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Nolden, F.

Paper Title Page
TUIOB02 Simulations of Stochastic Cooling of Antiprotons in the Collector Ring CR 58
 
  • C. Dimopoulou, A. Dolinskii, T. Katayama, F. Nolden, C. Peschke, M. Steck
    GSI, Darmstadt
  • D. Möhl, L. Thorndahl
    CERN, Geneva
 
  The Collector Ring at FAIR will be equipped with pertinent stochastic cooling systems in order to achieve fast cooling of the hot secondary beams, antiprotons and rare isotopes, thus profiting from the repetition rate of the SIS100 synchrotron. Detailed simulations of the system performance are needed for optimization as well as input for the users of the CR pre-coooled beams, e.g. HESR. We presently focus on the antiproton cooling in the band 1-2 GHz. After a short overview, results from Fokker-Planck simulations with the CERN code of the momentum cooling of antiprotons will be presented. The performance of the betatron cooling of antiprotons, which has to proceed simultaneously with the momentum cooling, was calculated separately by means of an analytical model. First results and their implications will be discussed, including an outlook to future simulation work.  
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TUCOB01 Stochastic Cooling Project at the Experimental Storage Ring, CSRe at IMP 64
 
  • J. X. Wu, J. W. Xia, Y. Zhang
    IMP, Lanzhou
  • F. Caspers
    CERN, Geneva
  • T. Katayama, F. Nolden
    GSI, Darmstadt
 
  Stochastic cooling at the experimental Cooler Storage Ring, CSRe at the Institute of Modern Physics (IMP) in China, will be used mainly for the experiments with radioactive fragment beams. Those RI beams arrive from the fragment separator with the emittance of 20-50 mm. mrad and the momentum spread Dp/p of ± 0.5~1.0 %. The equipped electron cooler is not able to cool down this hot beam within enough short period. Stochastic cooling is effective for these RI beams to reduce the emittance to less than 5 mm.mrad and Dp/p of 5·10-4 within 2-20 sec. After the stochastic pre-cooling, the electron cooling will further cool down the emittance and Dp/p within several seconds. The paper gives the design of the stochastic cooling system and the simulation results. The new developed forward traveling wave structure is presented as well as the measured results of test model.  
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TUPS16 An Improved Forward Travelling Wave Structure Design for Stochastic Cooling at Experimental Cooler Storage Ring (CSRe) at the Institute of Modern Physics (IMP) in China 132
 
  • Y. Zhang, J. X. Wu
    IMP, Lanzhou
  • F. Caspers, L. Thorndahl
    CERN, Geneva
  • T. Katayama, F. Nolden
    GSI, Darmstadt
 
  An improved forward travelling wave (TW) structure as the pick-up/kicker is designed for the stochastic cooling to match the field wave’s (phase) velocity to that of the beam. The theoretical analysis is performed together with the simulations of the propagation characteristics. Using CST Microwave Studio (CST MWS), the simulated results, including phase velocity, characteristics impedance, and distributions of the longitudinal fields, are implemented and compared with the experimented results. The improved forward TW structure can be satisfied the requirements of stochastic cooling project at CSRe, which the phase velocity is closed to 0.70 (matching the desired beam energy of 400 MeV/u) and the characteristics impedance is 17 ohm.  
TUPS19 Simulation Study of Barrier Bucket Accumulation with Stochastic Cooling at the GSI ESR 136
 
  • T. Katayama, F. Nolden, G. Schreiber, M. Steck
    GSI, Darmstadt
  • T. Kikuchi
    Nagaoka University of Technology, Nagaoka, Niigata
  • H. Stockhorst
    FZJ, Jülich
 
  The beam accumulation experiments with use of barrier bucket cavity and stochastic cooling was successfully performed at the ESR, GSI. The two methods of barrier voltage operation, moving barrier and fixed barrier cases were tried, and for some cases the electron cooling was additionally employed as well as the stochastic cooling. In the present paper, the beam accumulation process are simulated with particle tracking method where the cooling force (stochastic and electron cooling), the diffusion force and the barrier voltage force are included as well as the IBS diffusion effects. The simulation results are well in agreement with the experimental results.  
TUPS20 Demonstration of Longitudinal Stacking in the ESR with Barrier Buckets and Stochastic Cooling 140
 
  • M. Steck, C. Dimopoulou, B. Franzke, O. E. Gorda, T. Katayama, F. Nolden, G. Schreiber
    GSI, Darmstadt
  • I. N. Meshkov, A. O. Sidorin, G. V. Trubnikov
    JINR, Dubna, Moscow Region
  • D. Möhl
    CERN, Geneva
  • R. Stassen, H. Stockhorst
    FZJ, Jülich
 
  Fast longitudinal beam accumulation has been demonstrated in the ESR at GSI with an Ar18+ beam coming from the synchrotron SIS18 at 400 MeV/u. Continuous application of stochastic cooling in all three phase space directions, merges the stack with the new injected bunch. Longitudinal beam compression was achieved by using either short barrier bucket rf pulses or by successive injections onto the unstable fixed point of the rf bucket at h=1. This recent experiment in the ESR provides the proof of principle for the planned longitudinal stacking of pre-cooled antiprotons in the HESR, injected from the CR.