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accumulation

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MOPD065 Beam Accumulation with Barrier Voltage and Stochastic Cooling injection, collider, ion, proton 837
 
  • T. Katayama, M. Steck
    GSI, Darmstadt
  • T. Kikuchi
    Nagaoka University of Technology, Nagaoka, Niigata
  • R. Maier, D. Prasuhn, R. Stassen, H. Stockhorst
    FZJ, Jülich
  • I.N. Meshkov
    JINR, Dubna, Moscow Region
 
 

Anti-proton beam accumulation at CERN and FNAL has been performed with use of stochastic stacking in the momentum space. Thus accumulated beam has a large momentum spread and resultantly large radial beam size with large dispersion ring. In the present proposed scenario, beams from the pre-cooling ring are injected into the longitudinal empty space prepared by the barrier voltages and subsequently the stochastic cooling is applied. After the well cooling, barrier voltages will prepare again the empty space for the next beam injection. We have simulated the stacking process up to 100 stacking with use of the bunched beam tracking code including the stochastic cooling force and the diffusion force such as Schottky diffusion term, thermal diffusion, IBS effects. The synchrotron motion by barrier voltages are included with 4th order symplectic method. Examples of the application to 3 GeV anti-proton beam for the HESR ring in FAIR project are presented as well as the accumulation of heavy ion beam 3.5 GeV/u Au, at the NICA collider at JINR project.

 
TUPEA002 The Influences of Initially Induced Inhomogeneity over the Dynamics of Mismatched Intense Charged Beams emittance, simulation, focusing, controls 1330
 
  • R.P. Nunes
    UFPel, Pelotas
  • L.C. Martins
    UDESC, Joinville
  • F.B. Rizzato
    IF-UFRGS, Porto Alegre
 
 

Although undesired in many applications, the intrinsic spurious spatial inhomogeneity that permeates real systems is the forerunner instability which leads high-intensity charged particle beams to its equilibrium. In general, this equilibrium is reached in a particular way, by the development of a tenuous particle population around the original beam, conventionally known as the halo. In this way, the purpose of this work is to analyze the influence of the magnitude of initial inhomogeneity over the dynamics and over the equilibrium characteristics of initially quasi-homogeneous mismatched beams. For that, all beam constituent particles, which are initially disposed in an equidistant form, suffer a progressive perturbation through random noise with a variable amplitude. Dynamical and equilibrium quantities are quantified as functions of the noise amplitude, which indirectly is a consistent measure of the initial beam inhomogeneity. The results have been obtained by the means of full self-consistent N-particle beam numerical simulations and seem to be an important complement to the investigations already carried out in prior works.

 
TUPEB053 Measurements of Fast Transition Instability in RHIC electron, ion, octupole, synchrotron 1638
 
  • V. Ptitsyn, M. Blaskiewicz, W. Fischer, R.C. Lee, S.Y. Zhang
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York
 
 

A fast transition instability presents a limiting factor for ion beam intensity in RHIC. Several pieces of evidence show that electron clouds play an important role in establishing the threshold of this instability. In RHIC Runs 7 and 8 dedicated measurements of the instability, using different beam instrumentation tools (Button BPM, Wall Current Monitor, transition monitors) were done in order to observe the instability development over hundreds turns. The papers presents and discusses the results of those measurements in time and frequency domains.

 
TUPEC026 Determination of the Magnetic Characteristics in the Injection Septum for the Metrology Light Source septum, injection, storage-ring, pick-up 1773
 
  • O. Dressler, M.V. Hartrott
    Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin für Materialien und Energie GmbH, Elektronen-Speicherring BESSY II, Berlin
  • N. Hauge
    Danfysik A/S, Jyllinge
 
 

The pre-accelerator microtron supplies an electron beam at 105 MeV for the Metrology Light Source (MLS) of the Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt (PTB) in Berlin. The beam is delivered via the transfer line to the injection septum and then into the storage ring. This septum magnet has its stainless steel vacuum beam pipe placed inside a laminated silicon iron magnet core. Hence, the pulsed magnetic field (half sine) used for the beam deflection must propagate through the thin metallic beam pipe. During the commissioning of the injection process, it became apparent that the calculated nominal pulse current for this energy and geometry had to be increased by 30 % to achieve proper beam transfer and accumulation. Two problems were apparent. Firstly, the injected beam trajectory had to be set at an angle away from the main beam axis. Secondly, the beam transfer from the septum entrance to exit was disturbed. As a first measure, the septum current pulse length was extended from 35 to 107 μs. Further on, the septum magnet was insulated from the transfer line beam pipe by a ceramic brake. This paper reports on measurements of pulsed magnetic fields inside the septum magnet.


* Commissioning and Operation of the Metrology Light Source, J. Feikes et al., BESSY, Berlin, Germany; R. Klein, G. Ulm, Physikalisch-Technische Bundesanstalt, Berlin, Germany; EPAC08, Genoa, Italy.

