Author: Marone, A.
Paper Title Page
WEEPPB013 Direct Wind Superconducting Corrector Magnets for the SuperKEKB IR 2191
 
  • B. Parker, M. Anerella, J. Escallier, A.K. Ghosh, A.K. Jain, A. Marone, P. Wanderer
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York, USA
  • Y. Arimoto, M. Iwasaki, N. Ohuchi, M. Tawada, K. Tsuchiya, H. Yamaoka, Z.G. Zong
    KEK, Ibaraki, Japan
 
  Upgrade of the KEKB asymmetric e+e collider for a forty-fold luminosity increase, denoted SuperKEKB, is now underway. For SuperKEKB the beam crossing angle is increased to provide separate focusing channels for the incoming and outgoing electron and positrons beams in new superconducting Interaction Region (IR) magnets. Two functional classes of superconducting corrector magnets are needed to meet SuperKEKB beam optics goals. Dipole, skew-dipole, skew-quadrupole and octupole coil windings will be inserted inside the bores of the main IR quadrupoles to make magnet center alignments, roll adjustments and non-linear optics corrections. A second class of high-order magnetic multipole corrector coils is needed to compensate the non-linear fringe field experienced by the circulating beam that passes just outside the main quadrupole coils that are closest to the Interaction Point (IP). Near the IP there is no space for magnetic yokes or other passive shielding to diminish the fringe field. At the time of this conference the SuperKEKB corrector magnet production will be under way. The SuperKEKB correction coil design and our production technique are reviewed in this paper.  
 
WEOBA01 Construction Progress of the RHIC Electron Lenses 2125
 
  • W. Fischer, Z. Altinbas, M. Anerella, E.N. Beebe, M. Blaskiewicz, D. Bruno, W.C. Dawson, D.M. Gassner, X. Gu, R.C. Gupta, K. Hamdi, J. Hock, L.T. Hoff, A.K. Jain, R.F. Lambiase, Y. Luo, M. Mapes, A. Marone, T.A. Miller, M.G. Minty, C. Montag, M. Okamura, A.I. Pikin, S.R. Plate, D. Raparia, Y. Tan, C. Theisen, P. Thieberger, J.E. Tuozzolo, P. Wanderer, S.M. White, W. Zhang
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York, USA
 
  Funding: Work supported by U.S. DOE under contract No DE-AC02-98CH10886 with the U.S. Department of Energy.
In polarized proton operation, the RHIC performance is limited by the head-on beam-beam effect. To overcome these limitations two electron lenses are under construction. We give an overview of the progress over the last year. Guns, collectors and the warm electron beam transport solenoids with their associated power supplies have been constructed. The superconducting solenoids that guide the electron beam during the interaction with the proton beam are near completion. A test stand has been set up to verify the performance of gun, collector and some of the instrumentation. The RHIC infrastructure is being prepared for installation, and simulations continue to optimize the performance.
 
slides icon Slides WEOBA01 [7.672 MB]