03 Alternative Particle Sources and Acceleration Techniques
A17 High Intensity Accelerators
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TUPMY041 Delivery Status of the ELI-NP Gamma Beam System 1635
 
  • S. Tomassini, D. Alesini, A. Battisti, R. Boni, F. Cioeta, A. Delle Piane, E. Di Pasquale, G. Di Pirro, A. Falone, A. Gallo, S.I. Incremona, V.L. Lollo, A. Mostacci, S. Pioli, R. Ricci, U. Rotundo, A. Stella, C. Vaccarezza, A. Vannozzi, A. Variola
    INFN/LNF, Frascati (Roma), Italy
  • A. Bacci, D.T. Palmer, L. Serafini
    Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare, Milano, Italy
  • N. Bliss
    STFC/DL, Daresbury, Warrington, Cheshire, United Kingdom
  • F. Cardelli
    INFN-Roma1, Rome, Italy
  • K. Cassou, Z.F. Zomer
    LAL, Orsay, France
  • G. D'Auria
    Elettra-Sincrotrone Trieste S.C.p.A., Basovizza, Italy
  • A. Giribono, V. Pettinacci
    INFN-Roma, Roma, Italy
  • C. Hill
    STFC/DL/ASTeC, Daresbury, Warrington, Cheshire, United Kingdom
  • L. Palumbo
    Rome University La Sapienza, Roma, Italy
  • L. Piersanti
    University of Rome La Sapienza, Rome, Italy
 
  The ELI-NP GBS is a high intensity and monochromatic gamma source under construction in Magurele (Romania). The design and construction of the Gamma Beam System complex as well as the integration of the technical plants and the commissioning of the overall facility, was awarded to the Eurogammas Consortium in March 2014. The delivery of the facility has been planned in for 4 stages and the first one was fulfilled in October 31st 2015. The engineering aspects related to the delivery stage 1 are presented.  
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TUPMY042 Proton Injection into the Fermilab Integrable Optics Test Accelerator (IOTA) 1638
 
  • E. Prebys, K. Carlson, H. Piekarz, A. Valishev
    Fermilab, Batavia, Illinois, USA
  • S. A. Antipov
    University of Chicago, Chicago, Illinois, USA
 
  Funding: This work is supported by the DOE, under Contract No. De-AC02-07CH11359.
The Integrable Optics Test Accelerator (IOTA) is an experimental synchrotron being built at Fermilab to test the concept of non-linear "integrable optics". These optics are based on a lattice including non-linear elements that satisfies particular conditions on the Hamiltonian. The resulting particle motion is predicted to be stable but without a unique tune. The system is therefore insensitive to resonant instabilities and can in principle store very intense beams, with space charge tune shifts larger than those which are possible in conventional linear synchrotrons. The ring will initially be commissioned with electrons, but this poster describes progress toward the injection of protons into the ring, using the RFQ originally built for the High Energy Neutrino Source (HINS) project.
 
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