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- A.S. Fisher, D. Arnett, H. De Staebler, S. Debarger, R.K. Jobe, D. Kharakh, D.J. McCormick, M. Petree, M.C. Ross, J. Seeman, B. Smith
SLAC, Menlo Park, California
- J. Albert, D. Hitlin
CALTECH, Pasadena, California
- J. Button-Shafer, J.A. Kadyk
LBNL, Berkeley, California
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An x-ray beam-size monitor for positrons in the low-energy ring (LER) of the PEP-II B Factory at SLAC is being designed to accommodate the present 2-A, 3.1-GeV beam and anticipated currents of up to 4.7 A. The final photon stop of an arc will be rebuilt to pass dipole radiation through cooled apertures to optics 17 m from the source. Zone-plate imaging there can achieve a resolution of 6 microns, compared to 35 for a pinhole camera. Two multilayer x-ray mirrors precede the zone plate, limiting the bandwidth to 1%, in order to avoid chromatic blurring and protect the zone plate. Despite the narrow bandwidth, the zone plate?s larger diameter compared to a pinhole camera allows for a comparable photon flux. We will image all 1700 LER bunches and also measure them individually, searching for variations along the train due to electron-cloud and beam-beam effects, using a scanning detector conceptually derived from a wire scanner. A mask with three narrow slots at different orientations will scan the image to obtain three projections. In one passage, signals from a fast scintillator and photomultiplier will be rapidly digitized and sorted to profile each bunch.
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