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Shibata, K.

Paper Title Page
TUPEB018 CSR in the SuperKEKB Damping Ring 1554
 
  • D.M. Zhou, T. Abe, H. Ikeda, M. Kikuchi, K. Ohmi, K. Oide, K. Shibata, M. Tobiyama
    KEK, Ibaraki
  • G.V. Stupakov
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California
 
 

Coherent synchrotron radiation (CSR) is generated when a bunched beam traverses a dipole magnet or a wiggler/undulator. It can degrade the beam quality in both storage rings and linacs through enhancing the beam energy spread and lengthening the bunch length, even cause single-bunch microwave instabilities. Using several methods, CSR impedances in the positron damping ring (DR) of the SuperKEKB which is under design were calculated. From the impedances due to CSR, resistive wall and various vacuum components, quasi-Green function wake potentials were constructed and used in simulations of Particle-In-Cell (PIC) tracking. We present the CSR related results in this paper.

 
TUPD042 Loss Factor and Impedance of IR Beam Ducts for SuperKEKB and KEKB 2018
 
  • K. Shibata, K. Kanazawa
    KEK, Ibaraki
 
 

As part of the design works of the interaction region (IR) of SuperKEKB (the upgrade of KEKB B-factory (KEKB)), the loss factor and impedance of beam ducts for the interaction point (IP duct) were calculated by GdfiedL. The IP duct is round and connected to beam ducts for electron and positron beams with a diameter of 20 mm via Y-shaped crotch ducts at both ends. The lengths of the straight section and crotch section are about 200 mm, respectively. The beam crossing angle is 83 mrad. Calculations for two types of IP duct were performed. Both ducts are almost same in design except for the diameter of the straight section (20 mm and 30 mm). The loss factors were about 0.001 V/pC in both cases when the bunch length was 6 mm. The longitudinal impedances showed that there were no modes trapped longitudinally in IP duct. However, from the results of the transverse impedance and eigenmode calculation, it was found that many TE modes can be trapped at the crotch section if the beam is off-center of the beam duct. For comparison, the loss factor and impedance of the IR beam duct of KEKB are also being calculated now. Full details of the calculation results will be provided in this report.

 
TUPD043 Experimental Studies on Grooved Surfaces to Suppress Secondary Electron Emission 2021
 
  • Y. Suetsugu, H. Fukuma, K. Shibata
    KEK, Ibaraki
  • M.T.F. Pivi, L. Wang
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California
 
 

Grooved surfaces are effective to suppress the secondary electron emission, and can be a possible technique to mitigate the electron cloud instability (ECI) in positron/proton storage rings. Various types of triangular grooved surfaces have been studied in a laboratory, and also using an intense positron beam of the KEKB B-factory. The grooves have vertex angles of 20 ~ 30 degrees, and depths of 2.5 mm. In the laboratory, the secondary electron yield (SEY) of sample pieces were measured using an electron beam in a magnetic-free condition. The maximum SEY well below 1.0 was obtained after some extent of electron bombardment for most of grooved surfaces. To test he groove efficacy in magnetic field regions of particle accelerators, insertions with several types of grooved surfaces were installed into a test chamber in a wiggler magnet of KEKB positron ring. In a dipole-like chamber wit magnetic field (0.78 T), the reduction in the electron density around the beam was observed for a grooved section when compared to the case of a flat surface with TiN coating. An R&D effort is underway to optimize and manufacture the grooved surface in accelerator beam pipes for practical use.

 
WEOAMH01 Beam Tests of a Clearing Electrode for Electron Cloud Mitigation at KEKB Positron Ring 2369
 
  • Y. Suetsugu, H. Fukuma, K. Shibata
    KEK, Ibaraki
  • M.T.F. Pivi, L. Wang
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California
 
 

In order to mitigate the electron cloud instability (ECI) in a positron ring, an electron clearing electrode with a very thin structure has been developed. The electrode has been tested with an intense positron beam of the KEKB B-factory using a test chamber. A drastic reduction in the electron density around the beam was demonstrated in a dipole magnetic field (0.78 T). The clearing electrode was then applied to the actual copper beam pipe (94 mm in diameter) with antechambers for wiggler magnets of KEKB. The feed-through was revised to improve reliability, and the length was modified to fit a real magnet. The input power into the electrode was estimated to be approximately 80 W/m. The clear reduction in the electron density was also observed by applying a voltage of +500 V to the electrode. The design of clearing electrodes has now reached a high reliability and it is suitable for accelerator applications.

