Paper | Title | Page |
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MOOBN2 | Inverse Free Electron Laser Accelerators for Driving Compact Light Sources and Detection Applications | 1 |
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Funding: Defense Threat Reduction Agency (DTRA) Because of the broad application space for compact, 1-2 GeV accelerators, Inverse Free Electron Lasers (IFELs) are enjoying a rebirth of R&D funding. The efforts are under way in industry (RadiaBeam), academia (UCLA), and national laboratories (LLNL and BNL) to develop an ultra-compact IFEL energy booster for the photoinjector driven linear accelerating systems. The RUBICON collaboration integrates many of the institutions for proof-of-principle IFEL driven Inverse Compton Scattering (ICS) compact light source demonstrations. IFELs perform optimally in this mid-energy range, and given continual advances in laser technology, high average power IFELs with gradients well over 500 MeV/m are now feasible, leading to high quality, compact ICS and Free Electron Laser light sources. Importantly, IFEL operation can have excellent shot-to-shot energy stability, which is crucial when not only driving these light sources, but also for the downstream applications such as photofission, nuclear resonance fluorescence and standoff detection. |
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Slides MOOBN2 [2.625 MB] | |
MOP012 | Ultra-High Gradient Compact S-Band Accelerating Structure | 127 |
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Funding: Dept. of Energy DE-SC0000866 In this paper, we present the radio-frequency design of the DECA (Doubled Energy Compact Accelerator) S-band accelerating structure operating in the pi-mode at 2.856 GHz, where RF power sources are commonly available. The development of the DECA structure will offer an ultra-compact drop-in replacement for a conventional S-band linac in research and industrial applications such as drivers for compact light sources, medical and security systems. The electromagnetic design has been performed with the codes SuperFish and HFSS. The choice of the single cell shape derives from an optimization process aiming to maximize RF efficiency and minimize surface fields at very high accelerating gradients, i.e. 50 MV/m and above. Such gradients can be achieved utilizing shape-optimized elliptical irises, dual-feed couplers with the "fat-lip" coupling slot geometry, and specialized fabrication procedures developed for high gradient structures. The thermal-stress analysis of the DECA structure is also presented. * V. Dolgashev, "Status of X-band Standing Wave Structure Studies at SLAC", SLAC-PUB-10124, (2003). ** C. Limborg et al., "RF Design of LCLS Gun", LCLS-TN-05-03 (2005). |
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MOP154 | Prospects for Proton Accelerators Driven by the Radiation Pressure from a Sub-PW CO2 Laser | 379 |
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Funding: DOE Laser acceleration of ion beams is normally realized via irradiating thin-foil targets with near-IR solid-state lasers with up to petawatt (PW) peak power. Despite demonstration of significant achievements, further progress towards practical application of such beam sources is hindered by the challenges inherent in constructing still more intense and higher-contrast lasers. Our recent studies of the radiation pressure acceleration indicate that the combination of a 10-μm CO2 laser with a gas jet target offers a unique opportunity for a breakthrough in the field. Strong power scaling of this regime holds the promise of achieving the hundreds of MeV proton beams with just sub-PW CO2 laser pulses. Generation of such pulses is a challenging task. We discuss a strategy of the CO2 laser upgrade aimed to providing a more compact and economical hadron source for cancer therapy. This include optimization of the method of the 10μm short-pulse generation, higher amplification in the CO2 gas under combined isotopic and power broadening effects, and the pulse shortening to a few laser cycles (150-200 fs) via self-chirping in the laser-produced plasma and the consecutive dispersive compression. |
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TUOBN3 | Witness Bunch Acceleration in a Multi-bunch PWFA | 712 |
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Funding: Work supported by US DoE and NSF We present initial experimental results showing the excitation of plasma wakefields by a train of two drive bunches. These wakefields are experienced by a trailing witness bunch that gains energy while retaining a finite energy spread. These well controlled plasma wakefield accelerator (PWFA) experiments are important to test the theory of the PWFA and serve as a testbed for techniques that will be used in high energy experiments. |
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Slides TUOBN3 [5.432 MB] | |
TUP124 | Phase Contrast Imaging Using a Single Picosecond X-ray Pulse of the Inverse Compton Source at the BNL Accelerator Test Facility | 1062 |
