A   B   C   D   E   F   G   H   I   J   K   L   M   N   O   P   Q   R   S   T   U   V   W   X   Y   Z  

Schnase, A.

Paper Title Page
MOPEC065 Recent Status and Future Plan of J-PARC MA Loaded RF Systems 615
 
  • M. Yoshii, K. Hara, C. Ohmori, T. Shimada, H. Suzuki, M. Tada
    KEK/JAEA, Ibaraki-Ken
  • E. Ezura, K. Hasegawa, A. Takagi, K. Takata
    KEK, Ibaraki
  • M. Nomura, A. Schnase, F. Tamura, M. Yamamoto
    JAEA/J-PARC, Tokai-Mura, Naka-Gun, Ibaraki-Ken
 
 

The Japan Proton Accelerator Complex includes the 3GeV rapid cycling synchrotron (RCS) and the 50GeV main ring synchrotron (MR). Both synchrotrons use the high field gradient magnetic alloy (MA) loaded cavities. In RCS, 11 RF systems have been fully operational since December 2008. The RCS RF systems are operated with dual-harmonic acceleration voltages. Beam acceleration and bunch shape manipulation are efficiently taking place. 120kW of the neutron user operation was started at the Material and Life science facilities in November 2009. In MR synchrotron, the 5th RF system were installed in August 2009, and therefore 5 RF systems are now in operation. Beam commissioning for delivering protons to the hadron facility and neutrino beam experimental facility are under way. The neutrino user experiment is intended to start January 2010. Proton beam operation with more than 100kW is required. The approaches to realizing high intensity operation and the MR upgrade plan will be presented.

 
TUPEA050 Dual-harmonic Phase Control in the J-PARC RCS 1443
 
  • F. Tamura, M. Nomura, A. Schnase, T. Shimada, H. Suzuki, M. Yamamoto
    JAEA/J-PARC, Tokai-Mura, Naka-Gun, Ibaraki-Ken
  • K. Hara, C. Ohmori, M. Tada, M. Yoshii
    KEK/JAEA, Ibaraki-Ken
  • K. Hasegawa
    KEK, Ibaraki
 
 

The wide-band RF cavities in the J-PARC RCS are operated in the dual-harmonic operation, in which each single cavity is driven by a superposition of the fundamental and the second harmonic RF signals. By the dual-harmonic operation large amplitude second harmonic signals for the bunch shape manipulation are generated without extra cavities. The phase control of the second harmonic RF is a key for the bunch shape manipulation. The fundamental RF signal is controlled by the phase feedback loop to damp the dipole oscillation. The second harmonic is locked to the phase of the vector-sum phase of the fundamental RF signals. We present the system detail and the performance in the beam operation of the RCS.

 
TUPEA051 Application of Digital Narrow Band Noise to J-PARC Main Ring 1446
 
  • A. Schnase, K. Hasegawa, M. Nomura, T. Shimada, H. Suzuki, F. Tamura, M. Yamamoto
    JAEA/J-PARC, Tokai-Mura, Naka-Gun, Ibaraki-Ken
  • K. Hara, C. Ohmori, M. Tada, M. Yoshii
    KEK/JAEA, Ibaraki-Ken
  • T. Koseki, T. Toyama
    J-PARC, KEK & JAEA, Ibaraki-ken
  • M. Tomizawa
    KEK, Ibaraki
 
 

Applying narrow band longitudinal noise to the beam in J-PARC Main Ring in flattop, while the acceleration voltage is off might help to counteract the effect of ripple on the slow extraction. For this purpose, a complex noise sequence output by DSP modulates a custom made DDS synthesizer to create single side spectra without carrier. The noise is calculated starting from a description in frequency domain. Then an algorithm creates narrow band spectra with optimized behavior in time domain. Frequency domain data is transformed to time domain, and the amplitude is smoothed. The smoothed data is transformed back to frequency domain, and the spectral shape is restored. This process repeats until the amplitude in time domain has converged, while the desired spectrum shape is preserved. Noise generated in this way can be tailored for different requirements. We show the signal properties, the hardware, and preliminary beam test results, when the noise is applied to the MR RF system.

 
TUPD010 Simulation of Longitudinal Emittance Control in J-PARC RCS 1940
 
  • M. Yamamoto, M. Nomura, A. Schnase, T. Shimada, H. Suzuki, F. Tamura
    JAEA/J-PARC, Tokai-mura
  • E. Ezura, K. Hara, K. Hasegawa, C. Ohmori, M. Tada, A. Takagi, K. Takata, M. Yoshii
    KEK, Ibaraki
 
 

The Longitudinal emittance in J-PARC RCS should be controlled to accelerate a high intensity proton beam with minimal beam loss. In order to study and minimize the beam loss during acceleration, the optimized way to add the 2nd higher harmonic rf has been calculated by a particle tracking code. Furthermore, the bunch shape at RCS extraction should be controlled and optimized for the MR injection. For this purpose, the optimum RCS acceleration pattern has been calculated. We describe the simulation results and the comparison with the beam test.

