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Okugi, T.

Paper Title Page
MOPE022 Development of Shintake Beam Size Monitor for ATF2 1011
 
  • Y. Kamiya
    ICEPP, Tokyo
  • S. Araki, T. Okugi, T. Tauchi, N. Terunuma, J. Urakawa
    KEK, Ibaraki
  • S. Komamiya, M. Oroku, T.S. Suehara, Y. Yamaguchi, T. Yamanaka
    University of Tokyo, Tokyo
 
 

In this paper, we describe a system design and current status of Shintake beam size monitor. Shintake monitor is a laser-based beam diagnostics tool, which provides a non-invasive measurement of transverse beam sizes. The interaction target probing the electron beam is interference fringes build up by the two coherent lasers that have narrow bandwidth and long coherent length. A scale of the target structure corresponds to approximately one fourth of the laser wave length, and the smallest measurable size reaches down to several tens of nanometers. The monitor we described here is installed at the virtual interaction point of the ATF2 beam line, which is built to confirm the proposed final focus system for Future Linear Colliders. We adopt second harmonics of Nd:YAG laser of 532 nm wavelength, and phase stabilization feedback system to allow to measure the designed beam size of about 37 nm. To widen a measurable range up to about 5 microns (wire scanner's range), we also prepare three crossing modes that change an effective wavelength for the fringes. The monitor is used to measure a focus size during the tuning process. The system is based on the Shintake monitor for FFTB.

 
MOPE023 Evaluation of Expected Performance of Shintake Beam Size Monitor for ATF2 1014
 
  • Y. Yamaguchi, S. Komamiya, M. Oroku, T.S. Suehara, T. Yamanaka
    University of Tokyo, Tokyo
  • S. Araki, T. Okugi, T. Tauchi, N. Terunuma, J. Urakawa
    KEK, Ibaraki
  • Y. Kamiya
    ICEPP, Tokyo
 
 

ATF2 is the final focus test facility for ILC to realize and demonstrate nanometer focusing. One of the goals of the ATF2 is a demonstration of a compact final focus system based on the local chromaticity correction. A designed beam size at the focal point is to be 37 nm in vertical. To achieve the goal, a beam size monitor capable of nanometer beam size measurement is inevitably needed. Shintake monitor satisfies the demands, and is installed at the virtual interaction point of the ATF2. Shintake monitor is a beam size monitor which uses laser interference fringe pattern to measure beam size. The beam test for the Shintake monitor was successful in measurement of signal modulation with the laser interference fringe pattern in November 2009. In April 2010, beam size of less than 1 micron was achieved. We have studied the error sources, and evaluated the total error to be less than 10% for 1 minute measurement. This paper is about the evaluation of the Shintake monitor performance by analyzing beam tests data. Most systematic error sources are well understood, so that we can estimate accuracy of beam size measurement when the beam size reaches 37nm.

 
WEOBMH01 Operational Experiences Tuning the ATF2 Final Focus Optics Towards Obtaining a 37nm Electron Beam IP Spot Size 2383
 
  • G.R. White, A. Seryi, M. Woodley
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California
  • S. Bai
    IHEP Beijing, Beijing
  • P. Bambade, Y. Renier
    LAL, Orsay
  • B. Bolzon
    IN2P3-LAPP, Annecy-le-Vieux
  • Y. Kamiya
    ICEPP, Tokyo
  • S. Komamiya, M. Oroku, Y. Yamaguchi, T. Yamanaka
    University of Tokyo, Tokyo
  • K. Kubo, S. Kuroda, T. Okugi, T. Tauchi
    KEK, Ibaraki
  • E. Marin
    CERN, Geneva
 
 

The primary aim of the ATF2 research accelerator is to test a scaled version of the final focus optics planned for use in next-generation linear lepton colliders. ATF2 consists of a 1.3 GeV linac, damping ring providing low-emittance electron beams (<12pm in the vertical plane), extraction line and final focus optics. The design details of the final focus optics and implementation at ATF2 are presented elsewhere* . The ATF2 accelerator is currently being commissioned, with a staged approach to achieving the design IP spot size. It is expected that as we implement more demanding optics and reduce the vertical beta function at the IP, the tuning becomes more difficult and takes longer. We present here a description of the implementation of the overall tuning algorithm and describe operational experiences and performances


* Beam-Based Alignment, Tuning and Beam Dynamics Studies for the ATF2 Extraction Line and Final Focus System. Glen R. White , S. Molloy, M. Woodley, (SLAC). EPAC08-MOPP039, SLAC-PUB-13303.