 

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TUYMH02 Electron Cloud at Low Emittance in CesrTA 1251
 
  • M.A. Palmer, J.P. Alexander, M.G. Billing, J.R. Calvey, C.J. Conolly, J.A. Crittenden, J. Dobbins, G. Dugan, N. Eggert, E. Fontes, M.J. Forster, R.E. Gallagher, S.W. Gray, S. Greenwald, D.L. Hartill, W.H. Hopkins, D.L. Kreinick, B. Kreis, Z. Leong, Y. Li, X. Liu, J.A. Livezey, A. Lyndaker, J. Makita, M.P. McDonald, V. Medjidzade, R.E. Meller, T.I. O'Connell, S.B. Peck, D.P. Peterson, G. Ramirez, M.C. Rendina, P. Revesz, D.H. Rice, N.T. Rider, D. L. Rubin, D. Sagan, J.J. Savino, R.M. Schwartz, R.D. Seeley, J.W. Sexton, J.P. Shanks, J.P. Sikora, E.N. Smith, C.R. Strohman, H.A. Williams
    CLASSE, Ithaca, New York
  • F. Antoniou, S. Calatroni, M. Gasior, O.R. Jones, Y. Papaphilippou, J. Pfingstner, G. Rumolo, H. Schmickler, M. Taborelli
    CERN, Geneva
  • D. Asner
    Carleton University, College of Natural Sciences, Ottawa, Ontario
  • L. Boon, A.F. Garfinkel
    Purdue University, West Lafayette, Indiana
  • J.M. Byrd, C.M. Celata, J.N. Corlett, S. De Santis, M.A. Furman, A. Jackson, R. Kraft, D.V. Munson, G. Penn, D.W. Plate, M. Venturini
    LBNL, Berkeley, California
  • B.T. Carlson
    Grove City College, Grove City, Pennsylvania
  • T. Demma
    INFN/LNF, Frascati (Roma)
  • R.T. Dowd
    ASCo, Clayton, Victoria
  • J.W. Flanagan, P. Jain, K. Kanazawa, K. Kubo, K. Ohmi, H. Sakai, K. Shibata, Y. Suetsugu, M. Tobiyama
    KEK, Ibaraki
  • D. Gonnella
    Clarkson University, Potsdam, New York
  • W. Guo
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York
  • K.C. Harkay
    ANL, Argonne
  • R. Holtzapple
    CalPoly, San Luis Obispo, CA
  • J.K. Jones, A. Wolski
    Cockcroft Institute, Warrington, Cheshire
  • D. Kharakh, J.S.T. Ng, M.T.F. Pivi, L. Wang
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California
  • M.C. Ross, C.-Y. Tan, R.M. Zwaska
    Fermilab, Batavia
  • L. Schächter
    Technion, Haifa
  • E.L. Wilkinson
    Loyola University, Chicago, Illinois
 
 

The Cornell Electron Storage Ring (CESR) has been reconfigured as a test accelerator (CesrTA) for a program of electron cloud (EC) research at ultra low emittance. The instrumentation in the ring has been upgraded with local diagnostics for measurement of cloud density and with improved beam diagnostics for the characterization of both the low emittance performance and the beam dynamics of high intensity bunch trains interacting with the cloud. Finally a range of EC mitigation methods have been deployed and tested. Measurements of cloud density and its impact on the beam under a range of conditions will be presented and compared with simulations. The effectiveness of a range of mitigation techniques will also be discussed.

 

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TUPEB019 Evaluation of the Detector BG for SuperKEKB 1557
 
  • M. Iwasaki, Y. Funakoshi, J. Haba, N. Iida, K. Kanazawa, H. Koiso, Y. Ohnishi, K. Shibata, S. Tanaka, T. Tsuboyama, S. Uno, Y. Ushiroda
    KEK, Ibaraki
  • H. Aihara, C. Ng, S. Sugihara
    University of Tokyo, Tokyo
  • H. Nakano, H. Yamamoto
    Tohoku University, Graduate School of Science, Sendai
 
 

SuperKEKB is the upgrade plan of the current B-factory experiment with the KEKB accelerator at KEK. Its luminosity is designed to be 8x1035 /cm2/s (40 times higher than KEKB) and the integrated luminosity is expected to be 50 ab-1. In SuperKEKB, it is important to evaluate the beam induced BG and design the interaction region (IR) to assure the stable detector operation. To estimate the beam induced BG, we construct the beam-line simulation based on the GEANT4 simulation. In this paper, we report the BG evaluation and the IR design for SuperKEKB.

