Keyword: acceleration
Paper Title Other Keywords Page
MOOBN2 Inverse Free Electron Laser Accelerators for Driving Compact Light Sources and Detection Applications laser, electron, undulator, FEL 1
 
  • A.M. Tremaine, S. Boucher, A.Y. Murokh
    RadiaBeam, Santa Monica, USA
  • S.G. Anderson
    LLNL, Livermore, California, USA
  • W.J. Brown
    MIT, Cambridge, Massachusetts, USA
  • J.P. Duris, P. Musumeci, J.B. Rosenzweig
    UCLA, Los Angeles, California, USA
  • I. Jovanovic
    Penn State University, University Park, Pennsylvania, USA
  • I. Pogorelsky, M.N. Polyanskiy, V. Yakimenko
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York, USA
 
  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.
 
slides icon Slides MOOBN2 [2.625 MB]  
 
MOODS6 Beam Dynamics Simulations on the ESS Bilbao RFQ rfq, simulation, emittance, cavity 100
 
  • D. de Cos, I. Bustinduy, O. Gonzalez, J.L. Munoz, A. Velez
    ESS Bilbao, Bilbao, Spain
  • F.J. Bermejo
    Bilbao, Faculty of Science and Technology, Bilbao, Spain
  • V. Etxebarria, J. Portilla
    University of the Basque Country, Faculty of Science and Technology, Bilbao, Spain
  • J. Feuchtwanger
    ESS-Bilbao, Zamudio, Spain
  • S. Jolly, P. Savage
    Imperial College of Science and Technology, Department of Physics, London, United Kingdom
  • A.P. Letchford
    STFC/RAL/ISIS, Chilton, Didcot, Oxon, United Kingdom
 
  Funding: European Spallation Source - Bilbao
The Bilbao Accelerator RFQ is aimed to accelerate a 75 mA proton beam from 75 keV to 3 MeV, while keeping the beam both transversely and longitudinally focused, and presenting a minimum emittance growth. We report on the current status of the project, mainly focusing on the Beam Dynamics aspects of the design. Several particle simulations are carried out with RFQSIM, GPT and TRACK codes, in order to study the particle transmission of the RFQ under several circumstances, such as different current levels, vane geometry changes due to thermal stress, and different input beam characteristics obtained by changing the LEBT operation settings.
 
slides icon Slides MOODS6 [3.264 MB]  
 
MOP001 Charge Separation for Muon Collider Cooling emittance, solenoid, collider, simulation 103
 
  • R. B. Palmer, R.C. Fernow
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York, USA
 
  Most schemes for six dimensional muon ionization cooling work for only one sign. It is then necessary to have charge separation prior to that cooling. Schemes of charge separation using bent solenoids are described, and their simulated performances reported. It is found that for efficient separation, it should take place at somewhat higher momenta than commonly used for the cooling.  
 
MOP008 Upgrade of the Argonne Wakefield Accelerator Facility (AWA) and Commissioning of a New RF Gun for Drive Beam Generation wakefield, gun, electron, linac 115
 
  • M.E. Conde, D.S. Doran, W. Gai, R. Konecny, W. Liu, J.G. Power, Z.M. Yusof
    ANL, Argonne, USA
  • S.P. Antipov, C.-J. Jing
    Euclid TechLabs, LLC, Solon, Ohio, USA
  • E.E. Wisniewski
    Illinois Institute of Technology, Chicago, Illinois, USA
 
  Funding: Work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy under contract No. DE-AC02-06CH11357.
The AWA Facility is presently undergoing several upgrades that will enable it to further study wakefield acceleration driven by high charge electron beams. The facility employs an L-band photocathode RF gun to generate high charge short electron bunches, which are used to drive wakefields in dielectric loaded structures as well as in metallic structures (iris loaded, photonic band gap, etc). Several facility upgrades are underway: (a) a new RF gun with a higher quantum efficiency photocathode will replace the RF gun that has been used to generate the drive bunches; (b) the existing RF gun will be used to generate a witness beam to probe the wakefields; (c) three new L-band RF power stations, each providing 25 MW, will be added to the facility; (d) five linac structures will be added to the drive beamline, bringing the beam energy up from 15 MeV to 75 MeV. The drive beam will consist of bunch trains of up to 32 bunches spaced by 0.77 ns with up to 100 nC per bunch. The goal of future experiments is to reach accelerating gradients of several hundred MV/m and to extract RF pulses with GW power level.
 