 
TUPD073 Effect of Bunch Shape on Electron-Proton Instability electron, proton, vacuum, storage-ring 2090
 
  • Z. Liu
    IUCF, Bloomington, Indiana
  • S.M. Cousineau, V.V. Danilov, J. Galambos, J.A. Holmes, M.A. Plum
    ORNL, Oak Ridge, Tennessee
 
 

The instability caused by the electron cloud effect (ECE) may set an upper limit to beam intensity in proton storage rings. This instability is potentially a major obstacle to the full intensity operation, at 1.5·1014 protons per pulse, of the Spallation Neutron Source (SNS). High intensity experiments have been done with different sets of parameters that affect the electron-proton (e-p) instability, of which bunch intensity and bunch shape are considered as two main factors. In the experiment, the phase and amplitude of the second harmonic RF cavity are used to modify the bunch shape. Simulation with the beam dynamics code ORBIT has been carried out to compare with experimental results and to understand the impact of bunch shape on electron cloud build-up and beam stability. We have also attempted to benchmark the e-p model to predict the frequency spectrum and the RF buncher voltage threshold values against experimental results. Details and discussion will be reported in this conference.


* M.T.F. Pivi and M.A. Furman, PRSTAB 6, 034201 (2003)
** V. Danilov et. al, 39th ICFA Advanced Beam Dynamics Workshop, 2006
*** B. Macek et. al, PAC 2003

 
WEPEB049 Recent Progress of the Bunch-by-bunch Feedback System at the Advanced Photon Source feedback, emittance, pick-up, damping 2803
 
  • C. Yao, N.P. Di Monte, V. Sajaev
    ANL, Argonne
 
 

A bunch-by-bunch feedback system was installed at the APS in 2008. Close-loop tests were conducted and improvements have been made to the system that include two 500-watt amplifiers, a new location for the horizontal drive stripline, a two-blade new horizontal stripline, and upgrade of front-end electronics. With these improvements we are able to stabilize beam with a reduced chromaticity of 0.45 in the horizontal plane and 2.5 in the vertical plane for the 24-singlet bunch pattern. Beam lifetime has increased from 8.5 hours to 15 hours. We did not observe any obvious increase in the effective beam emittance and rms beam motion. More studies will be performed to explore the potential of improving beam performance of the hybrids fill pattern, which has a 16-mA leading bunch. We report the system improvements and the results of our test results.


cyao@aps.anl.gov

 
THYMH01 Lanzhou Cooler Storage Ring Commissioning ion, extraction, heavy-ion, injection 3611
 
  • J.W. Xia, Y. Liu, L.J. Mao, R.S. Mao, J.C. Yang, Y.J. Yuan
    IMP, Lanzhou
 
 

CSR has recently made significant progress in commissioning a variety of light to heavy ion in the cooler ring. Also, carbon therapy was successfully carried out. A significant achievement is the energy modulation extraction using slow extraction realizing 3D conformal treatment.

 

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THPEA085 Vacuum Performances of Some LHC Collimators vacuum, ion, injection, target 3867
 
  • V. Baglin, G. Bregliozzi, J.M. Jimenez
    CERN, Geneva
  • J. Kamiya
    JAEA/J-PARC, Tokai-Mura, Naka-Gun, Ibaraki-Ken
 
 

Pressure increases are observed with the first beams circulating in the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC) close to some collimators. This paper describes the vacuum performances of the collimators as measured in the laboratory and also the performances obtained in the machine. Based on these observations, estimations of some operational behavior such as pressure increase and NEG reactivation scenario are given.

 
THPEC038 The Concept of Antiproton Accumulation in the RESR Storage Ring of the FAIR Project antiproton, injection, simulation, storage-ring 4140
 
  • M. Steck, C. Dimopoulou, A. Dolinskyy, B. Franzke, T. Katayama, S.A. Litvinov, F. Nolden, C. Peschke
    GSI, Darmstadt
  • D. Möhl, L. Thorndahl
    CERN, Geneva
 
 

In the complex of the accelerators of the FAIR project the RESR storage ring is mainly designed as an accumulator ring for antiprotons. The continuous accumulation of pre-cooled batches with a cycle time of 10 s from the collector ring is essential to achieve the goal of a production rate of 10 million antiprotons per second. The accumulation in the RESR uses a stochastic cooling system which operates in longitudinal phase space, similar as previous antiproton accumulator rings at CERN and FNAL. The ingredients of the accumulation system, the ring lattice functions, the electrode design and the electrical circuits have been studied in detailed simulations. A system has been found which safely provides the required performance and offers the option of upgrades, if higher accumulation rate is required in future. Maximum intensities of 100 billion cooled antiprotons are planned which are expected to stay below the instability threshold.