 
THPEA011 Simulation of Magnetic Alloy Loaded RF Cavity and HOM Analysis 3697
 
  • K. Hasegawa, K. Hara, C. Ohmori, M. Tada, M. Yoshii
    KEK, Ibaraki
  • M. Nomura, A. Schnase, F. Tamura, M. Yamamoto
    JAEA/J-PARC, Tokai-Mura, Naka-Gun, Ibaraki-Ken
 
 

The RF cavity using Magnetic Alloy (MA) cores has been developed for achieving the high field gradient in J-PARC. For reducing the beam loading effects, the Q-value of the RF cavities in the Main Ring (MR) is controlled by using the cut-core configuration. In order to check the effect of HOMs between the cut-core gap, a simulation method of MA cores was studied and electromagnetic fields of excitation modes have been calculated by HFSS. We present the detail of the simulation method of MA cores and the HOM analysis of the cavity with the cut-cores.

 
THPEA016 Developments of Magnetic Alloy Cores with Higher Impedance for J-PARC Upgrade 3711
 
  • C. Ohmori, K. Hasegawa, A. Takagi
    KEK, Ibaraki
  • K. Hara, T. Shimada, H. Suzuki, M. Tada, M. Yoshii
    KEK/JAEA, Ibaraki-Ken
  • M. Nomura, A. Schnase, F. Tamura, M. Yamamoto
    JAEA/J-PARC, Tokai-Mura, Naka-Gun, Ibaraki-Ken
 
 

Magnetic alloy cavities are successfully used for J-PARC synchrotrons. These cavities generate much higher RF voltage than ordinary ferrite cavities. For future upgrades of J-PARC facilities, a higher field gradient is necessary. It was found that the characteristics of magnetic alloy is improved by a new annealing scheme under magnetic field. A large production system using an old cyclotron magnet is under construction for the J-PARC upgrade. The status of core development will be reported.

 
THPEA019 Thermal Deformation of Magnetic Alloy Cores for J-PARC RCS RF Cavities 3717
 
  • T. Shimada
    KEK/JAEA, Ibaraki-Ken
  • K. Hara, K. Hasegawa, C. Ohmori, M. Tada, M. Yoshii
    KEK, Ibaraki
  • M. Nomura, A. Schnase, H. Suzuki, F. Tamura, M. Yamamoto
    JAEA/J-PARC, Tokai-Mura, Naka-Gun, Ibaraki-Ken
 
 

Several magnetic alloy cores of the RF cavities, which are installed in the 3 GeV rapid cycling synchrotron (RCS) of J-PARC have shown buckling after about two years operation. To find the reason, why the local deformation happened, we made a test setup. There we heat up MA cores in air by 500 kHz RF and measure the thermal deformation in order to collect information about the buckling process. The results obtained by comparing the expansion of cores made by different production methods are reported.

 
THPEA022 Condition of MA Cores in the RF Cavities of J-PARC Synchrotrons after Several Years of Operation 3723
 
  • M. Nomura, A. Schnase, T. Shimada, H. Suzuki, F. Tamura, M. Yamamoto
    JAEA/J-PARC, Tokai-Mura, Naka-Gun, Ibaraki-Ken
  • E. Ezura, K. Hara, C. Ohmori, M. Tada, M. Yoshii
    KEK/JAEA, Ibaraki-Ken
  • K. Hasegawa, K. Takata
    KEK, Ibaraki
 
 

We have been operating the RF cavities loaded with MA cores with a high field gradient of more than 20 kV/m since October 2007. We have been measuring the RF cavity impedance at the shutdown periods, and we detected the impedance reductions of RCS RF cavities on January and June 2009. Taking out the RF cavities from the beam line and opening them, we found that many of cores showed a buckling at the inner radius. Also detachment of the epoxy coating intended to prevent rusting was observed. We report the detail of condition of MA cores and the relation between the impedance reduction and core condition.

 
THPEB014 Status and Upgrade Plan of Slow Extraction from the J-PARC Main Ring 3912
 
  • M. Tomizawa, T. Adachi, Y. Arakaki, A. Kiyomichi, S. Murasugi, R. Muto, H. Nakagawa, K. Niki, K. Okamura, Y. Sato, S. Sawada, Y. Shirakabe, H. Someya, K.H. Tanaka, T. Toyama, E. Yanaoka
    KEK, Ibaraki
  • A. Ando, Y. Hashimoto, T. Koseki, J. Takano
    J-PARC, KEK & JAEA, Ibaraki-ken
  • D. Horikawa, I. Sakai
    University of Fukui, Faculty of Engineering, Fukui
  • K. Mochiki, S. Onuma
    Tokyo City University, Tokyo
  • H. Sato
    Tsukuba University, Ibaraki
  • A. Schnase
    JAEA/J-PARC, Tokai-mura
 
 

High power protons from the J-PARC main ring is slowly extracted using the third integer resonance and delivered to the experimental hall for various nuclear and particle physics experiments. The slow extraction device comprises two electro static septa (ESS),ten magnetic septa, four bump magnets, eight resonant sextupole magnets and their power supply. One of the critical issue of the slow extraction is radiation caused by the beam loss during the slow extraction. We have developed the electrostatic and magnetic septa with thin septum thickness. A unique scheme with large step size and small angular spread of the extracted beam enables hit rate on the ESS less than 1% level. In January 2009, first 30 GeV proton beam has been successfully delivered to the fixed target. Quadrupole magnets and a DSP feedback control system to obtain a uniform beam spill structure were implemented in 2009 summer shutdown period. We will report the extraction efficiency, extracted beam profiles and spill structure obtained by the beam commissioning so far. We will also mention a upgrade plan based on some new ideas to aim a higher performance.