79 research outputs found
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Beta-Beat Correction Using Strong Sextupole Bumps in PEP-II
A method for correcting lattice beta mismatches has been developed for the PEP-II collider using orbit offsets in strong sextupoles. The solution is first predicted in the MAD program by modeling closed orbit bumps in the plane of correction at the sextupoles strongest in that plane. The derived solution is then tested in the machine to confirm prediction, and finally dialed into the machine under high-current conditions
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An RF bunch length monitor for the SLC final focus
In preparation for the 1997 SLC run, a novel RF bunch-length monitor has been installed in the SLC South Final Focus. The monitor consists of a ceramic gap in the beam pipe, a 160-ft long X-band waveguide (WR90), and a set of dividers, tapers and microwave detectors. Electromagnetic fields radiated through the ceramic gap excite modes in the nearby open-ended X-band waveguide, which transmits the beam-induced signal to a radiation-free shack outside of the beamline vault. There, a combination of power dividers, tapers, waveguides, and crystal detectors is used to measure the signal power in 4 separate frequency channels between 7 and 110 GHz. For typical rms bunch lengths of 0.5-2 mm in the SLC, the bunch frequency spectrum can extend up to 100 GHz. In this paper, the authors present the overall monitor layout, describe MAFIA calculations of the signal coupled into the waveguide based on a detailed model of the complex beam-pipe geometry, estimate the final power level at the RF conversion points, and report the measured transmission properties of the installed waveguide system
Significant Lifetime and Background Improvements in PEP-II by Reducing the 3rd Order Chromaticity in LER with Orbit Bumps
Orbit bumps in sextupoles are routinely used for tuning the luminosity in the PEP-II B-Factory. Anti-symmetric bumps at a pair of identical sextupoles separated by -I section generate the net dispersion, while symmetric horizontal bumps induce a tune shift and beta beat. By combining two of these symmetric bumps with opposite signs, where the second pair is 90{sup o} away, the tune shift cancels and the beta beat doubles. In the low energy ring (LER), there are four -I sextupole pairs per arc, located one after another 90{sup o} apart, where pairs 1 and 3 are at the same phase and pairs 2 and 4 are 90{sup o} away. By making two symmetric bumps with opposite sign in pairs 1 and 3, the tune shift and beta beat outside this region cancel, but there is a local change of phase and beta in the 2nd sextupole pair located in the middle. By using this bump knob, the LER lifetime improved by a factor of 3, losses by a factor of 5, and the beam-beam background in the drift chamber of the BaBar detector by 20%. Optics analysis showed that the local phase change at the 2nd sextupole pair can compensate the 3rd order chromaticity
Optimization of Chromatic Optics Near the Half Integer in PEP-II
The PEP-II collider has benefited greatly from the correction of the chromatic functions. By optimizing sextupole family strengths, it is possible to correct the non-linear chromaticity, the chromatic beta, and the second order dispersion in both the LER and HER. Having implemented some of these corrections, luminosity was improved in PEP-II by almost 10%
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Luminosity Variations Along Bunch Trains in PEP-II
In the spring of 2005 after a long shut-down, the luminosity of the B-Factory PEP-II decreased along the bunch trains by about 25-30%. There were many reasons studied which could have caused this performance degradation, like a bigger phase transient due to an additional RF station in the Low-Energy-Ring (LER), bad initial vacuum, electron cloud, chromaticity, steering, dispersion in cavities, beam optics, etc. The initial specific luminosity of 4.2 sloped down to 3.2 and even 2.8 for a long train (typical: 130 of 144), later in the run with higher currents and shorter trains (65 of 72) the numbers were more like 3.2 down to 2.6. Finally after steering the interaction region for an unrelated reason (overheated BPM buttons) and the consequential lower luminosity for two weeks, the luminosity slope problem was mysteriously gone. Several parameters got changed and there is still some discussion about which one finally fixed the problem. Among others, likely candidates are: the LER betatron function in x at the interaction point got reduced, making the LER x stronger, dispersion reduction in the cavities, and finding and fixing a partially shorted magnet
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Precision Measurement and Improvement of e+, e- Storage Rings
Through horizontal and vertical excitations, we have been able to make a precision measurement of linear geometric optics parameters with a Model-Independent Analysis (MIA). We have also been able to build up a computer model that matches the real accelerator in linear geometric optics with an SVD-enhanced Least-square fitting process. Recently, with the addition of longitudinal excitation, we are able to build up a computer virtual machine that matches the real accelerators in linear optics including dispersion without additional fitting variables. With this optics-matched virtual machine, we are able to find solutions that make changes of selected normal and skew quadrupoles for machine optics improvement. It has made major contributions to improve PEP-II optics and luminosity. Examples from application to PEP-II machines will be presented
