A   B   C   D   E   F   G   H   I   J   K   L   M   N   O   P   Q   R   S   T   U   V   W   X   Y   Z  

Kishek, R.A.

Paper Title Page
WE3GRC05 Time-Dependent Phase-Space Mapping of Space-Charge-Dominated Beams 1928
 
  • D. Stratakis
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York
  • R.B. Fiorito, I. Haber, R.A. Kishek, P.G. O'Shea, M. Reiser, J.C.T. Thangaraj
    UMD, College Park, Maryland
  • K. Tian
    JLAB, Newport News, Virginia
 
 

Funding: This work is funded by the US Dept. of Energy Offices of High Energy Physics and High Energy Density Physics, and by the US Dept. of Defense Office of Naval Research and Joint Technology Office


In this paper we report on a proof of principle experiment for demonstrating the possibility of reconstructing the time resolved-phase-space distribution of a space-charge dominated beam by a tomographic technique which provides us with far more information than a time-sliced emittance. We emphasize that this work describes and demonstrates a new methodology which can be applicable to any beam pulse using imaging methods with the appropriate time resolution for the pulse duration. The combination of a high precision tomographic diagnostic with fast imaging screens and a gated camera are used to produce phase space maps of two beams: one with a parabolic current profile and another with a short perturbation atop a rectangular pulse. The correlations between longitudinal and transverse phase spaces are apparent and their impact on the dynamics is discussed.

 

slides icon

Slides

 
TH6REP053 Determination of True RMS Emittance from OTR Measurements 4072
 
  • C. F. Papadopoulos, R.B. Fiorito, R.A. Kishek, P.G. O'Shea, A.G. Shkvarunets
    UMD, College Park, Maryland
  • M.E. Conde, W. Gai, J.G. Power
    ANL, Argonne
 
 

Funding: This work is funded by the US Dept. of Energy Offices of High Energy Physics and High Energy Density Physics, and by the US Dept. of Defense Office of Naval Research and Joint Technology Office.


Single foil OTR and two foil OTR interferometry have been successfully used to measure the size and divergence of electron beams with a wide range of energies. To measure rms emittance, two cameras are employed: one focused on the foil to obtain the spatial distribution of the beam, the other focused to infinity to obtain the angular distribution. The beam is first magnetically focused to a minimum size in directions which are orthogonal to the propagation axis, using a pair of quadrupoles. Then simultaneous measurements of the rms size (x,y) and divergence (x’,y’) of the beam are made. However, in the process of a quadrupole scan, the beam can go through a spot size minimum, a divergence minimum and a waist, i.e. the position where the cross-correlation term is zero. In general, the beam size, divergence and focusing strength for each of these conditions are different. We present new algorithms that relate the beam and magnetic parameters to the rms emittance for each of these three cases. We also compare the emittances, obtained using our algorithms and measurements made at the ANL AWA facility, with those produced by computer simulation.

 
FR5PFP049 Effects of Transverse Physics on Nonlinear Evolution of Longitudinal Space-Charge Waves in Beams 4418
 
  • K. Tian
    JLAB, Newport News, Virginia
  • I. Haber, R.A. Kishek, P.G. O'Shea, M. Reiser
    UMD, College Park, Maryland
  • D. Stratakis
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York
 
 

Funding: This work is funded by the US Dept. of Energy Offices of High Energy Physics and High Energy Density Physics, and by the US Dept. of Defense Office of Naval Research and Joint Technology Office


Longitudinal space-charge waves can introduce energy perturbations into charge particle beams and degrade the beam quality, which is critical to many modern applications of particle accelerators. Although many longitudinal phenomena arising from small perturbations can be explained by a one-dimensional cold fluid theory, nonlinear behavior of space-charge waves observed in experiments has not been well understood. In this paper, we summarize our recent investigation by means of more detailed measurements and self-consistent simulations. Combining the numerical capability of a PIC code, WARP, with the detailed initial conditions measured by our newly developed time resolved 6-D phase space mapping technique, we are able to construct a self consistent model for studying the complex physics of longitudinal dynamics of space-charge dominated beams. Results from simulation studies suggest that the unexplained nonlinear behavior of space-charge waves may be due to transverse mismatch or misalignment of beams.

 
FR5PFP058 Longitudinal Beam Bucket Studies for a Space-Charge Dominated Beam 4440
 
  • B.L. Beaudoin, S. Bernal, K. Fiuza, I. Haber, R.A. Kishek, P.G. O'Shea, M. Reiser, D.F. Sutter, J.C.T. Thangaraj
    UMD, College Park, Maryland
 
 

Funding: * This work is funded by US Dept. of Energy Offices of High Energy Physics and High Energy Density Physics, and by the US Dept. of Defense Office of Naval Research and Joint Technology Office.