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Inverse Compton scattering (ICS) X-ray sources are of current interest due to their novel features that enable new methods in medical and biological imaging. As a compelling example of such a possibility, we present an experimental demonstration of single shot inline phase contrast imaging using the ICS source located at the BNL Accelerator Test Facility. The phase contrast effect is clearly observed in the images obtained. Further, its qualities are shown to be in agreement with the predictions of theoretical models through comparison of experimental and simulated images of a set of plastic wires of differing composition and size. We also display an example of application of the technique to single shot phase contrast imaging of a biological sample. | ||
WEP107 | CSR Shielding Experiment | 1677 |
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It is well known that the emission of coherent synchrotron radiation (CSR) in a dipole magnets leads to increase in beam energy spread and emittance. At the Brookhaven National Laboratory Accelerator Test Facility (ATF) we study the suppression of CSR emission affect on electron beam in a dipole magnet by two vertically spaced conducting plates. The gap between the plates is controlled by four actuators and could be varied from 0 to 14 mm. Our experimental results show that closing the plates significantly reduces both the beam energy loss and CSR-induced beam energy spread. In this paper we present selected results of the experiment and compare then with rigorous analytical theory. | ||
WEP126 | Progress in Experimental Study of Current Filamentation Instability | 1719 |
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Funding: Work supported by Department of Energy and National Science Foundation Current Filamentation Instability, CFI, is of central importance for the propagation of relativistic electron beams in plasmas. CFI could play an important role in the generation of magnetic fields and radiation in the after-glow of gamma ray bursts and also in energy transport for the fast-igniter inertial confinement fusion concept. Simulations were conducted with the particle-in-cell code QuickPIC* for e- beam and plasma parameters at the Brookhaven National Laboratory – Accelerator Test Facility, BNL-ATF. Results show that for a 2cm plasma the instability reaches near saturation. An experimental program was proposed and accepted at the BNL-ATF and an experiment is currently underway. There are three components to the experimental program: 1) imaging of the beam density/filaments at the exit from the plasma, 2) measurement and imaging of the transverse plasma density gradient and measurement of the magnetic field and 3) identifying the radiation spectrum of the instability. Preliminary results from phase one will be presented along with the progress and diagnostic design for the following phases of the experiment. * C. Huang et. al. Journal of Computational Physics 217, 2(2006) |
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THOBN3 | Proof-of-Principle Experiment for FEL-based Coherent Electron Cooling | 2064 |
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Funding: This work is supported the U.S. Department of Energy Coherent electron cooling (CEC) has a potential to significantly boost luminosity of high-energy, high-intensity hadron-hadron and electron-hadron colliders*. In a CEC system, a hadron beam interacts with a cooling electron beam. A perturbation of the electron density caused by ions is amplified and fed back to the ions to reduce the energy spread and the emittance of the ion beam. To demonstrate the feasibility of CEC we propose a proof-of-principle experiment at RHIC using one of JLab’s SRF cryo-modules. In this paper, we describe the experimental setup for CeC installed into one of RHIC's interaction regions. We present results of analytical estimates and results of initial simulations of cooling a gold-ion beam at 40 GeV/u energy via CeC. * Vladimir N. Litvinenko, Yaroslav S. Derbenev, Physical Review Letters 102, 114801 |
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Slides THOBN3 [1.379 MB] | |
THP002 | Re-Circulated Inverse Compton Scattering X-ray Source for Industrial Applications | 2139 |
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An experiment is under way at the Accelerator Test Facility (ATF) at BNL to demonstrate inverse Compton scattering in a pulse-train regime. A photoinjector generated electron beam pulse train is scattered by a recirculating laser pulse in a novel resonant configuration termed Recirculation Injection by Nonlinear Gating (RING). The goal of the experiment is to demonstrate strong enhancement of the ICS photon flux through laser recirculation. The project status is presented, and the long-term outlook is discussed with emphasis on the medical and security applications. | ||
THP050 | Normal Conducting Radio Frequency X-band Deflecting Cavity Fabrication and Validation | 2211 |
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An X-band Traveling wave Deflector mode cavity (XTD) has been developed at Radiabeam Technologies to perform longitudinal characterization of the sub-picosecond ultra-relativistic electron beams. The device is optimized for the 100 MeV electron beam parameters at the Accelerator Test Facility (ATF) at Brookhaven National Laboratory, and is scalable to higher energies. The XTD is designed to operate at 11.424 GHz, and features short filling time, femtosecond resolution, and a small footprint. RF design, fabrication and RF validation and tuning will be presented. | ||