 
TUPEB054 Design of Positron Damping Ring for Super-KEKB 1641
 
  • M. Kikuchi, T. Abe, K. Egawa, H. Fukuma, K. Furukawa, N. Iida, H. Ikeda, T. Kamitani, K. Kanazawa, K. Ohmi, K. Oide, K. Shibata, M. Tawada, M. Tobiyama, D.M. Zhou
    KEK, Ibaraki
 
 

Super-KEKB, an upgrade plan of the present KEKB collider, has recently changed its scheme from 'high current' option to 'nano-beam' scheme. In the latter the current is relatively low(4A/2.3A for LER/HER ring) compared to that of the high-current option(9.4A/4.1A), while the vertical beam size is squeezed to 60 nm at the interaction point to get the high luminosity. The emittance of the injected beam should be low and, since the Tousheck lifetime is very short(600 sec), the intensity of the positron beam is as high as 8 nC/pulse. For the electron beam a low-emittance high-intensity RF gun is adopted. For the positron beam a damping ring has been proposed. The design of the damping ring has been performed for the high-current option*. In this paper an updated design for the nano-beam scheme is presented.


* Nucl. Instr. Meth. A 556 (2006) 13-19

 
WEOAMH02 Recent Progress of KEKB 2372
 
  • Y. Funakoshi, T. Abe, K. Akai, Y. Cai, K. Ebihara, K. Egawa, A. Enomoto, J.W. Flanagan, H. Fukuma, K. Furukawa, T. Furuya, J. Haba, T. Ieiri, N. Iida, H. Ikeda, T. Ishibashi, M. Iwasaki, T. Kageyama, S. Kamada, T. Kamitani, S. Kato, M. Kikuchi, E. Kikutani, H. Koiso, M. Masuzawa, T. Mimashi, T. Miura, A. Morita, T.T. Nakamura, K. Nakanishi, M. Nishiwaki, Y. Ogawa, K. Ohmi, Y. Ohnishi, N. Ohuchi, K. Oide, T. Oki, M. Ono, M. Satoh, Y. Seimiya, K. Shibata, M. Suetake, Y. Suetsugu, T. Sugimura, Y. Susaki, T. Suwada, M. Tawada, M. Tejima, M. Tobiyama, N. Tokuda, S. Uehara, S. Uno, Y. Yamamoto, Y. Yano, K. Yokoyama, M. Yoshida, S.I. Yoshimoto, D.M. Zhou, Z.G. Zong
    KEK, Ibaraki
 
 

KEKB is an e-/e+ collider for the study of B physics and is also used for machine studies for future machines. The peak luminosity of KEKB, which is the world-highest value, has been still increasing. This report summarizes recent progress at KEKB.

 

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WEPE097 Recommendation for the Feasibility of More Compact LC Damping Rings 3578
 
  • M.T.F. Pivi, L. Wang
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California
  • C.M. Celata, M.A. Furman, M. Venturini
    LBNL, Berkeley, California
  • J.A. Crittenden, G. Dugan, M.A. Palmer
    CLASSE, Ithaca, New York
  • T. Demma, S. Guiducci
    INFN/LNF, Frascati (Roma)
  • K.C. Harkay
    ANL, Argonne
  • O.B. Malyshev
    Cockcroft Institute, Warrington, Cheshire
  • K. Ohmi, K. Shibata, Y. Suetsugu
    KEK, Ibaraki
  • Y. Papaphilippou, G. Rumolo
    CERN, Geneva
 
 

As part of the International Linear Collider (ILC) collaboration, we have compared the electron cloud effect for different Damping Ring designs respectively with 6.4 km and 3.2 km circumference and investigated the feasibility of a shorter damping ring with respect to the electron cloud build-up and related beam instability. These studies were carried out with beam parameters of the ILC Low Power option. A reduced damping ring circumference has been proposed for the new ILC baseline design and would allow to considerably reduce the number of components, wiggler magnets and costs. We also briefly discuss the plans for future studies including the luminosity upgrade option with shorter bunch spacing, the evaluation of mitigations and the integration of the CesrTA results into the Damping Ring design.