The containment of beams in the longitudinal direction is fundamental to the operation of accelerators that circulate high intensity beams for long distances such as the University of Maryland Electron Ring (UMER); a scaled accelerator using low-energy electrons to model space-charge dynamics. The longitudinal space-charge forces in the beam, responsible for the expansion of the beam ends, cause a change in energy at the beam head/tail with respect to the main injected energy or flat-top part of the beam. This paper presents the first experimental results on using an induction cell to longitudinally focus the circulating beam within the UMER lattice for multiple turns.


Keywords: electron ring, focusing, induction cell.

 
FR5PFP059 Resonance Phenomena over a Broad Range of Beam Intensities in an Electron Storage Ring 4443
 
  • S. Bernal, B.L. Beaudoin, M. Cornacchia, K. Fiuza, I. Haber, R.A. Kishek, T.W. Koeth, P.G. O'Shea, C. F. Papadopoulos, M. Reiser, D.F. Sutter, C. Wu
    UMD, College Park, Maryland
 
 

Funding: This work is funded by the US Dept. of Energy Offices of High Energy Physics and High Energy Density Physics, and by the US Dept. of Defense Office of Naval Research and Joint Technology Office


The University of Maryland Electron Ring (UMER) can operate over a broader range of beam intensities than other circular machines. Naturally, transverse and longitudinal space charge effects limit the ability to store beams. In UMER, the resonance properties of the machine in the two regimes of operation, emittance- and space charge-dominated transport, differ significantly. We report on studies of linear betatron resonances in UMER from 0.6 mA to 80 mA beam current, corresponding to theoretical space charge incoherent tune shifts well over the Lasslet limit. The observations are related to existing theories as well as to computer simulations. We also describe the instrumentation and techniques used for tune measurements.

 
FR5PFP060 Modeling Acceleration of High Intensity Space-Charge-Dominated Beams 4446
 
  • K. Fiuza, B.L. Beaudoin, S. Bernal, I. Haber, R.A. Kishek, P.G. O'Shea, M. Reiser, D.F. Sutter
    UMD, College Park, Maryland
 
 

Funding: This work is funded by the US Dept. of Energy Offices of High Energy Physics and High Energy Density Physics, and by the US Dept. of Defense Office of Naval Research and Joint Technology Office.


Understanding the dynamics of the acceleration of high-intensity space-charge-dominated electron and ion beam is very important. Accelerating by steps a space-charge-dominated beam can be fundamentally different from beams at lower intensities, because at sufficiently high beam intensities the beam response to acceleration can drive to some unknown instabilities leading to a significant beam losses. This work analyses the acceleration of the University of Maryland Electron Ring (UMER) beam, i.e., high current, low-energy and space-charge-dominated electron beam which is applicable, on a scale basis, to a large class of other beam systems. We use the WARP particle-in-cell code to perform simulations that are compared with theoretical predictions and preliminary experimental results.

 
FR5PFP061 Matching and Injection of Beams with Space Charge into the University of Maryland Electron Ring (UMER) 4449
 
  • R.A. Kishek, B.L. Beaudoin, S. Bernal, M. Cornacchia, I. Haber, P.G. O'Shea, M. Reiser, D.F. Sutter, J.C.T. Thangaraj, C. Wu
    UMD, College Park, Maryland
  • D. Stratakis
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York
 
 

Funding: This work is funded by the US Dept. of Energy Offices of High Energy Physics and High Energy Density Physics, and by the US Dept. of Defense Office of Naval Research and Joint Technology Office


Beam matching is critical for avoiding envelope mismatch oscillations that can lead to emittance growth and halo formation, especially if the beam has significant space charge. The University of Maryland Electron Ring (UMER) is a research storage ring that is designed for scaled studies that are applicable to many larger machines. Using 10 keV electron beams at relatively high current (0.6 – 100 mA), space charge forces are relatively strong. Matching of the UMER beam is rendered difficult by the space charge, the crowdedness of the lattice, and especially the unique injection scheme where an offset oversized quadrupole is shared between the ring and the injector. In this paper we discuss several schemes for optimizing the matching at injection, both analytical and beam-based, which we test using particle-in-cell simulations with the code, WARP. Comparison to UMER experimental data is provided where available.

 
FR5PFP062 Halo Regeneration in Intense Charged Particle Beams 4452
 
  • C. F. Papadopoulos, S. Bernal, I. Haber, R.A. Kishek, P.G. O'Shea, M. Reiser
    UMD, College Park, Maryland
 
 

Funding: This work is funded by the US Dept. of Energy Offices of High Energy Physics and High Energy Density Physics, and by the US Dept of Defense Office of Naval Research and Joint Technology Office.


