Author: Li, Y.
Paper Title Page
TUPAB223 Design of Double- and Multi-Bend Achromat Lattices with Large Dynamic Aperture and Approximate Invariants 1945
 
  • Y. Li, R.S. Rainer, V.V. Smaluk
    BNL, Upton, New York, USA
  • K. Hwang, C.E. Mitchell, R.D. Ryne
    LBNL, Berkeley, California, USA
 
  Funding: Funded by U.S. Department of Energy (DOE) under Contract No. DE-SC0012704 (BNL) and DE-AC02-05CH11231 (LBNL), U.S. DOE Early Career Research Program under the Office of High Energy Physics.
A nu­mer­i­cal method to de­sign non­lin­ear dou­ble- and multi-bend achro­mat (DBA and MBA) lat­tices with ap­prox­i­mate in­vari­ants of mo­tion is de­scribed. The search for such non­lin­ear lat­tices is mo­ti­vated by Fer­mi­lab’s In­te­grable Op­tics Test Ac­cel­er­a­tor (IOTA), whose de­sign is based on an in­te­grable Hamil­ton­ian sys­tem with two in­vari­ants of mo­tion. While it may not be pos­si­ble to de­sign an achro­matic lat­tice for a ded­i­cated syn­chro­tron light source stor­age ring with one or more exact in­vari­ants of mo­tion, it is pos­si­ble to tune the sex­tupoles and oc­tupoles in ex­ist­ing DBA and MBA lat­tices to pro­duce ap­prox­i­mate in­vari­ants. In our pro­ce­dure, the lat­tice is tuned while min­i­miz­ing the turn-by-turn fluc­tu­a­tions of the Courant-Sny­der ac­tions Jx and Jy at sev­eral dis­tinct am­pli­tudes, while si­mul­ta­ne­ously min­i­miz­ing dif­fu­sion of the on-en­ergy be­ta­tron tunes. The re­sult­ing lat­tices share some im­por­tant fea­tures with in­te­grable ones, such as a large dy­namic aper­ture, tra­jec­to­ries con­fined to in­vari­ant tori, ro­bust­ness to res­o­nances and er­rors, and a large am­pli­tude-de­pen­dent tune-spread.
 
poster icon Poster TUPAB223 [2.392 MB]  
DOI • reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2021-TUPAB223  
About • paper received ※ 10 May 2021       paper accepted ※ 15 June 2021       issue date ※ 20 August 2021  
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TUPAB227 Simultaneous Compensation of Phase and Amplitude Dependent Geometrical Resonances Using Octupoles 1960
 
  • F. Plassard, Y. Hidaka, Y. Li, T.V. Shaftan, V.V. Smaluk, G.M. Wang
    BNL, Upton, New York, USA
 
  As the new gen­er­a­tion of light sources are push­ing to­ward dif­frac­tion lim­ited stor­age rings with ul­tra-low emit­tance beams, non­lin­ear beam dy­nam­ics be­come in­creas­ingly dif­fi­cult to con­trol. It is a com­mon prac­tice for mod­ern de­signs to use a sex­tu­pole scheme that al­lows si­mul­ta­ne­ous cor­rec­tion of nat­ural chro­matic­ity and en­ergy in­de­pen­dent, or geo­met­ri­cal, sex­tupo­lar res­o­nances. How­ever, the re­main­ing higher order terms aris­ing from the cross talks of the sex­tu­pole fam­i­lies set a strong lim­i­ta­tion on the achiev­able dy­namic aper­ture. This paper pre­sents a sim­u­la­tion-based recipe to use oc­tupoles to­gether with this sex­tu­pole scheme to pro­vide si­mul­ta­ne­ous self-com­pen­sa­tion of lin­ear am­pli­tude de­pen­dent tune shift to­gether with phase-de­pen­dent oc­tupo­lar and higher order geo­met­ri­cal res­o­nant dri­ving terms. The cor­rec­tion method was built based on ob­ser­va­tions made on a sim­ple FODO model, then ap­plied to a re­al­is­tic low emit­tance lat­tice, de­signed in the frame­work of the up­grade of the Na­tional Syn­chro­tron Light Source II (NSLS-II).  
DOI • reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2021-TUPAB227  
About • paper received ※ 19 May 2021       paper accepted ※ 23 June 2021       issue date ※ 14 August 2021  
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TUPAB235 Dynamic Aperture Optimization in the EIC Electron Storage Ring with Two Interaction Points 1984
 
  • D. Marx, Y. Li, C. Montag, S. Tepikian, F.J. Willeke
    BNL, Upton, New York, USA
  • Y. Cai, Y.M. Nosochkov
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
  • G.H. Hoffstaetter, J.E. Unger
    Cornell University (CLASSE), Cornell Laboratory for Accelerator-Based Sciences and Education, Ithaca, New York, USA
 
