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Johnson, R. P.

Paper Title Page
MOPAN117 Magnet System for Helical Muon Cooling Channels 443
 
  • S. A. Kahn, M. Alsharo'a, R. P. Johnson
    Muons, Inc, Batavia
  • V. Kashikhin, V. S. Kashikhin, K. Yonehara, A. V. Zlobin
    Fermilab, Batavia, Illinois
 
  Funding: Supported in part by STTR Grant DE-FG02-04ER86191.

A helical cooling channel consisting of a pressurized gas absorber imbedded in a magnetic channel that provides superimposed solenoidal, helical dipole and helical quadrupole fields has shown considerable promise in providing six-dimensional cooling of muon beams. The analysis of this muon cooling technique with both analytic and simulation studies has shown significant reduction of muon phase space. A particular channel that has been simulated is divided into four segments each with progressively stronger fields and smaller apertures to reduce the equilibrium emittance so that more cooling can occur. The fields in the helical channel are sufficiently large that the conductor for segments 1 and 2 can be Nb3Sn and the conductor for segments 3 and 4 may need to be high temperature superconductor. This paper will describe the magnetic specifications for the channel and two conceptual designs on how to implement the magnetic channel.

 
MOPAN118 High Field HTS Solenoid for Muon Cooling 446
 
  • S. A. Kahn, M. Alsharo'a, R. P. Johnson, M. Kuchnir
    Muons, Inc, Batavia
  • R. C. Gupta, R. B. Palmer, P. Wanderer, E. Willen
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York
  • D. J. Summers
    UMiss, University, Mississippi
 
  Funding: Work supported by U. S. Department of Energy under Contract DE-AC02-98CH1088 and SBIR Grant DE-FG02-04ER86191

The ability of high temperature superconducting (HTS) conductor to carry high currents at low temperatures makes feasible the development of very high field magnets for uses in accelerators and beam-lines. A specific application of a very high field solenoid is to provide a very small beta region for the final cooling stages for a muon collider. This paper will describe a conceptual design of a 50 Tesla solenoid based on Bi-2223 HTS tape, where the magnet will be operated at 4.2 K to take advantage of the high current carrying capacity at that temperature. A 25 Tesla solenoid has been run using a 5 Tesla Bi-2212 insert. The current carrying capacity of the BSCCO wire has been measured to be 266 Amps/mm2 at 4.2 K at the NHFML. This paper will describe the technical issues associated with building this 50 Tesla magnet. In particular it will address how to mitigate the large Lorentz stresses associated with the high field magnet and how to design the magnet to reduce the compressive end forces.

 
MOPAS012 Magnets for the MANX 6-D Muon Cooling Demonstration Experiment 461
 
  • V. S. Kashikhin, V. Kashikhin, M. J. Lamm, G. Romanov, K. Yonehara, A. V. Zlobin
    Fermilab, Batavia, Illinois
  • R. P. Johnson, S. A. Kahn, T. J. Roberts
    Muons, Inc, Batavia
 
  Funding: Supported in part by DOE STTR grant DE-FG02-04ER86191

MANX is a 6-dimensional muon ionization-cooling experiment that has been proposed to Fermilab to demonstrate the use of a Helical Cooling Channel (HCC) for future muon colliders and neutrino factories. The HCC for MANX has solenoidal, helical dipole, and helical quadrupole magnetic components which diminish as the beam loses energy as it slows down in a liquid helium absorber inside the magnets. Two superconducting magnet system designs are described which use quite different approaches to providing the needed fields. Additional magnets that provide emittance matching between the HCC and upstream and downstream spectrometers are also described as are the results of G4Beamline simulations of the beam cooling behaviour of the complete magnet and absorber system.

 
TUOBKI02 Low Emittance Muon Colliders 706
 
  • R. P. Johnson
    Muons, Inc, Batavia
  • Y. S. Derbenev
    Jefferson Lab, Newport News, Virginia
 
  Funding: The work described here was supported in part by DOE SBIR/STTR grants DE-FG02-03ER83722, 04ER86191, 04ER84016, 05ER86252, 05ER86253 and 06ER86282.

Advances in ionization cooling, phase space manipulations, and technologies to achieve high brightness muon beams are stimulating designs of high-luminosity energy-frontier muon colliders. Simulations of Helical Cooling Channels (HCC) show impressive emittance reductions, new ideas on reverse emittance exchange and muon bunch coalescing are being developed, and high-field superconductors show great promise to improve the effectiveness of ionization cooling. Experiments to study RF cavities pressurized with hydrogen gas in strong magnetic fields have had encouraging results. A 6-dimensional HCC demonstration experiment is being designed and a 1.5 TeV muon collider is being studied at Fermilab. Two new synergies are that very cool muon beams can be accelerated in ILC RF structures and that this capability can be used both for muon colliders and for neutrino factories. These advances are discussed in the context of muon colliders with small transverse emittances and with fewer muons to ease requirements on site boundary radiation, detector backgrounds, and muon production.

 
slides icon Slides  
WEPMS071 EVIDENCE FOR FOWLER-NORDHEIM BEHAVIOR IN RF BREAKDOWN 2499
 
  • M. BastaniNejad, A. A. Elmustafa
    Old Dominion University, Norfolk, Virginia
  • M. Alsharo'a, P. M. Hanlet, R. P. Johnson, M. Kuchnir, D. J. Newsham
    Muons, Inc, Batavia
  • C. M. Ankenbrandt, A. Moretti, M. Popovic, K. Yonehara
    Fermilab, Batavia, Illinois
  • D. M. Kaplan
    Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, Illinois
 