 
MOP010 Resonance, Particle Stability, and Acceleration in the Micro-Accelerator Platform electron, resonance, laser, simulation 121
 
  • J.C. McNeur, J.B. Rosenzweig, G. Travish, J. Zhou
    UCLA, Los Angeles, USA
  • R.B. Yoder
    Manhattanville College, Purchase, New York, USA
 
  Funding: US Defense Threat Reduction Agency
A micron-scale dielectric-based slab-symmetric accelerator is currently being designed and fabricated at UCLA. This Micro-Accelerator Platform (MAP) accelerates electrons in a 800nm wide vacuum gap via a resonant accelerating mode excited by a side-coupled optical-wavelength laser. Detailed results of particle dynamics and field simulations are presented. In particular, we examine various methods of achieving net acceleration and particle stability. Additionally, structural designs that produce accelerating fields synchronous with both relativistic and sub-relativistic electrons are discussed.
 
 
MOP014 Status and Upgrades of the NLCTA for Studies of Advanced Beam Acceleration, Dynamics, and Manipulation laser, cavity, radiation, electron 130
 
  • M.P. Dunning, C. Adolphsen, T.S. Chu, E.R. Colby, A. Gilevich, C. Hast, R.K. Jobe, C. Limborg-Deprey, D.J. McCormick, B.D. McKee, J. Nelson, T.O. Raubenheimer, K. Soong, G.V. Stupakov, Z.M. Szalata, D.R. Walz, F. Wang, S.P. Weathersby, M. Woodley, D. Xiang
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
 
  The Next Linear Collider Test Accelerator (NLCTA) is a low-energy electron accelerator (120 MeV) at SLAC that is used for ultra-high gradient X-band RF structure testing and advanced accelerator research. Here we give an overview of the current program at the facility, including the E-163 direct laser acceleration experiment, the echo-enabled harmonic generation (EEHG) FEL experiment, narrow-band THz generation, coherent optical transition radiation (COTR) studies, microbunching instability studies, and X-band structure testing. We also present the upgrades that are currently underway and some future programs utilizing these upgrades, including extension of the EEHG experiments to higher harmonics, and an emittance exchange experiment.  
 
MOP043 Simulations of a Muon Linac for a Neutrino Factory linac, simulation, synchrotron, factory 181
 
  • K.B. Beard
    Muons, Inc, Batavia, USA
  • S.A. Bogacz, V.S. Morozov, Y. Roblin
    JLAB, Newport News, Virginia, USA
 
  Funding: Supported in part by DOE grant DE-FG-08ER86351
The Neutrino Factory baseline design involves a complex chain of accelerators including a single-pass linac, two recirculating linacs and an FFAG. The first linac follows the capture and bunching section and accelerates the muons from about 244 to 900 MeV. It must accept a high emittance beam about 30 cm wide with a 10% energy spread. This linac uses counterwound, shielded superconducting solenoids and 201 MHz superconducting cavities. Simulations have been carried out using several codes including Zgoubi, OptiM, GPT, and G4beamline, both to determine the optics and to estimate the radiation loads on the elements due to beam loss and muon decay.
 
