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Wang, J.-M.

Paper Title Page
MPPP036 Collective Effects for NSLS-II
 
  • A. Blednykh, S. Krinsky, B. Podobedov, J. Rose, N.A. Towne, J.-M. Wang
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York
 
  NSLS-II is a 3 GeV ultra high brightness storage ring that is planned to succeed the present NSLS rings at Brookhaven. NSLS-II will provide hard X-ray photons from ~20 mini-gap undulators that may significantly contribute to the machine impedance. This, in combination with very high beam phase space density, and low momentum compaction drives a number of coherent instabilities. This paper reviews the most important collective effects for NSLS-II and their implications on the machine design.  
MPPP037 A Model Study of Transverse Mode Coupling Instability at NSLS-II. 2500
 
  • A. Blednykh, J.-M. Wang
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York
 
  The vertical impedances of the preliminary designs of NSLS-II MGUs are calculated by means of GdfidL code. The TMCI thresholds corresponding to these impedances are estimated using an analytically solvable model.  
MPPP038 Harmonic Cavity Performance for NSLS-II 2544
 
  • A. Blednykh, S. Krinsky, B. Podobedov, J. Rose, N.A. Towne, J.-M. Wang
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York
 
  NSLS-II is a 3 GeV ultra-high brightness storage ring that is planned to succeed the present NSLS rings at Brookhaven. Ultra-low emittance bunch combined with a short bunch length results in the Touschek lifetime of only a few hours, which strongly advocates including harmonic RF in the baseline design of NSLS-II. This paper describes the required harmonic RF parameters, trade-offs between the possible choices and the expected system performance, including the implications on lifetime and instabilities.  
RPAE056 NSLS II: The Future of the NSLS 3345
 
  • J.B. Murphy, J. Bengtsson, R. Biscardi, A. Blednykh, G.L. Carr, W.R. Casey, S. Chouhan, S.B. Dierker, E. Haas, R. Heese, S. Hulbert, E.D. Johnson, C.C. Kao, S.L. Kramer, S. Krinsky, I.P. Pinayev, S. Pjerov, B. Podobedov, G. Rakowsky, J. Rose, T.V. Shaftan, B. Sheehy, J. Skaritka, N.A. Towne, J.-M. Wang, X.J. Wang, L.-H. Yu
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York
 
  Funding: Under Contract with the United States Department of Energy Contract Number DE-AC02-98CH10886

The National Synchrotron Light Source at BNL was the first dedicated light source facility and it has now operated for more than 20 years. During this time the user community has grown to more than 2400 users annually. To insure that this vibrant user community has access to the highest quality photon beams, the NSLS is pursuing the design of a new ultra-high brightness (~10E21) electron storage ring, tailored to the 0.3-20 KeV photon energy range. We present our preliminary design and review the critical accelerator physics design issues.

 
RPAE058 NSLS-II Injection Concept 3408
 
  • T.V. Shaftan, A. Blednykh, S. Chouhan, E.D. Johnson, S.L. Kramer, S. Krinsky, J.B. Murphy, I.P. Pinayev, S. Pjerov, B. Podobedov, G. Rakowsky, J. Rose, T. Tanabe, J.-M. Wang, X.J. Wang, L.-H. Yu
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York
 
  Currently the facility upgrade project is under progress at the NSLS (Brookhaven National Laboratory). The goal of NSLS-II is a 3 GeV ultra-low emittance storage ring that will provide three orders of magnitude increase in brightness over the present NSLS X-ray beamlines. The low emittance of the high brightness ring lattice results in quite short lifetimes, which makes operation in top-off injection mode a necessity. The NSLS-II injection system must be able to provide an electron beam at the high repetition rate and with good injection efficiency. In this paper we present a concept of the NSLS-II injection system and discuss conditions and constraints for the injector design. Various injection system parameters are estimated from the point of view of SR user demand.