Generation of meter-scale hydrogen plasmas and efficient, pump-depletion-limited wakefield excitation using 10 GeV electron bunches
High repetition rates and efficient energy transfer to the accelerating beam
are important for a future linear collider based on the beam-driven plasma
wakefield acceleration scheme (PWFA-LC). This paper reports the first results
from the Plasma Wakefield Acceleration Collaboration (E300) that are beginning
to address both of these issues using the recently commissioned FACET-II
facility at SLAC. We have generated meter-scale hydrogen plasmas using
time-structured 10 GeV electron bunches from FACET-II, which hold the promise
of dramatically increasing the repetition rate of PWFA by rapidly replenishing
the gas between each shot compared to the hitherto used lithium plasmas that
operate at 1-10 Hz. Furthermore, we have excited wakes in such plasmas that are
suitable for high gradient particle acceleration with high drive-bunch to wake
energy transfer efficiency -- a first step in achieving a high overall energy
transfer efficiency. We have done this by using time-structured electron drive
bunches that typically have one or more ultra-high current (>30 kA) femtosecond
spike(s) superimposed on a longer (~0.4 ps) lower current (<10 kA) bunch
structure. The first spike effectively field-ionizes the gas and produces a
meter-scale (30-160 cm) plasma, whereas the subsequent beam charge creates a
wake. The length and amplitude of the wake depends on the longitudinal current
profile of the bunch and plasma density. We find that the onset of pump
depletion, when some of the drive beam electrons are nearly fully depleted of
their energy, occurs for hydrogen pressure >1.5 Torr. We also show that some
electrons in the rear of the bunch can gain several GeV energies from the wake.
These results are reproduced by particle-in-cell simulations using the QPAD
code. At a pressure of ~2 Torr, simulations results and experimental data show
that the beam transfers about 60% of its energy to the wake
Wakefield Generation in Hydrogen and Lithium Plasmas at FACET-II: Diagnostics and First Beam-Plasma Interaction Results
Plasma Wakefield Acceleration (PWFA) provides ultrahigh acceleration
gradients of 10s of GeV/m, providing a novel path towards efficient, compact,
TeV-scale linear colliders and high brightness free electron lasers. Critical
to the success of these applications is demonstrating simultaneously high
gradient acceleration, high energy transfer efficiency, and preservation of
emittance, charge, and energy spread. Experiments at the FACET-II National User
Facility at SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory aim to achieve all of these
milestones in a single stage plasma wakefield accelerator, providing a 10 GeV
energy gain in a <1 m plasma with high energy transfer efficiency. Such a
demonstration depends critically on diagnostics able to measure emittance with
mm-mrad accuracy, energy spectra to determine both %-level energy spread and
broadband energy gain and loss, incoming longitudinal phase space, and matching
dynamics. This paper discusses the experimental setup at FACET-II, including
the incoming beam parameters from the FACET-II linac, plasma sources, and
diagnostics developed to meet this challenge. Initial progress on the
generation of beam ionized wakes in meter-scale hydrogen gas is discussed, as
well as commissioning of the plasma sources and diagnostics
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Tracking Down a Fast Instability in the PEP-II LER
During Run 5, the beam in the PEP-II Low Energy Ring (LER) became affected by a predominantly vertical instability with very fast growth rate of 10...60/ms and varying threshold. The coherent amplitude of the oscillation was limited to approx. 1 mm peak and would damp down over a few tens of turns, however, beam loss set in even as the amplitude signal damped, causing a beam abort. This led to the conclusion that the bunches were actually blowing up. The appearance of a 2{nu}{sub S} line in the spectrum suggested a possible head-tail nature of the instability, although chromaticity was not effective in changing the threshold. The crucial hints in tracking down the cause turned out to be vacuum activity near the rf cavities and observance of signals on the cavity probes of certain rf cavities
Measurement of the e^(+)e^(-)→ bb(macron) cross section between √s = 10.54 and 11.20 GeV
We report e^(+)e^(-)→ bb(macron) cross section measurements by the BABAR experiment performed during an energy scan in the range of 10.54 to 11.20 GeV at the SLAC PEP-II e^(+)e^(-) collider. A total relative error of about 5% is reached in more than 300 center-of-mass energy steps, separated by about 5 MeV. These measurements can be used to derive precise information on the parameters of the Y (10860) and Y (11020) resonances. In particular we show that their widths may be smaller than previously measured
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