 
MOP057 A SLAB Dielectric Structure as a Source of Wakefield Acceleration and THz Cherenkov Radiation Generation wakefield, radiation, simulation, electron 211
 
  • D. Stratakis, G. Andonian, J.B. Rosenzweig, X. Wei
    UCLA, Los Angeles, California, USA
 
  Funding: Work is funded by US Dept. of Energy grant numbers DE-FG03-92ER40693.
Acceleration of electrons in wakefields set up by a series of drive bunches in a dielectric structure has been proposed as a possible component of next-generation accelerators. Here, we discuss future experimental work with a slab sub-millimeter dielectric loaded accelerator structure that in contrast to conventional dielectric tubes should diminish the effects of transverse wakes and will permit higher total charge to be accelerated. The proposed experiment will allow the generation of unprecedented peak power at THz frequencies. In addition, it can generate ~50-150 MV/m drive fields and thus will allow the testing of acceleration using witness and drive beams. We examine details of the geometry and composition of the structures to be used in the experiment.
 
 
MOP083 Plasma Wake Excitation by Lasers or Particle Beams plasma, laser, electron, focusing 253
 
  • C.B. Schroeder, C. Benedetti, E. Esarey, C.G.R. Geddes, W. Leemans, C. Tóth
    LBNL, Berkeley, California, USA
 
  Funding: Work supported by the Office of Science, Office of High Energy Physics, of the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231.
Plasma accelerators may be driven by the ponderomotive force of an intense laser or the space-charge force of a charged particle beam. Plasma wake excitation driven by lasers or particle beams is examined, and the implications of the different physical excitation mechanisms for accelerator design are discussed.
 
 
MOP084 A High Repetition Plasma Mirror for Staged Electron Acceleration laser, plasma, electron, coupling 256
 
  • T. Sokollik, E.S. Evans, A.J. Gonsalves, W. Leemans, C. Lin, K. Nakamura, J. Osterhoff, S. Shiraishi, C. Tóth, J. van Tilborg
    LBNL, Berkeley, California, USA
 
  Funding: Acknowledgment: This work is supported by the National Science Foundation and DTRA.
In order to build a compact, staged laser plasma accelerator the in-coupling of the laser beam to the different stages represents one of the key issues. To limit the spatial foot print and thus to realize a high overall acceleration gradient, a concept has to be found which realizes this in-coupling within a few centimeters. We present experiments on a tape-drive based plasma mirror which could be used to reflect the focused laser beam into the acceleration stage.
References:
* W. Leemans et. al, Phys. Today, 62, 44 (2009)
** G. Doumy et. al, Phys. Rev. E 69, 026402 (2004)
*** B. Dromey et. al,, Rev. Sci. Instrum. 75, 645 (2004)
 
 
MOP096 Fabrication and Measurement of Dual Layer Silica Grating Structures for Direct Laser Acceleration laser, alignment, simulation, vacuum 280
 
  • E.A. Peralta, R.L. Byer
    Stanford University, Stanford, California, USA
  • E.R. Colby, R.J. England, C. McGuinness, K. Soong
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
 
  Funding: Department of Energy: DE-AC02-76SF00515(SLAC),DE-FG06-97ER41276
We present our progress in the fabrication and measurement of a transmission-based dielectric double-grating accelerator structure. The structure lends itself to simpler coupling to the accelerating mode in the waveguide with negligible group velocity dispersion effects, allowing for operation with ultra-short (fs) laser pulses. This document describes work being done at the Stanford Nanofabrication Facility to create a monolithic guided-wave structure with 800 nm period gratings separated by a fixed sub-wavelength gap using standard optical lithographic techniques on a fused silica substrate. An SEM and other characterization tools were used to measure the fabrication deviations of the grating geometry and simulations were carried out in MATLAB and HFSS to study the effects of such deviations on the resulting accelerating gradient.
 
 
MOP097 Modeling of Quasi-Phase Matching for Laser Electron Acceleration laser, plasma, electron, simulation 283
 
  • M.W. Lin
    The Pennsylvania State University, University Park, Pennsylvania, USA
  • I. Jovanovic
    Penn State University, University Park, Pennsylvania, USA
 
