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MO3RAI01 | A Few Issues on the Upgrade of KEKB B-Factory | 23 |
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A few issues on the path of the luminosity upgrade of KEKB B-Factory is described, including coherent synchrotron radiation, design of the interaction region, crab crossing, and high current operation. These issues will raise more obstacles on the upgrade with the High-Current Scheme. As an alternative, {¥it Nano-Beam Scheme} should be considered as a possible option for the upgrade. |
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MO6RFP015 | Gas Desorption from TiN-Coated Copper Beam Duct | 381 |
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The titanium nitride (TiN) coating inside a beam duct has been recently attracting attention as a measure to mitigate the electron cloud effect in positron/proton rings. Here studied is the gas desorption from the TiN-coated copper beam duct, which will be adopted in the upgrade of KEK B-factory (KEKB). In the experiment, the pressure in a TiN-coated duct was measured and compared with that in a non-coated one. The TiN film (200 nm thick) was coated by DC magnetron sputtering at KEK. After an air exposure for the previously-determined period, the duct was evacuated by a turbo-molecular pump (300 l/s). At 50 hours after evacuation, the pressure was about 4 times larger than that for the case of the non-coated one. The residual gas was mainly water. In order to fine the minimum baking temperature to decrease the gas desorption from the TiN coating, the pressures were measured after the baking by changing the temperatures in the practical range, from 50 to 150 degrees. The pressure after the baking at 80 degrees was finally found to be comparable to that for the non-coated one. This paper describes these results in detail including the measurements of gas desorption rates. |
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WE6PFP043 | Recent Progress of KEKB | 2588 |
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Crab cavities were installed at KEKB at the beginning of 2007. The beam operation with the crab cavities is in progress. In this paper, machine performance with crab crossing is described focusing on a specific luminosity and a beam lifetime issue related to the dynamic beam-beam effects. |
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FR5RFP068 | Demonstration of Electron Clearing Effect by Means of Clearing Electrodes and Groove Structures in High-Intensity Positron Ring | 4689 |
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Funding: The Japan/US Cooperation Program Beam instability caused by the electron cloud is expected to be a limiting factor in the performance of future advanced positron and proton storage rings. In a wiggler section of the positron ring of the KEK B-factory (KEKB), we have installed a vacuum chamber with an insertion that can be replaced and including different techniques to study the mitigation of the electron-cloud effect in a high magnetic field region. We have installed an insertion with strip-line clearing electrode, an insertion with triangular grooves and an insertion with a smooth surface, and compared them each other under the same conditions. The electrode insertion is composed of a thin tungsten layer formed on a thin alumina ceramic layer. The groove insertion is composed of TiN-coated triangular grooves running longitudinally. In this paper, we report about the tests in the KEKB and about the large reduction in the measured electron cloud density when the clearing electrode and groove sections are installed with respect to the smooth insertion. These experiments are the first ones demonstrating the principle of the clearing electrode and groove insertions in a magnetic field. |
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FR1RAI02 | The Conversion and Operation of the Cornell Electron Storage Ring as a Test Accelerator (CesrTA) for Damping Rings Research and Development | 4200 |
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Funding: Support provided by the US National Science Foundation, the US Department of Energy, and the Japan/US Cooperation Program. In March of 2008, the Cornell Electron Storage Ring (CESR) concluded twenty eight years of colliding beam operations for the CLEO high energy physics experiment. We have reconfigured CESR as an ultra low emittance damping ring for use as a test accelerator (CesrTA) for International Linear Collider (ILC) damping ring R&D. The primary goals of the CesrTA program are to achieve a beam emittance approaching that of the ILC Damping Rings with a positron beam, to investigate the interaction of the electron cloud with both low emittance positron and electron beams, to explore methods to suppress the electron cloud, and to develop suitable advanced instrumentation required for these experimental studies (in particular a fast x-ray beam size monitor capable of single pass measurements of individual bunches). We report on progress with the CESR conversion activities, the status and schedule for the experimental program, and the first experimental results that have been obtained. |
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