Paper | Title | Page |
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MO6RFP074 | Design and Fabrication of a 500-kV Photocathode DC Gun for ERL Light Sources | 542 |
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A 500-kV, 10-mA photocathode DC gun has been designed and is now under fabrication by the collaboration efforts of JAEA, KEK, Hiroshima Univ. and Nagoya Univ. The Cockcroft-Walton generator and the ceramic insulator are installed upright in the SF6 tank. We have adopted a multiple-stacked cylindrical ceramic insulator, because this type of ceramic insulator has shown good stability and robustness at the 200-kV Nagoya polarized gun and the 250-kV JAEA FEL gun. All the vacuum chambers are made of titanium alloy with very low out-gassing. The Cockcroft-Walton generator, the ceramic insulator, the vacuum chambers will be fabricated by April 2009 and a high-voltage test will be started soon later. Up-to-date status of the gun development will be presented in detail. |
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MO6RFP075 | Development of a 250-kV Photo-Cathode Electron Gun for the ERL Light Sources at JAEA | 545 |
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A 250-kV, 50-mA electron gun has been developed at JAEA for establishing fundamental technologies to generate and evaluate a ultra-small emittance beam, which is required for future ERLs such as a coherent X-ray source and a high-flux gamma-ray source. The gun has been assembled and the first photo-current was obtained from a cathode of NEA-GaAs. Apparatuses for beam measurements has been installed. We plan to measure the transverse emittance by a double-slit configuration and the temporal profile with a deflecting cavity. |
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TU5RFP081 | Status of the Energy Recovery Linac Project in Japan | 1278 |
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Future synchrotron light source project using an energy recovery linac (ERL) is under proposal at the High Energy Accelerator Research Organization (KEK) in collaboration with several Japanese institutes such as the JAEA and the ISSP. We are on the way to develop such key technologies as the super-brilliant DC photo-injector and superconducting cavities that are suitable for both CW and high-current operations. We are also promoting the construction of the Compact ERL for demonstrating such key technologies. We report the latest status of our project, including update results from our photo-injector and from both superconducting cavities for the injector and the main linac, as well as the progress in the design and preparations for constructing the Compact ERL. |