  Funding: This work is supported by the Defense Threat Reduction Agency through contract HDTRA1-10-1-0034.
Sensing of shielded fissile materials at long range is critically dependent on the development of compact particle accelerators. Direct laser acceleration (DLA) of electrons has the potential to meet this requirement. In DLA, the axial component of the electric field of a focused radially polarized laser pulse accelerates particles. The acceleration gradient could be estimated as 77 MeV/mm for 800 nm laser with power of 0.5 TW and 8.5 μm guided mode radius. The implementation of long guided propagation of laser pulses and the phase matching between electrons and laser pulses may limit the DLA in reality. A preformed corrugated plasma waveguide could be applied to extend the laser beam propagation distance and for quasi-phase matching between laser and electron pulses for net acceleration. We perform numerical calculations to estimate the phase matching conditions for a radially polarized laser pulse propagating in a corrugated plasma waveguide. Further, the electric field distribution of a radially polarized laser pulse propagating in this waveguide is also analyzed via particle-in-cell simulations, and will be used to guide future experiments.
* P. Serafim, et al., IEEE Trans. Plasma Sci. 28, 1155 (2000).
** A.G. York, et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 100, 195001 (2008).
 
 
MOP107 Status of Dielectric-Lined Two-Channel Rectangular High Transformer Ratio Accelerator Structure Experiment wakefield, electron, controls, status 298
 
  • S.V. Shchelkunov, M.A. LaPointe
    Yale University, Beam Physics Laboratory, New Haven, Connecticut, USA
  • M.E. Conde, W. Gai, J.G. Power, Z.M. Yusof
    ANL, Argonne, USA
  • J.L. Hirshfield
    Omega-P, Inc., New Haven, Connecticut, USA
  • T.C. Marshall
    Columbia University, New York, USA
  • D. Mihalcea
    Northern Illinois University, DeKalb, Illinois, USA
  • G.V. Sotnikov
    NSC/KIPT, Kharkov, Ukraine
 
  Funding: This work is supported by DoE, Office of High Energy Physics
Recent tests of a two-channel rectangular dielectric lined accelerator structure are described; comparison with theory and related issues are presented. The structure (with channel width ratio 6:1) is designed to have a maximum transformer ratio of ~12.5:1. It operates mainly in the LSM31 mode (~ 30GHz). The dielectric liner is cordierite (dielectric constant ~4.76). The acceleration gradient is 1.2 MV/m for each 10nC of the drive bunch for the first acceleration peak of the wakefield, and 0.92 MV/m for the second peak. The structure is installed into the AWA beam-line (Argonne National Lab) and is excited by a single 10-50nC, 14MeV drive bunch. Both the drive bunch and a delayed witness bunch are produced at the same photocathode. This is the first experiment to test a two-channel dielectric rectangular wakefield device where the accelerated bunch may be continuously energized by the drive bunch. The immediate experimental objective is to observe the energy gain and spread, and thereby draw conclusions from the experimental results and the theory model predictions. The observed energy change of the test bunch might be well explained*.
* G. V. Sotnikov, et al., Advanced Accelerator Concepts: 13th Workshop, Carl B. Schroeder, Wim Leemans and Eric Esarey, editors, AIP Conf. Proc. 1086), pp. 415–420 (AIP, New York, 2009).
 
 
MOP108 Simulation Study of Proton-Driven PWFA Based on CERN SPS Beam plasma, wakefield, proton, simulation 301
 
  • G.X. Xia, A. Caldwell
    MPI-P, München, Germany
  • C. Huang
    LANL, Los Alamos, New Mexico, USA
  • W.B. Mori
    UCLA, Los Angeles, California, USA
 
  We have proposed an experimental study of the proton-driven plasma wakefield acceleration by using proton beam from the CERN SPS. In this paper, the particle-in-cell (PIC) simulation of the SPS beam-driven plasma wakefield acceleration is introduced. By varying the beam parameters and plasma parameters, simulation shows that electric fields in excess of 1 GeV/m can be achieved.  
 
