Paper | Title | Page |
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WE6PFP071 | ATF2 Spot Size Tuning Using the Rotation Matrix Method | 2662 |
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The Accelerator Test Facility (ATF2) at KEK aims to experimentally verify the local chromaticity correction scheme to achieve a vertical beam size of 37nm. The facility is a scaled down version of the final focus design proposed for the future linear colliders. In order to achieve this goal, high precision tuning methods are being developed. One of the methods proposed for ATF2 is a novel method known as the ‘rotation matrix’ method. Details of the development and testing of this method, including orthogonality optimisation and simulation methods, are presented. |
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WE6PFP024 | ATF2 Ultra-Low IP Betas Proposal | 2540 |
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The CLIC Final Focus System has considerably larger chromaticity than those of ILC and its scaled test machine ATF2. We propose to reduce the IP betas of ATF2 to reach a CLIC-like chromaticity. This would also allow to study the FFS tuning difficulty as function of the IP beam spot size. Both the ILC and CLIC projects will largely benefit from the ATF2 experience at these ultra-low IP betas. |
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FR5PFP004 | Orbit Reconstruction, Correction, Stabilization and Monitoring in the ATF2 Extraction Line | 4311 |
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Funding: CNRS/IN2P3 ANR (Programme Blanc, Project ATF2-IN2P3-KEK, contract ANR-06-BLAN-0027) The orbit in the ATF2 extraction line has to be accurately controlled to allow orbit and optics corrections to work well downstream. The Final Focus section contains points with large beta function values which amplify incoming beam jitter, and few correctors since the steering is performed using quadrupole movers, and so good orbit stability is required. It is also essential because some magnets are non-linear and can introduce position-dependent coupling of the motion between the two transverse planes. First experience monitoring the orbit in the extraction line during the ATF2 commissioning is described, along with a simulation of the planned steering algorithm. |
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FR5PFP021 | Plans and Progress towards Tuning the ATF2 Final Focus System to Obtain a 35nm IP Waist | 4353 |
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Funding: Work supported in part by Department of Energy Contract DE-AC02-76SF00515 Using a new extraction line currently being commissioned, the ATF2 experiment plans to test a novel compact final focus optics design using a local chromaticity correction scheme, such as could be used in future linear colliders*. Using a 1.3 GeV beam of ~30nm normalised vertical emittance extracted from the ATF damping ring, the primary goal is to achieve a vertical IP waist of 35nm. We discuss our planned strategy, implementation details and early experimental results for tuning the ATF2 beam to meet the primary goal. These optics require uniquely tight tolerances on some magnet strengths and positions, we discuss efforts to re-match the optics to meet these requirements using high-precision measurements of key magnet elements. We simulated in detail the tuning procedure using several algorithms and different code implementations for comparison from initial orbit establishment to final IP spot-size tuning. Through a Monte Carlo study of 100's of simulation seeds we find we can achieve a spot-size within 10% of the design optics value in at least 90% of cases. We also ran a simulation to study the long-term performance with the use of beam-based feedbacks. *"ATF2 Proposal", ATF2 Collaboration (Boris Ivanovich Grishanov et al.)., KEK-REPORT-2005-2, Aug 23, 2005. |
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FR1RAI03 | ATF2 Commissioning | 4205 |
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ATF2 is a final-focus test beam line that attempts to focus the low-emittance beam from the ATF damping ring to a beam size of about 37 nm, and at the same time to demonstrate nm beam stability, using numerous advanced beam diagnostics and feedback tools. The construction is well advanced and beam commissioning of ATF2 has started in the second half of 2008. ATF2 is constructed and commissioned by ATF international collaborations with strong US, Asian and European participation. |
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