  Funding: Supported in part by DOE STTR grant DE-FG02-05ER86252

Microscopic images of the surfaces of metallic electrodes used in high-pressure gas-filled 800 MHz RF cavity experiments are used to investigate the mechanism of RF breakdown. The images show evidence for melting and boiling in small regions of ~10 micron diameter on tungsten, molybdenum, and beryllium electrode surfaces. In these experiments, the dense hydrogen gas in the cavity prevents electrons or ions from being accelerated to high enough energy to participate in the breakdown process so that the only important variables are the fields and the metallic surfaces. The distributions of breakdown remnants on the electrode surfaces are compared to the maximum surface gradient E predicted by an ANSYS model of the cavity. The surface local density of spark remnants, presumably the probability of breakdown, shows a power law dependence on the maximum gradient, with E10 for tungsten and molybdenum and E7 for beryllium. This is reminiscent of Fowler-Nordheim behavior of electron emission from a cold cathode, which is explained by the quantum-mechanical penetration of a barrier that is characterized by the work function of the metal.

 
THPMN094 Simulations of Parametric-resonance Ionization Cooling 2927
 
  • D. J. Newsham, R. P. Johnson, R. Sah
    Muons, Inc, Batavia
  • S. A. Bogacz, Y.-C. Chao, Y. S. Derbenev
    Jefferson Lab, Newport News, Virginia
 
  Funding: Supported in part by DOE SBIR grant DE-FG02-04ER84016

Parametric-resonance ionization cooling (PIC) is a muon-cooling technique that is useful for low-emittance muon colliders. This method requires a well-tuned focusing channel that is free of chromatic and spherical aberrations. In order to be of practical use in a muon collider, it also necessary that the focusing channel be as short as possible to minimize muon loss due to decay. G4Beamline numerical simulations are presented of a compact PIC focusing channel in which spherical aberrations are minimized by using design symmetry.

 
THPMN095 Muon Bunch Coalescing 2930
 
  • R. P. Johnson
    Muons, Inc, Batavia
  • C. M. Ankenbrandt, C. M. Bhat, M. Popovic
    Fermilab, Batavia, Illinois
  • S. A. Bogacz, Y. S. Derbenev
    Jefferson Lab, Newport News, Virginia
 
  Funding: Supported in part by DOE STTR grants DE-FG02-04ER86191 and -05ER86253.

The idea of coalescing multiple muon bunches at high energy to enhance the luminosity of a muon collider provides many advantages. It circumvents space-charge, beam loading, and wakefield problems of intense low-energy bunches while restoring the synergy between muon colliders and neutrino factories based on muon storage rings. A sampling of initial conceptual design work for a coalescing ring is presented here.

 
THPMN096 Stopping Muon Beams 2933
 
  • M. A.C. Cummings, R. P. Johnson
    Muons, Inc, Batavia
  • C. M. Ankenbrandt, K. Yonehara
    Fermilab, Batavia, Illinois
 
  Funding: Supported in part by DOE SBIR/STTR grant DE-FG02-03ER83722

The study of rare processes using stopping muon beams provides access to new physics that cannot be addressed at energy frontier machines. The flux of muons into a small stopping target is limited by the kinematics of the production process and by stochastic processes in the material used to slow the particles. Innovative muon beam cooling techniques are being applied to the design of stopping muon beams in order to increase the event rates in such experiments. Such intense stopping beams will also aid the development of applications such as muon spin resonance and muon-catalyzed fusion.

 
THPMN106 Use of Harmonics in RF Cavities in Muon Capture for a Neutrino Factory or Muon Collider 2957
 
  • D. V. Neuffer, C. Y. Yoshikawa
    Fermilab, Batavia, Illinois
  • R. P. Johnson
    Muons, Inc, Batavia
 
  Funding: Supported in part by DOE STTR grant DE-FG02-05ER86252

Common to various front end designs for a muon collider or neutrino factory are costly low frequency RF cavities used to bunch muons. In this paper we show that adding higher harmonic RF cavities to the bunching section of a muon capture channel can provide as good or better bunching efficiency than the case where only the fundamental is used. Since higher harmonic cavities are less expensive to build and operate, this approach implies significant cost savings.

 
THPMN110 The MANX Muon Cooling Demonstration Experiment 2969
 
  • K. Yonehara, D. R. Broemmelsiek, M. Hu, A. Jansson, V. D. Shiltsev
    Fermilab, Batavia, Illinois
  • R. J. Abrams, M. A.C. Cummings, R. P. Johnson, S. A. Kahn, T. J. Roberts
    Muons, Inc, Batavia
 
  Funding: Supported in part by DOE STTR grant DE-FG02-06ER86282

MANX is an experiment to prove that effective six-dimensional (6D) muon beam cooling can be achieved a Helical Cooling Channel (HCC) using ionization-cooling with helical and solenoidal magnets in a novel configuration. The aim is to demonstrate that 6D muon beam cooling is understood well enough to plan intense neutrino factories and high-luminosity muon colliders. The experiment consists of the HCC magnets that envelop a liquid helium energy absorber, upstream and downstream instrumentation to measure the particle or beam parameters before and after cooling, and emittance matching sections between the detectors and the HCC. We describe and compare the experimental configuration for both single particle and beam profile measurement techniques based on G4Beamline simulations.