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Talman, R.M.

Paper Title Page
WEPEA083 Application of Model Independent Analysis with EPICS-DDS 2675
 
  • N. Malitsky, I. Pinayev
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York
  • R.M. Talman
    CLASSE, Ithaca, New York
  • C. Xiaomeng
    Stony Brook University, Stony Brook
 
 

Model Independent Analysis (MIA) is an essential approach for measuring optical properties of accelerators. In the paper, we evaluate its application in the context of the NSLS-II Light Source storage ring. It is the first application of the new high-level application environment based on the EPICS-DDS middle layer. Using a full-scale virtual accelerator, the paper explores the tolerance of the MIA approach against the different conditions such as measurement noise in the beam position monitors, magnet errors, misalignments, etc.

 
WEPEB022 The NTMAT EPICS-DDS Virtual Accelerator for the Cornell ERL Injector 2734
 
  • C.M. Gulliford, I.V. Bazarov, J. Dobbins, R.M. Talman
    CLASSE, Ithaca, New York
  • N. Malitsky
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York
 
 

Commissioning of the high brightness photoinjector for the Energy Recovery Linac at Cornell University continues. To aid in this process we have developed a 'Virtual Accelerator' application, which provides the beam physicist with an online high-level physics description of the machine. This application combines a linear optics model called Numerical Transfer Matrix (NTMAT), developed at Cornell, and EPICS-DDS, a middle-layer software based on the Experimental Physics and Industrial Control System (EPICS) toolkit and the Data Distribution Service (DDS) data-centric publish/subscribe model. We present the initial results of implementing this new software tool and its deployment in the Cornell ERL injector control room.