Halo is one important limiting factor for the continuous and reliable operation of intense electron or ion beam facilities, such as FELs and spallation neutron sources. A halo population outside the core of the beam can lead to uncontrolled beam loss, electron cloud effects and activation of the beam pipe, as well as beam quality degradation. In this study, we focus on the issue of halo removal, by means of beam collimation, and subsequent halo regeneration. We compare the particle-core model of halo creation to accurate, self consistent particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations. We show that under certain conditions the halo is regenerated even after collimation. This can only be understood within the context of collective effects, particularly in the case of intense beams.

 
FR5PFP063 Coherent Phenomena over a Broad Range of Beam Intensities in the Electron Storage Ring UMER 4455
 
  • D.F. Sutter, B.L. Beaudoin, S. Bernal, M. Cornacchia, K. Fiuza, I. Haber, R.A. Kishek, P.G. O'Shea, M. Reiser, C. Wu
    UMD, College Park, Maryland
 
 

Funding: *This work is funded by the US Dept. of Energy Offices of High Energy Physics and High Energy Density Physics, and by the US Dept. of Defense Office of Naval Research and Joint Technology Office


The University of Maryland Electron Ring (UMER) is designed for operation over a broad range of beam intensities, including those normally achieved only in linacs. This is possible thanks to a combination of low-energy (10 keV) electrons and a high density of magnetic quadrupoles (72 over an 11.5 m circumference) that allow operation from 0.5 mA to 100 mA; that is, from the emittance dominated to the highly space charge dominated regimes. We present results of basic centroid-motion characterization, including measurements of closed-orbit distortion, momentum compaction factor, and natural chromaticity and dispersion. These are compared with results from computer simulations employing the code ELEGANT. We discuss the techniques and challenges behind the measurements with fast beam-position and wall-current monitors, and also the special role of the background ambient magnetic field for beam steering.

 
FR5PFP098 Self-Consistent Non-Stationary Model for Multipactor Analysis in Dielectric-Loaded Accelerator Structures 4532
 
  • O.V. Sinitsyn, T.M. Antonsen, R.A. Kishek, G.S. Nusinovich
    UMD, College Park, Maryland
 
 

Funding: Office of High Energy Physics, US Department of Energy (DoE).


Multipactor (MP) may occur in many situations: one- and two-surface MP, resonant and poly-phase-MP, on the surface of metals and dielectrics etc. We consider this phenomenon in dielectric loaded accelerator (DLA) structures. The starting point for our work is experimental and theoretical studies of such structures jointly done by Argonne National Lab and Naval Research Lab*. In the theoretical model developed during those studies, the space charge field due to the accumulated charged particles is taken into account as a parameter. We offer a non-stationary 2D cylindrical model where the DC field is taken into account self-consistently. We have improved our previous model** and demonstrated that its predictions are in good agreement with the results of other studies***. We also demonstrate some recent results where the effects of axial particle motion are taken into account.


*J.G. Power et al., PRL, 92, 164801, 2004
**O.V. Sinitsyn et. al., AIP Proc. 13th Advanced Accelerator Concepts, 2008
***J.G. Power, S.H. Gold, AIP Proc.12th Advanced Accelerator Concepts, 2006

 
FR5REP029 A Novel Beam Steering Algorithm with Orbit Response Matrix 4829
 
  • C. Wu, E.H. Abed, B.L. Beaudoin, S. Bernal, K. Fiuza, I. Haber, R.A. Kishek, P.G. O'Shea, M. Reiser, D.F. Sutter
    UMD, College Park, Maryland
 
 

Funding: This work is funded by the US Dept. of Energy Offices of High Energy Physics and High Energy Density Physics, and by the US Dept. of Defense Office of Naval Research and Joint Technology Office.


Beam centroid control is an important method for optimizing the performance for accelerators, including the University of Maryland Electron Ring (UMER), which is a scaled low-energy (10KeV) storage ring. The conventional response matrix and singular value decomposition approach do not work well on the UMER because of the unique ring structure. One of the purposes of this work is to verify that the beam centroid could be controlled in the presence of very strong space charge. In this paper, we present a novel algorithm which is based on the singular value decomposition, but uses a different response matrix, which is computed from the closed equilibrium orbit and beam positions up to the first four turns in the multi-turn beam circulation. Other issues like strong coupling between the horizontal steering dipoles and vertical steering dipoles in the beam injection section will be addressed. Implementation of this algorithm leads to significant improvement on the beam positions and multi-turn operation.