  Funding: Work supported by Brookhaven Science Associates, LLC under Contract No. DE-SC0012704 and by SLAC under Contract No. DE-AC02-76SF00515 with the U.S. Department of Energy.
In the Elec­tron-Ion Col­lider (EIC), which is cur­rently being de­signed for con­struc­tion at Brookhaven Na­tional Lab­o­ra­tory, elec­trons from the elec­tron stor­age ring will col­lide with hadrons, pro­duc­ing lu­mi­nosi­ties up to 1034 cm-2 s-1. The base­line de­sign in­cludes only one in­ter­ac­tion point (IP), and op­tics have been found with a suit­able dy­namic aper­ture in each di­men­sion. How­ever, the EIC pro­ject asks for the op­tion of a sec­ond IP. The strong fo­cus­ing re­quired at the IPs cre­ates a very large nat­ural chro­matic­ity (about -125 in the ver­ti­cal plane for the ring). Com­pen­sat­ing this lin­ear chro­matic­ity while si­mul­ta­ne­ously con­trol­ling the non­lin­ear chro­matic­ity to high order to achieve a suf­fi­cient mo­men­tum ac­cep­tance of 1% (10 σ) at 18 GeV is a con­sid­er­able chal­lenge. A scheme to com­pen­sate higher-or­der chro­matic ef­fects from 2 IPs by set­ting the phase ad­vance be­tween them does not, by it­self, pro­vide the re­quired mo­men­tum ac­cep­tance for the EIC Elec­tron Stor­age Ring. A thor­ough de­sign of the non­lin­ear op­tics is un­der­way to in­crease the mo­men­tum ac­cep­tance using mul­ti­ple sex­tu­pole fam­i­lies, and the lat­est re­sults are pre­sented here.
 
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DOI • reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2021-TUPAB235  
About • paper received ※ 19 May 2021       paper accepted ※ 19 July 2021       issue date ※ 20 August 2021  
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WEPAB005 Design Status Update of the Electron-Ion Collider 2585
 
  • C. Montag, E.C. Aschenauer, G. Bassi, J. Beebe-Wang, J.S. Berg, M. Blaskiewicz, A. Blednykh, J.M. Brennan, S.J. Brooks, K.A. Brown, Z.A. Conway, K.A. Drees, A.V. Fedotov, W. Fischer, C. Folz, D.M. Gassner, X. Gu, R.C. Gupta, Y. Hao, A. Hershcovitch, C. Hetzel, D. Holmes, H. Huang, W.A. Jackson, J. Kewisch, Y. Li, C. Liu, H. Lovelace III, Y. Luo, M. Mapes, D. Marx, G.T. McIntyre, F. Méot, M.G. Minty, S.K. Nayak, R.B. Palmer, B. Parker, S. Peggs, B. Podobedov, V. Ptitsyn, V.H. Ranjbar, G. Robert-Demolaize, S. Seletskiy, V.V. Smaluk, K.S. Smith, S. Tepikian, R. Than, P. Thieberger, D. Trbojevic, N. Tsoupas, J.E. Tuozzolo, S. Verdú-Andrés, E. Wang, D. Weiss, F.J. Willeke, H. Witte, Q. Wu, W. Xu, A. Zaltsman, W. Zhang
    BNL, Upton, New York, USA
  • S.V. Benson, J.M. Grames, F. Lin, T.J. Michalski, V.S. Morozov, E.A. Nissen, J.P. Preble, R.A. Rimmer, T. Satogata, A. Seryi, M. Wiseman, W. Wittmer, Y. Zhang
    JLab, Newport News, Virginia, USA
  • Y. Cai, Y.M. Nosochkov, G. Stupakov, M.K. Sullivan
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
  • K.E. Deitrick, C.M. Gulliford, G.H. Hoffstaetter, J.E. Unger
    Cornell University (CLASSE), Cornell Laboratory for Accelerator-Based Sciences and Education, Ithaca, New York, USA
  • E. Gianfelice-Wendt
    Fermilab, Batavia, Illinois, USA
  • T. Satogata
    ODU, Norfolk, Virginia, USA
  • D. Xu
    FRIB, East Lansing, Michigan, USA
 
  Funding: Work supported by BSA, LLC under Contract No. DE-SC0012704, by JSA, LLC under Contract No. DE-AC05-06OR23177, and by SLAC under Contract No. DE-AC02-76SF00515 with the U.S. Department of Energy.
The de­sign of the elec­tron-ion col­lider EIC to be con­structed at Brookhaven Na­tional Lab­o­ra­tory has been con­tin­u­ously evolv­ing to­wards a re­al­is­tic and ro­bust de­sign that meets all the re­quire­ments set forth by the nu­clear physics com­mu­nity in the White Paper. Over the past year ac­tiv­i­ties have been fo­cused on ma­tur­ing the de­sign, and on de­vel­op­ing al­ter­na­tives to mit­i­gate risk. These in­clude im­prove­ments of the in­ter­ac­tion re­gion de­sign as well as mod­i­fi­ca­tions of the hadron ring vac­uum sys­tem to ac­com­mo­date the high av­er­age and peak beam cur­rents. Beam dy­nam­ics stud­ies have been per­formed to de­ter­mine and op­ti­mize the dy­namic aper­ture in the two col­lider rings and the beam-beam per­for­mance. We will pre­sent the EIC de­sign with a focus on re­cent de­vel­op­ments.
 
poster icon Poster WEPAB005 [2.095 MB]  
DOI • reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2021-WEPAB005  
About • paper received ※ 14 May 2021       paper accepted ※ 22 June 2021       issue date ※ 16 August 2021  
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