MOP112 Study of Enhanced Transformer Ratio in a Coaxial Dielectric Wakefield Accelerator using a Profiled Drive Bunch Train wakefield, simulation, accelerating-gradient, collider 304
 
  • G.V. Sotnikov
    NSC/KIPT, Kharkov, Ukraine
  • J.L. Hirshfield
    Yale University, Physics Department, New Haven, CT, USA
  • T.C. Marshall, G.V. Sotnikov
    Omega-P, Inc., New Haven, Connecticut, USA
 
  Funding: The research was supported by US Department of Energy, Office of High Energy Physics, Advanced Accelerator R & D.
A key parameter of wakefield acceleration is the transformer ratio T. For a dielectric wakefield accelerator, it has been suggested to use a ramped drive bunch train (RBT), or a multizone dielectric structure to enhance T. Here we show the possibility of greatly improving the RBT technique by the use of a numerical algorithm. We study a two-channel 28 GHz structure with two nested Alumina cylindrical shells (CDWA) which is to be excited by a train of four annular bunches having energy 14 MeV and axial RMS size 1mm; the total charge of bunches is 200 nC. For bunch charge and spacing chosen for optimum acceleration gradient, or for optimizing T using the standard method, we obtain T~3.6. We found that if the charge ratios are 1.0:2.4:3.5:5.0 and the spaces between the bunches are 2.5, 2.5, and 4.5 wakefield periods, then T~17. The RBT also can be used successfully in a high gradient THz CDWA structure.
* C.Jing et.al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 98 144801, (2007)
** C. Wang, et.al. Proc. PAC 2005. IEEE, 2005, p.1333.
*** G. Sotnikov et.al. PRST-AB, 061302 (2009).
 
 
MOP117 Beam Test of a Tunable Dielectric Wakefield Accelerator wakefield, gun, electron, linac 316
 
  • C.-J. Jing, S.P. Antipov, A. Kanareykin, P. Schoessow
    Euclid TechLabs, LLC, Solon, Ohio, USA
  • M.E. Conde, W. Gai, J.G. Power
    ANL, Argonne, USA
 
  Funding: Work supported by US DoE SBIR Grant under Contract # DE-FG02-07ER84822
We report on a collinear wakefield experiment using the first tunable dielectric loaded accelerating structure. Dielectric-based accelerators are generally lacking in approaches to tune the frequency after fabrication. However, by introducing an extra layer of nonlinear ferroelectric which has a dielectric constant sensitive to temperature and DC voltage, the frequency of a DLA structure can be tuned on the fly by controlling the temperature or DC bias. The experiment demonstrated that by varying the temperature of the structure over a 50°C temperature range, the energy of a witness bunch at a fixed delay with respect to the drive beam could be changed by an amount corresponding to more than half of the nominal structure wavelength.
 
 
MOP127 The LLNL/UCLA High Gradient Inverse Free Electron Laser Accelerator laser, electron, undulator, simulation 331
 
  • S.G. Anderson, G.G. Anderson, M. Betts, S.E. Fisher, D.J. Gibson, S.S.Q. Wu
    LLNL, Livermore, California, USA
  • J.T. Moody, P. Musumeci, A.M. Tremaine
    UCLA, Los Angeles, California, USA
 
  Funding: This work performed under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy by Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory under Contract DE-AC52-07NA27344.
We describe the Inverse Free Electron Laser (IFEL) accelerator currently under construction at LLNL in collaboration with UCLA. This project combines a strongly tapered undulator with a 10 Hz repetition rate, Ti:Sapphire laser to produce > 200 MeV/m average accelerating gradient over the 50 cm long undulator. The project goal is to demonstrate IFEL accelerator technology that preserves the input beam quality and is well suited for future light source applications. We discuss the accelerator design focusing on issues associated with the use of 800 nm, 100 fs laser pulses. Three-dimensional simulations of the IFEL interaction are presented which guide the choice of laser and electron beam parameters. Finally, experimental plans and potential future developments are discussed.
 
