393 research outputs found
The Pulsed Power Converter and Septum Magnet System for Injection into the Electron Storage Ring at ESRF
At ESRF, the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility in Grenoble, electrons are accelerated, via a 200Â MeV Linac and a 6Â GeV synchrotron booster, and injected into the storage ring at 10Â Hz rate. Two thin septum blade magnets and an eddy current sheet type septum magnet provide the final deflection of the injected beam. The operational requirements of the e- injection scheme and the resulting demanding hardware specifications are recalled. The pulsed septum magnets are briefly described. The design, circuit layout and construction of the power converters are related with emphasis on innovative aspects of general interest. Results of tests during commissioning are reported
Power Converters of the Main Dipole and Quadrupole Magnet Strings of the Antiproton Decelerator at CERN
The two main power converters for the dipoles (D) and quadrupoles (Q) are presented as part of the complex power converter system of the Antiproton Decelerator. The operational requirements and the performance specifications for deceleration from 3.5 to 0.1 GeV/c are discussed. The layout and design of the power part, consisting of a 12-pulse thyristor rectifier and a switch-mode parallel active filter (AF), and of the precision regulation are described. The alternatives for integrating the AF into the current and voltage regulation loops are outlined. Problems encountered and results of tests are reported
Large Signal Model of a Four-quadrant AC to DC Converter for Accelerator Magnets
This paper presents the large signal model of a four-quadrant AC to DC converter, which is expected to be used in the area of particle accelerators. The system’s first stage is composed of a three-phase boost PWM (Pulse Width Modulated) rectifier with DSP (Digital Signal Processing) based power factor correction (PFC) and output voltage regulation. The second stage is a full-bridge PWM inverter that allows fast four-quadrant operation. The structure is fully reversible, and an additional resistance (brake chopper) is not needed to dissipate the energy when the beam deflection magnet acts as generator
Plastic flow of persistent currents in two dimensional strongly interacting systems
The local persistent current in two dimensional strongly interacting systems
is investigated. As the interaction strength is enhanced the current in the
sample undergoes a transition from diffusive to ordered flow. The strong
interacting flow has the characteristics of a plastic flow through dislocations
in the pinned charge density wave which develops in the system at low
densities.Comment: 12 pages, 4 figures, accepted for publication in Phys. Rev. B (RC
Dephasing in Disordered Conductors due to Fluctuating Electric Fields
We develop a novel eikonal expansion for the Cooperon to study the effect of
space- and time-dependent electric fields on the dephasing rate of disordered
conductors. For randomly fluctuating fields with arbitrary covariance we derive
a general expression for the dephasing rate which is free of infrared
divergencies in reduced dimensions. For time-dependent external fields with
finite wavelength and sufficiently small amplitude we show that the dephasing
rate is proportional to the square root of the electromagnetic power coupled
into the system, in agreement with data by Wang and Lindelof [Phys. Rev. Lett.
{\bf{59}}, 1156 (1987)].Comment: 17 Latex-pages, one figure; we now give more technical details and
discuss the screening problem more carefully; to appear in Phys. Rev.
Acceleration of lead ions in the CERN PS booster and the CERN PS
The new CERN Heavy Ion Accelerating Facility also requires besides a new Linac substantial modifications of existing accelerators. They are imposed by the low speed and the low intensity of the ion beam and, crucially at low energy, by the short lifetime of the partially stripped ions due to charge exchange with the atoms of the residual gas. The upgraded vacuum system hits the limits of a non-bakeable machine and consequently the acceleration had to be sped up by all means. In the Booster this led to injection and RF capture on a fast-rising magnet cycle and a new digital RF beam control system. Beam current transformers had to be replaced by new, heavily shielded ones. Other modifications include a new staircase magnet to distribute ions over the four Booster rings, lengthening of septa and kicker pulses, plus new, bakeable extraction septa and an energy stabilizing RF loop on the flat top in the CPS, and a stripper in the transfer line to the SPS
Conversion of the PS complex as LHC proton pre-injector
CERNs Large Hadron Collider (LHC) [1][2] will be supplied with protons from the injector chain Linac2-PS Booster (PSB)-PS-SPS (Fig. 1). The required transverse beam brilliance (intensity/emittance) is almost twice that of current PS beams and the LHC bunch spacing of 25 ns must be impressed on the beam before its transfer to the SPS. The scheme involves new RF harmonics in the PSB and the PS, an increase of the PSB energy, and two-batch filling of the PS. After a successful test of the main ingredients, a project for converting the PS complex was launched in 1994. Major additions are (i) h=1 RF systems in the PSB, (ii) upgrading of the PSB main magnet supply from 1 to 1.4 GeV operation, (iii) new magnets, septa, power supplies, kicker pulsers for the PSB-PS beam transfer, (iv) 40 and 80 MHz systems in the PS, (v) beam profile measurement devices with improved resolution. A significant part of the effort is being provided by TRIUMF under the Canada-CERN co-operation agreement on the LHC
Thermodynamics of the dissipative two-state system: a Bethe Ansatz study
The thermodynamics of the dissipative two-state system is calculated exactly
for all temperatures and level asymmetries for the case of Ohmic dissipation.
We exploit the equivalence of the two-state system to the anisotropic Kondo
model and extract the thermodynamics of the former by solving the thermodynamic
Bethe Ansatz equations of the latter. The universal scaling functions for the
specific heat and static dielectric susceptibility
are extracted for all dissipation strengths for
both symmetric and asymmetric two-state systems. The logarithmic corrections to
these quantities at high temperatures are found in the Kondo limit , whereas for we find the expected power law temperature
dependences with the powers being functions of the dissipative coupling
. The low temperature behaviour is always that of a Fermi liquid.Comment: 24 pages, 32 PS figures. Typos corrected, final versio
The PS complex produces the nominal LHC beam
The LHC [1] will be supplied, via the SPS, with protons from the pre-injector chain comprising Linac2, PS Booster (PSB) and PS. These accelerators have under-gone a major upgrading programme [2] during the last five years so as to meet the stringent requirements of the LHC. These imply that many high-intensity bunches of small emittance and tight spacing (25 ns) be available at the PS extraction energy (25 GeV). The upgrading project involved an increase of Linac2 current, new RF systems in the PSB and the PS, raising the PSB energy from 1 to 1.4 GeV, two-batch filling of the PS and the installation of high-resolution beam profile measurement devices. With the project entering its final phase and most of the newly installed hardware now being operational, the emphasis switches to producing the nominal LHC beam and tackling the associated beam physics problems. While a beam with transverse characteristics better than nominal has been obtained, the longitudinal density still needs to be increased. An alternative scheme to produce the 25 ns bunch spacing is outlined, together with other promising developments
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