We are close to the factor of a million six-dimensional phase space
(6D) reduction needed for muon colliders. Recent experimental and simulation
results are presented.Comment: 6 pp. 14th Advanced Accelerator Concepts Workshop 13-19 Jun 2010:
Annapolis, Marylan
Strength of Higher-Order Spin-Orbit Resonances
When polarized particles are accelerated in a synchrotron, the spin
precession can be periodically driven by Fourier components of the
electromagnetic fields through which the particles travel. This leads to
resonant perturbations when the spin-precession frequency is close to a linear
combination of the orbital frequencies. When such resonance conditions are
crossed, partial depolarization or spin flip can occur. The amount of
polarization that survives after resonance crossing is a function of the
resonance strength and the crossing speed. This function is commonly called the
Froissart-Stora formula. It is very useful for predicting the amount of
polarization after an acceleration cycle of a synchrotron or for computing the
required speed of the acceleration cycle to maintain a required amount of
polarization. However, the resonance strength could in general only be computed
for first-order resonances and for synchrotron sidebands. When Siberian Snakes
adjust the spin tune to be 1/2, as is required for high energy accelerators,
first-order resonances do not appear and higher-order resonances become
dominant. Here we will introduce the strength of a higher-order spin-orbit
resonance, and also present an efficient method of computing it. Several
tracking examples will show that the so computed resonance strength can indeed
be used in the Froissart-Stora formula. HERA-p is used for these examples which
demonstrate that our results are very relevant for existing accelerators.Comment: 10 pages, 6 figure
Binary collisions of charged particles in a magnetic field
Binary collisions between charged particles in an external magnetic field are
considered in second-order perturbation theory, starting from the unperturbed
helical motion of the particles. The calculations are done with the help of an
improved binary collisions treatment which is valid for any strength of the
magnetic field, where the second-order energy and velocity transfers are
represented in Fourier space for arbitrary interaction potentials. The energy
transfer is explicitly calculated for a regularized and screened potential
which is both of finite range and non-singular at the origin, and which
involves as limiting cases the Debye (i.e., screened) and Coulomb potential.
Two distinct cases are considered in detail. (i) The collision of two identical
(e.g., electron-electron) particles; (ii) and the collision between a
magnetized electron and an uniformly moving heavy ion. The energy transfer
involves all harmonics of the electron cyclotron motion. The validity of the
perturbation treatment is evaluated by comparing with classical trajectory
Monte--Carlo calculations which also allows to investigate the strong
collisions with large energy and velocity transfer at low velocities. For large
initial velocities on the other hand, only small velocity transfers occur.
There the non-perturbative numerical classical trajectory Monte--Carlo results
agree excellently with the predictions of the perturbative treatment.Comment: submitted to Phys. Rev.
Symmetric achromatic low-beta collider interaction region design concept
We present a new symmetry-based concept for an achromatic low-beta collider
interaction region design. A specially-designed symmetric Chromaticity
Compensation Block (CCB) induces an angle spread in the passing beam such that
it cancels the chromatic kick of the final focusing quadrupoles. Two such CCBs
placed symmetrically around an interaction point allow simultaneous
compensation of the 1st-order chromaticities and chromatic beam smear at the IP
without inducing significant 2nd-order aberrations to the particle trajectory.
We first develop an analytic description of this approach and explicitly
formulate 2nd-order aberration compensation conditions at the interaction
point. The concept is next applied to develop an interaction region design for
the ion collider ring of an electron-ion collider. We numerically evaluate
performance of the design in terms of momentum acceptance and dynamic aperture.
The advantages of the new concept are illustrated by comparing it to the
conventional distributed-sextupole chromaticity compensation scheme.Comment: 12 pages, 17 figures, to be submitted to Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beam
Generation of angular-momentum-dominated electron beams from a photoinjector
Various projects under study require an angular-momentum-dominated electron
beam generated by a photoinjector. Some of the proposals directly use the
angular-momentum-dominated beams (e.g. electron cooling of heavy ions), while
others require the beam to be transformed into a flat beam (e.g. possible
electron injectors for light sources and linear colliders). In this paper, we
report our experimental study of an angular-momentum-dominated beam produced in
a photoinjector, addressing the dependencies of angular momentum on initial
conditions. We also briefly discuss the removal of angular momentum. The
results of the experiment, carried out at the Fermilab/NICADD Photoinjector
Laboratory, are found to be in good agreement with theoretical and numerical
models.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures, submitted to Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beam
THE SCHEME OF BEAM SYNCHRONIZATION IN MEIC*
Abstract Synchronization of two colliding beams at single or multiple collision points is a critical issue for the design of the Medium energy Electron-Ion Collider (MEIC) at JLab. The path-length variation required to accommodate different ion energies, which varies from 20 to 100 GeV/u, could be larger than several bunch spacings. The present scheme adopted in the MEIC design is centered on varying the number of bunches stored in the ion collider ring. This could provide a set of discrete ion harmonic energies such that the beam synchronization is realized. To cover the ion energy between these harmonic energies, it is further proposed to vary simultaneously the electron ring circumference and RF frequency in both collider rings, both of them are technically feasible
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FEL-based coherent electron cooling for high-energy hadron colliders
Cooling intense high-energy hadron beams is a major challenge in modern accelerator physics. Synchrotron radiation is too feeble and two common methods--stochastic and electron cooling--are not efficient in providing significant cooling for high energy, high intensity proton colliders. In this paper they discuss a practical scheme of Coherent Electron Cooling (CeC), which promises short cooling times (below one hour) for intense proton beams in RHIC at 250 GeV or in LHC at 7 TeV. A possibility of CeC using various microwave instabilities was discussed since 1980s. In this paper, they present first evaluation of specific CeC scheme based on capabilities of present-day accelerator technology, ERLs, and high-gain Free-Electron lasers (FELs). They discuss the principles, the main limitations of this scheme and present some predictions for Coherent Electron Cooling in RHIC and the LHC operating with ions or protons, summarized in Table 1
On the Evolution of Ion Bunch Profile in the Presence of Longitudinal Coherent Electron Cooling
In the presence of longitudinal coherent electron cooling, the evolution of
the line-density profile of a circulating ion bunch can be described by the 1-D
Fokker-Planck equation. We show that, in the absence of diffusion, the 1-D
equation can be solved analytically for certain dependence of cooling force on
the synchrotron amplitude. For more general cases with arbitrary diffusion, we
solved the 1-D Fokker-Planck equation numerically and the numerical solutions
have been compared with results from macro-particle tracking
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