 
MOP144 Multi-Harmonic Cavity for RF Breakdown Studies cavity, cathode, klystron, electron 361
 
  • Y. Jiang
    Yale University, Beam Physics Laboratory, New Haven, Connecticut, USA
  • J.L. Hirshfield
    Yale University, Physics Department, New Haven, CT, USA
  • S. Kazakov, S.V. Kuzikov
    Omega-P, Inc., New Haven, Connecticut, USA
 
  Funding: DOE, Office of HEP
An axially-asymmetric cavity to support several modes at harmonically-related frequencies is predicted to sustain higher RF breakdown thresholds than a conventional pillbox cavity, when driven by two or more external RF phase-locked harmonic sources. Experimental efforts are underway at Yale Beam Physics Lab to study RF breakdown in a bimodal asymmetric cavity. Such a cavity could be a basic building-block for a future high-gradient warm accelerator structure.
* S.Yu. Kazakov, S.V. Kuzikov, Y. Jiang, and J.L. Hirshfield, PRSTAB, 13, 071303 (2010).
** S.V. Kuzikov, S.Yu. Kazakov, Y. Jiang, and J.L. Hirshfield, PRL 104, 214801 (2010).
 
 
MOP153 High Efficiency Laser Ion Acceleration in Low Density Plasmas proton, plasma, laser, simulation 376
 
  • E. d'Humières, V. Tikhonchuk
    CELIA, Talence, France
 
  Laser driven sources of high energy ions commonly use thin solid foils. A gaseous target can also produce ion beams with characteristics comparable to those obtained with solid targets. Using Particle-In-Cell simulations, we have studied in detail ion acceleration with high intensity laser pulses interacting with low density plasmas. A two-step acceleration process can be triggered: first, ions are accelerated in volume by electric fields generated by hot electrons, second, the ion energy is boosted in a strong electrostatic shock. 2D and 3D simulations show the potential of this regime. It is possible to model separately these two steps. In the first step a hot electron population and a descending density profile are necessary, and the second step develops if a fast proton wave enters in a low density plasma.  
 
MOP224 A Data Acquisition System for Longitudinal Beam Properties in a Rapid Cycling Synchrotron booster, emittance, synchrotron, instrumentation 522
 
  • J. Steimel, C.-Y. Tan
    Fermilab, Batavia, USA
 
  Funding: Operated by Fermi Research Alliance, LLC under Contract No. DE-AC02-07CH11359 with the United States Department of Energy.
A longitudinal beam properties, data acquisition system has been commissioned to operate in the Fermilab booster ring. This system captures real time information including beam synchronous phase, bunch length, and coupled bunch instability amplitudes as the beam is accelerated from 400MeV to 8GeV in 33ms. The system uses an off-the-shelf Tektronix oscilloscope running Labview software and a synchronous pulse generator. This paper describes the hardware configuration and the software configuration used to optimize the data processing rate.
 
 
MOP235 LANSCE Wire Scanning Diagnostics Device Prototype vacuum, linac, diagnostics, proton 551
 
  • S. Rodriguez Esparza, Y.K. Batygin, J.D. Gilpatrick, M.E. Gruchalla, A.J. Maestas, C. Pillai, J.L. Raybun, F.D. Sattler, J.D. Sedillo, B.G. Smith
    LANL, Los Alamos, New Mexico, USA
 
  The Accelerator Operations & Technology Division at Los Alamos National Laboratory operates a linear particle accelerator which utilizes 110 wire scanning diagnostics devices to gain position and intensity information of the proton beam. In the upcoming LANSCE improvements, 51 of these wire scanners are to be replaced with a new design, up-to-date technology and off-the-shelf components. This document outlines the requirements for the mechanical design of the LANSCE wire scanner and presents the recently developed linac wire scanner prototype. Additionally, this document presents the design modifications that have been implemented into the fabrication and assembly of this first linac wire scanner prototype. Also, this document will present the design for the second and third wire scanner prototypes being developed. These last two prototypes belong to a different section of the particle accelerator and therefore have slightly different design specifications. Lastly, the paper concludes with a plan for future work on the wire scanner development.  
 
