Author: Benson, S.V.
Paper Title Page
MOPPM1R1
Perspective of a Dual Energy Electron Storage Ring Cooler for a Hadron Beam Cooling  
 
  • F. Lin, V.S. Morozov
    ORNL RAD, Oak Ridge, Tennessee, USA
  • S.V. Benson, J. Guo, G.A. Krafft, H. Zhang, Y. Zhang
    JLab, Newport News, Virginia, USA
  • B. Dhital
    BNL, Upton, New York, USA
 
  Funding: Supported by UT-Battelle, LLC, under contract DE-AC05-00OR22725, by Brookhaven Sci. Asso., LLC, under Contract DE-AC02-98CH10886 and by Jefferson Sci. Asso., LLC, under contract DE-AC05-06OR23177.
A dual energy electron storage ring cooler was proposed and explored to maintain a good hadron beam quality against intra-beam scattering and all heating sources in a collider. The unique configuration of this concept is that electron beam in the low energy section extracts heat away from the hadron beam through Coulomb interaction while electron beam in the high energy section releases heat through its intrinsic synchrotron radiation damping. The early design employs a magnetized electron beam for achieving a high cooling efficiency. Recently, a non-magnetized cooling electron beam was explored in this dual energy cooler. It could meet the same cooling requirements while lowering the risks. This paper presents study results on design and optimization of a dual energy storage ring cooler and describes the trade-offs between using magnetized and non-magnetized cooling for this approach.
 
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THPOSRP14 JSPEC: A Program for IBS and Electron Cooling Simulation 79
 
  • H. Zhang, S.V. Benson, M.W. Bruker, Y. Zhang
    JLab, Newport News, Virginia, USA
 
  Funding: This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Nuclear Physics under contract DE-AC05-06OR23177.
JSPEC (JLab Simulation Package on Electron Cooling) is an open-source C++ program developed at Jefferson Lab to simulate the evolution of the ion beam under the intrabeam scattering effect and/or the electron cooling effect. JSPEC includes various models of the ion beam, the electron beam, and the friction force, aiming to reflect the latest advances in the field and to provide a useful tool to the community. JSPEC has been benchmarked against other cooling simulation codes and experimental data. It has been used to support the cooler design for JLEIC, an earlier JLab design for the Electron-Ion Collider. A Python wrapper of the C++ code, pyJSPEC, for Python 3.x environment has also been developed and released. It allows users to run JSPEC simulations in a Python environment and makes it possible for JSPEC to collaborate with other accelerator and beam modeling programs, as well as plentiful Python tools in data visualization, optimization, machine learning, etc. In this report, we introduce the features of JSPEC, with a focus on the latest development, and demonstrate how to use JSPEC and pyJSPEC with sample codes and numerical examples.
 
poster icon Poster THPOSRP14 [0.553 MB]  
DOI • reference for this paper ※ doi:10.18429/JACoW-COOL2023-THPOSRP14  
About • Received ※ 15 September 2023 — Revised ※ 09 October 2023 — Accepted ※ 14 November 2023 — Issued ※ 02 December 2023
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THPOSRP17 Development of an ERL for Coherent Electron Cooling at the Electron-Ion Collider 87
 
  • K.E. Deitrick, S.V. Benson
    JLab, Newport News, Virginia, USA
  • W.F. Bergan, A.V. Fedotov, D. Kayran, E. Wang, D. Xu
    BNL, Upton, New York, USA
  • J.V. Conway, B.M. Dunham, R.G. Eichhorn, C.M. Gulliford, V.O. Kostroun, C.E. Mayes, K.W. Smolenski, N.W. Taylor
    Xelera Research LLC, Ithaca, New York, USA
  • N. Wang
    Cornell University, Ithaca, New York, USA
 
  Funding: Authored by Jefferson Science Associates, LLC under U.S. DOE Contract DE-AC05-06OR23177 and Brookhaven Science Associates, LLC, Contract DE-SC0012704; Xelera supported by U.S. DOE grant DE-SC0020514.
The Electron-Ion Collider (EIC) is currently under development of to be built at Brookhaven National Lab and requires cooling during collisions in order to preserve the quality of the hadron beam despite degradation due to intra-beam scattering and beam-beam effect. An Energy Recovery Linac (ERL) is being designed to deliver the necessary electron beam for the Coherent electron Cooling (CeC) of the hadron beam, with an electron bunch charge of 1 nC and an average current of 100 mA; two modes of operation are being developed for 150 and 55 MeV electrons, corresponding to 275 and 100 GeV protons. The injector of this SHC-ERL is shared with the Precooler ERL, which cools lower energy proton beams via bunched-beam cooling, as used in Low Energy RHIC electron Cooling (LEReC). This paper reviews the current state of the design.
 
DOI • reference for this paper ※ doi:10.18429/JACoW-COOL2023-THPOSRP17  
About • Received ※ 11 October 2023 — Accepted ※ 12 October 2023 — Issued ※ 02 December 2023  
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