 

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WEOBMH02 Multi-bunch Beam Extraction using Strip-line Kicker at KEK-ATF 2386
 
  • T. Naito, H. Hayano, K. Kubo, S. Kuroda, T. Okugi, N. Terunuma, J. Urakawa
    KEK, Ibaraki
 
 

The beam extraction experiment using the strip-line kicker has been carried out at KEK-ATF. The specification of the International linear collider (ILC) is that the long bunch train (1320 - 5120 bunches), which has the bunch spacing of 189 - 480ns, is compressed to 3 or 6ns bunch spacing into the DR, and again decompressed from the DR. The kicker manipulates the changes of the bunch spacing. The kicker requires a fast rise/fall time (3 or 6ns) and a high repetition rate (3 or 6MHz). A multiple strip-line kicker system is the most promising candidate to realize the specification for the ILC*. The beam extraction experiment at KEK-ATF** using proto-type of the strip-line kicker was done by following parameters, up to 30 bunches of the multi-bunch in the DR, which has 5.6ns bunch spacing, are extracted bunch-by-bunch with 308ns interval to the extraction line. The stored multi-bunch was extracted successfully. The detail of the experiment and the result are reported.


* T. Naito et. al., Proc. of PAC07, pp2772-2274.
** T. Naito et. al., Proc. of EPAC08, pp601-603.

 

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Slides

 
THPE020 Scenarios for the ATF2 Ultra-Low Betas Proposal 4554
 
  • E. Marin, R. Tomás
    CERN, Geneva
  • P. Bambade
    LAL, Orsay
  • S. Kuroda, T. Okugi, T. Tauchi, N. Terunuma, J. Urakawa
    KEK, Ibaraki
  • B. Parker
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York
  • A. Seryi, G.R. White, M. Woodley
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California
 
 

The current ATF2 Ultra-Low beta proposal was designed to achieve 20nm vertical IP beam size without considering the multipolar components of the FD magnets. In this paper we describe different scenarios that avoid the detrimental effect of these multipolar errors in the FD. The simplest approach consists in modifying the optics but other solutions are studied as the introduction of new higher order magnets or the replacement of the FD with SC technology. The practical aspects of such an upgrade are the tuning performance and the compatibility with existing devices and instrumentation. These are fully addressed in the paper.

 
WEPE041 A Superconducting Magnet Upgrade of the ATF2 Final Focus 3440
 
  • B. Parker, M. Anerella, J. Escallier, P. He, A.K. Jain, A. Marone, P. Wanderer, K.-C. Wu
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York
  • P. Bambade
    LAL, Orsay
  • B. Bolzon, A. Jeremie
    IN2P3-LAPP, Annecy-le-Vieux
  • P.A. Coe, D. Urner
    OXFORDphysics, Oxford, Oxon
  • C. Hauviller, E. Marin, R. Tomás, F. Zimmermann
    CERN, Geneva
  • N. Kimura, K. Kubo, T. Kume, S. Kuroda, T. Okugi, T. Tauchi, N. Terunuma, T. Tomaru, K. Tsuchiya, J. Urakawa, A. Yamamoto
    KEK, Ibaraki
  • A. Seryi, C.M. Spencer, G.R. White
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California
 
 

The KEK ATF2 facility, with a well instrumented beam line and Final Focus (FF), is a proving ground for linear collider (LC) technology to demonstrate the extreme beam demagnification and spot stability needed for a LC FF*. ATF2 uses water cooled magnets but the baseline ILC calls for a superconducting FF**. Thus we plan to replace some ATF2 FF magnets with superconducting ones made via direct wind construction as planned for the ILC. With no cryogenic supply at ATF2, we look to cool magnets and current leads with a few cryocoolers. ATF2 FF coil winding is underway at BNL and production warm magnetic measurements indicate good field quality. Having FF magnets with larger aperture and better field quality than present FF might allow reducing the beta function at the FF for study of focusing regimes relevant to CLIC. Our ATF2 magnet cryostat will have laser view ports for cold mass movement measurement and FF support and stabilization requirements under study. We plan to make stability measurements at BNL and KEK to relate ATF2 FF magnet performance to that of a full length ILC R&D prototype at BNL. We want to be able to predict LC FF performance with confidence.


* ATF2 proposal, volumes 1 and 2 at http://lcdev.kek.jp/ILC-AsiaWG/WG4notes/atf2/proposal/index.html
** International Linear Collider Reference Design Report, ILC-REPORT-2007-001, August 2007.