TUOBN3 Witness Bunch Acceleration in a Multi-bunch PWFA plasma, wakefield, electron, controls 712
 
  • P. Muggli, B.A. Allen, Y. Fang
    USC, Los Angeles, California, USA
  • M. Babzien, M.G. Fedurin, K. Kusche, R. Malone, C. Swinson, V. Yakimenko
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York, USA
 
  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.
 
slides icon Slides TUOBN3 [5.432 MB]  
 
TUOBN4 Plasma Wakefield Experiments at FACET plasma, electron, wakefield, positron 715
 
  • M.J. Hogan, R.J. England, J.T. Frederico, C. Hast, S.Z. Li, M.D. Litos, D.R. Walz
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
  • W. An, C.E. Clayton, C. Joshi, W. Lu, K.A. Marsh, W.B. Mori, S. Tochitsky
    UCLA, Los Angeles, California, USA
  • P. Muggli, S.F. Pinkerton, Y. Shi
    USC, Los Angeles, California, USA
 
  Funding: Work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy under contract number DE-AC02-76SF00515.
FACET, the Facility for Advanced Accelerator and Experimental Tests, is a new facility being constructed in sector 20 of the SLAC linac primarily to study beam driven plasma wakefield acceleration beginning in summer 2011. The nominal FACET parameters are 23GeV, 3nC electron bunches compressed to ~20μm long and focused to ~10μm wide. The intense fields of the FACET bunches will be used to field ionize neutral lithium or cesium vapor produced in a heat pipe oven. Previous experiments at SLAC demonstrated 50GeV/m gradients in an 85cm field ionized lithium plasma where the interaction distance was limited by head erosion. Simulations indicate the lower ionization potential of cesium will decrease the rate of head erosion and increase single stage performance. The initial experimental program will compare the performance of lithium and cesium plasma sources with single and double bunches. Later experiments will investigate improved performance with a pre-ionized cesium plasma. The status of the experiments and expected performance are reviewed.
 
slides icon Slides TUOBN4 [13.080 MB]  
 
TUOBN5 A Proposed Experimental Test of Proton-Driven Plasma Wakefield Acceleration Based on CERN SPS plasma, wakefield, electron, proton 718
 
  • G.X. Xia, A. Caldwell
    MPI-P, München, Germany
  • W. An, C. Joshi, W. Lu, W.B. Mori
    UCLA, Los Angeles, California, USA
  • R.W. Assmann, F. Zimmermann
    CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
  • R.A. Fonseca, N.C. Lopes, J. Vieira
    Instituto Superior Tecnico, Lisbon, Portugal
  • C. Huang
    LANL, Los Alamos, New Mexico, USA
  • K.V. Lotov
    BINP SB RAS, Novosibirsk, Russia
  • P. Muggli
    USC, Los Angeles, California, USA
  • A.M. Pukhov
    HHUD, Dusseldorf, Germany
  • L.O. Silva
    IPFN, Lisbon, Portugal
 
  Proton-driven plasma wakefield acceleration (PDPWA) has been proposed as an approach to accelerate electron beam to TeV energy regime in a single passage of plasma channel. An experimental test is recently proposed to demonstrate the capability of PDPWA by using proton beams from the CERN SPS. The preparation of experiment is introduced. The particle-in-cell simulation results based on realistic beam parameters are presented.  
slides icon Slides TUOBN5 [2.208 MB]  
 
TUP070 EM Design of the Low-Beta SC Cavities for the Project X Front End cavity, linac, factory, SRF 946
 
  • I.G. Gonin, S. Barbanotti, P. Berrutti, L. Ristori, N. Solyak, V.P. Yakovlev
    Fermilab, Batavia, USA
 
  The low-energy part of the Project X H-linac includes three types of superconducting single spoke cavities (SSR) with β = 0.11, 0.21 and 0.4 operating at the fundamental TEM-mode at 325MHz. In this paper we present the detailed EM optimization of cavity shapes having the goal to minimize the peak electric and magnetic fields. We also discuss the importance of the integration of EM and mechanical design.  
 
