Keyword: insertion
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TUPH11 Retractable Absorber (Mask) and White Beam Imager Diagnostic for Canted Straight Section photon, radiation, operation, alignment 45
 
  • J. Da Silva Castro, N. Béchu, C. Herbeaux, N. Hubert, N. Jobert, M. Labat, F. Lepage, A. Mary, K.T. Tavakoli
    SOLEIL, Gif-sur-Yvette, France
 
  At the SOLEIL synchrotron, as in other accelerators, two canted sources can coexist on the same straight section for space and economic reasons. For its two long beamlines (ANATOMIX source upstream and NANOSCOPIUM source downstream) SOLEIL has made the choice to equip one of his long straight section with two canted insertion devices capable to operate simultaneously. That implies to take into account the degradation risk management of equipment, due to radiation. As the beam power deposition from the upstream undulator can seriously degrade the downstream one, or even other equipment. To handle these risks, Soleil first designed and installed in 2016 a retractable vertical absorber between both insertions to protect the downstream source from the upstream one. In 2017, Soleil then designed and installed a white beam imager, redundant an existing photon beam monitor (XBPM), to verify the correct positioning / alignment of equipment and beams relative to each other. For the vertical absorber as for the white beam imager Soleil had to meet some interesting technological and manufacturing aspects that we propose to present in a poster.  
poster icon Poster TUPH11 [3.744 MB]  
DOI • reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-MEDSI2018-TUPH11  
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TUPH31 Development of a Revolver Type Undulator undulator, insertion-device, electron, photon 105
 
  • T. Ramm, M. Tischer
    DESY, Hamburg, Germany
 
  A revolver type undulator is developed for the SASE section of the FLASH Free-Electron Laser (FEL) at DESY. Currently, a 1,2GeV linear accelerator injects electrons into two undulator lines to provide fully coherent VUV light to different experimental stations in two experimental halls. The more recently built FLASH2 branch consists of 12 planar undulators with a fixed magnet structure of ~32mm period length. Within plans for refurbishment of the original FLASH1 undulator section and also to open up new operation schemes with an extended photon energy range, an undulator development was started that allows for a change of different magnet structures. Once installed, it will be possible to change the wavelength range or the FEL operation scheme within a short period of time. Magnet structures can then be switched at any time without any observable effect on the electron beam orbit or the photon beam position. The single design steps are described in the following article: profile of requirements, choice of an applicable changing mechanism, development of a new magnet structure, the position of the bearing points, a new floor assembly and improvement of the cantilever arm.  
poster icon Poster TUPH31 [1.534 MB]  
DOI • reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-MEDSI2018-TUPH31  
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WEPH16 Thermal Analysis of High Heat Load Mirrors for the in-Situ Nanoprobe Beamline of the APS Upgrade photon, insertion-device, undulator, focusing 238
 
  • J.J. Knopp, M.V. Fisher, Z. Liu, J. Maser, R. Reininger, X. Shi
    ANL, Argonne, Illinois, USA
 
  The Advanced Photon Source (APS) is currently in the process of upgrading to a multi-bend achromat (MBA) storage ring, which will increase brightness and coherent flux by several orders of magnitude. The planned In-Situ Nanoprobe (ISN) beamline, one of the feature beamlines of the APS Upgrade (APS-U) project, is a 220 m long beamline that aims to focus the x-ray beam to a spot size of 20 nm or below by focusing with a KB pair. A double-mirror system, consisting of a high heat load mirror and a pink beam mirror, is designed to provide high harmonic rejection, reduce the power transmitted to the monochromator, and focus the beam along the vertical direction to a beam-defining aperture (BDA). One of the key issues is to manage the high power and power density absorbed by these mirrors. To attain the best focus at the BDA, the pink beam mirror needs to be mechanically bent to correct for thermal deformations on both mirrors. In this paper we report on the thermal responses of the mirror system to different undulator tunings and cooling schemes as calculated with Finite Element Analysis (FEA) and optical ray tracing.  
poster icon Poster WEPH16 [0.742 MB]  
DOI • reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-MEDSI2018-WEPH16  
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