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Badakov, H.

Paper Title Page
TPAE048 The UCLA/FNPL Time Resolved Underdense Plasma Lens Experiment 3013
 
  • M.C. Thompson, H. Badakov, J.B. Rosenzweig, G. Travish
    UCLA, Los Angeles, California
  • H. Edwards, R.P. Fliller, G.M. Kazakevich, P. Piot, J.K. Santucci
    Fermilab, Batavia, Illinois
  • J.L. Li, R. Tikhoplav
    Rochester University, Rochester, New York
 
  Funding: Work Supported by U.S. Dept. of Energy grant DE-FG03-92ER40693.

An underdense plasma lens experiment is planned as a collaboration between UCLA and the Fermilab NICADD Photoinjector Laboratory (FNPL). The experiment will focus on measuring the variation of the plasma focusing along the longitudinal beam axis and comparing these results with theory and simulation. The experiment will utilize a thin gaussian underdense plasma lens with peak density 6 x 1012 cm-3 and a FWHM length of 1.6 cm. This plasma lens will have a focusing strength equivalent to a quadrupole magnet with a 180 T/m field gradient. A 15 MeV, 8nC electron beam with nominal dimensions sr = 400 μm and sz = 2.1 mm will be focused by this plasma lens onto an OTR screen approximately 2 cm downstream of the lens. The light from the OTR screen will be imaged into a streak camera in order to directly measure the correlation between z and sr within the beam. Status and progress on the experiment are reported.

 
TPAE049 The UCLA/SLAC Ultra-High Gradient Cerenkov Wakefield Accelerator Experiment 3067
 
  • M.C. Thompson, H. Badakov, J.B. Rosenzweig, G. Travish
    UCLA, Los Angeles, California
  • M.J. Hogan, R. Ischebeck, R. Siemann, D.R. Walz
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California
  • P. Muggli
    USC, Los Angeles, California
  • A. Scott
    UCSB, Santa Barbara, California
  • R.B. Yoder
    ,
 
  Funding: Work Supported by U.S. Dept. of Energy grant DE-FG03-92ER40693.

An experiment is planned to study the performance of dielectric Cerenkov wakefield accelerating structures at extremely high gradients in the GV/m range. This new UCLA/SLAC collaboration will take advantage of the unique SLAC FFTB electron beam and its demonstrated ultra-short pulse lengths and high currents (e.g., sz = 20 μm at Q = 3 nC). The electron beam will be focused down and sent through varying lengths of fused silica capillary tubing with two different sizes: ID = 200 μm / OD = 325 μm and ID = 100 μm / OD = 325 μm. The pulse length of the electron beam will be varied in order to alter the accelerating gradient and probe the breakdown threshold of the dielectric structures. In addition to breakdown studies, we plan to collect and measure coherent Cerenkov radiation emitted from the capillary tube to gain information about the strength of the accelerating fields. Status and progress on the experiment are reported.