Paper |
Title |
Page |
TUPLS081 |
Flat Beams and Application to the Mass Separation of Radioactive Beams
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1687 |
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- P. Bertrand
GANIL, Caen
- J.-L. Biarrotte
IPN, Orsay
- D. Uriot
CEA, Gif-sur-Yvette
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The notion of flat beam is now well established and has been proven theoretically and experimentally with applications for linear colliders. In this paper, we propose a new and simple demonstration of the "flat beam theorem", and a possible application in the frame of radioactive ion beams (RIB) production. It consists in using a magnetized multi-specie heavy ion beam extracted from a high frequency ECR source, decoupling the transverse phase planes in such a way to obtain a very small emittance in the horizontal one, and using a dipole to separate the isotopes. A design of such a transport and separation line will be proposed and commented.
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WEPCH007 |
Beam Dynamics Studies for the Spiral-2 Project
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1930 |
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- J.-L. Biarrotte
IPN, Orsay
- P. Bertrand
GANIL, Caen
- D. Uriot
CEA, Gif-sur-Yvette
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The SPIRAL-2 superconducting linac driver, which aims to deliver 5 mA, 20 A.MeV deuterons and 1 mA, 14.5 A.MeV q/A=1/3 heavy ions, is now entering the construction phase. It is composed of an injector composed of two ECR sources entering a 88 MHz RFQ, followed by a superconducting section based on independently phased quarter-wave cavities with warm focusing. This paper presents the status of the beam dynamics studies recently performed during this construction phase: consolidation and freezing of the linac design, update of the mass separation system or analysis of the proton capability.
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MOPLS060 |
Design of an Interaction Region with Head-on Collisions for the ILC
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682 |
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- J. Payet, O. Napoly, C. Rippon, D. Uriot
CEA, Gif-sur-Yvette
- M. Alabau Pons, P. Bambade, J. Brossard, O. Dadoun, C. Rimbault
LAL, Orsay
- D.A.-K. Angal-Kalinin, F. Jackson
CCLRC/DL/ASTeC, Daresbury, Warrington, Cheshire
- R. Appleby
UMAN, Manchester
- L. Keller, Y. Nosochkov, A. Seryi
SLAC, Menlo Park, California
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An interaction region with head-on collisions is considered an alternative to the baseline configuration of the International Linear Collider, including two interaction regions with finite crossing-angles (2 and 20 mrad). Although more challenging from the point of view of the beam extraction, the head-on scheme is favoured by the experiments because it allows a more convenient detector configuration, particularly in the forward region. The optics of the head-on extraction is revisited by separating the e+ and e- beams horizontally, first by electrostatic separators operated at their LEP nominal field and then using a defocusing quadrupole of the final focus beam line. In this way the septum magnet is protected from the beamstrahlung power. Newly optimized final focus and extraction optics are presented, including a first look at post-collision diagnostics. The influence of parasitic collisions is shown to lead to a region of stable collision parameters. Beam and beamstrahlung photon losses are calculated along the extraction elements. Issues concerning the design of the large bore superconducting final focus magnets, common to both incoming and outgoing beams, are considered.
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