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MOPHA037 |
Visible Light Diagnostics at the ANKA Storage Ring |
866 |
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- B. Kehrer, A. Borysenko, E. Hertle, N. Hiller, M. Holz, A.-S. Müller, P. Schönfeldt, P. Schütze
KIT, Karlsruhe, Germany
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Synchrotron radiation in the visible light range is a versatile diagnostics tool for accelerator studies. At the ANKA storage ring of the Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), we have a dedicated visible light diagnostics beamline and two additional beam ports close to the radiation's source point. The visible light diagnostics beamline hosts a time-correlated single-photon-counting unit to measure the bunch filling pattern and a streak camera for longitudinal diagnostics. Recently, the beamline has been extended with a fast-gated intensified camera to study transverse instabilities. The synchrotron light monitor ports were previously used for direct source imaging. Due to the diffraction limit the vertical beam size could not be resolved. One of the two ports has recently been equipped with a double-slit to allow for interferometric measurements of the vertical beam size. In this paper we give an overview of the different setup modifications and present first results.
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DOI • |
reference for this paper
※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2015-MOPHA037
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WEPMN065 |
Progress at the FREIA Laboratory |
3072 |
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- M. Olvegård, A.K. Bhattacharyya, T.J.C. Ekelöf, J. Eriksson, K. Fransson, K.J. Gajewski, V.A. Goryashko, L. Hermansson, M. Holz, M. Jacewicz, M. Jobs, Å. Jönsson, H. Li, T. Lofnes, H. Nicander, R.J.M.Y. Ruber, R. Santiago Kern, R. Wedberg, V.G. Ziemann
Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden
- D.S. Dancila, A. Rydberg
Uppsala University, Department of Engineering Sciences, Uppsala, Sweden
- R.A. Yogi
ESS, Lund, Sweden
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The FREIA Facility for Research Instrumentation and Accelerator Development at Uppsala University, Sweden, has reached the stage where the testing of superconducting cavities for the European Spallation Source (ESS) is starting. The new helium liquefaction plant has been commissioned and now supplies a custom-made, versatile horizontal cryostat, HNOSS, with liquid helium at up to 140 l/h. The cryostat has been designed and built to house up to two accelerating cavities, or, later on, other superconducting equipment such as magnets or crab cavities. A prototype cavity for the spoke section of the ESS linac will arrive mid 2015 for high-power testing in the horizontal cryostat. Two tetrode-based commercial RF power stations will deliver 400 kW peak power each, at 352 MHz, to the cavity through an RF distribution line developed at FREIA. In addition, significant progress has been made with in-house development of solid state amplifier modules and power combiners for future use in particle accelerators. We report here on these and other ongoing activities at the FREIA laboratory.
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DOI • |
reference for this paper
※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2015-WEPMN065
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Export • |
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