TUP092 Multi-purpose 805 MHz Pillbox RF Cavity for Muon Acceleration Studies cavity, vacuum, coupling, linac 1003
 
  • G.M. Kazakevich, G. Flanagan, R.P. Johnson, M.L. Neubauer, R. Sah
    Muons, Inc, Batavia, USA
  • K.C.D. Chan, A.J. Jason, S.S. Kurennoy, H.M. Miyadera, P.J. Turchi
    LANL, Los Alamos, New Mexico, USA
  • A. Moretti, M. Popovic, K. Yonehara
    Fermilab, Batavia, USA
  • Y. Torun
    IIT, Chicago, Illinois, USA
 
  Funding: Supported by DOE grant DE-FG-08ER86352.
An 805 MHz RF pillbox cavity has been designed and constructed to investigate potential muon beam acceleration and cooling techniques. The cavity can operate in vacuum or under pressure to 100 atmospheres, at room temperature or in an LN2 bath at 77 K. The cavity is designed for easy assembly and disassembly with bolted construction using aluminum seals. The surfaces of the end walls of the cavity can be replaced with different materials such as copper, aluminum, beryllium, or molybdenum, and with different geometries such as shaped windows or grid structures. Different surface treatments such as electro polished, high-pressure water cleaned, and atomic layer deposition are being considered for testing. The cavity has been designed to fit inside the 5-Tesla solenoid in the MuCool Test Area at Fermilab. Performance of the cavity, including initial conditioning and operation in the external magnetic field will be reported.
 
 
TUP276 Measurement of Thermal Dependencies of PBG Fiber Properties laser, simulation, controls, alignment 1343
 
  • R. Laouar, E.R. Colby, R.J. England, R.J. Noble
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
 
  Funding: Department Of Energy
Photonic crystal fibers (PCFs) represent a class of optical fibers which have a wide spectrum of applications in the telecom and sensing industries. Currently, the Advanced Accelerator Research Department at SLAC is developing photonic bandgap particle accelerators, which are photonic crystal structures with a central defect used to accelerate electrons and achieve high longitudinal electric fields. Extremely compact and less costly than the traditional accelerators, these structures can support higher accelerating gradients and will open a new era in high energy physics as well as other fields of science. Based on direct laser acceleration in dielectric materials, the so called photonic band gap accelerators will benefit from mature laser and semiconductor industries.
 
 
TUP282 The MICE Target target, extraction, injection, proton 1355
 
  • P.J. Smith, C.N. Booth, P. Hodgson, E. Overton, M. Robinson
    Sheffield University, Sheffield, United Kingdom
  • G.J. Barber, K.R. Long
    Imperial College of Science and Technology, Department of Physics, London, United Kingdom
  • E.G. Capocci, J.S. Tarrant
    STFC/RAL, Chilton, Didcot, Oxon, United Kingdom
  • B.J.A. Shepherd
    STFC/DL/ASTeC, Daresbury, Warrington, Cheshire, United Kingdom
 
  The MICE experiment uses a beam of low energy muons to test the feasibility of ionization cooling. This beam is derived parasitically from the ISIS accelerator at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory. A target mechanism has been developed and deployed that rapidly inserts a small titanium target into the circulating proton beam immediately prior to extraction without undue disturbance of the primary ISIS beam. The first target drive was installed in ISIS during 2008 and operated successfully for over 100,000 pulses. A second upgraded design was installed in 2009 and after more than half a million actuations is still in operation. Further upgrades to the target design are now being tried in a separate test rig at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory. The technical specifications for these upgraded designs are given and the motivations for the improvements are discussed. Additionally, further future improvements to the current design are discussed.  
 
WEOAS1 Inertial Fusion Driven by Intense Heavy-Ion Beams ion, target, plasma, heavy-ion 1386
 
  • W. M. Sharp, J.J. Barnard, R.H. Cohen, M. Dorf, A. Friedman, D.P. Grote, S.M. Lund, L.J. Perkins, M.R. Terry
    LLNL, Livermore, California, USA
  • F.M. Bieniosek, A. Faltens, E. Henestroza, J.-Y. Jung, A.E. Koniges, J.W. Kwan, E. P. Lee, S.M. Lidia, B.G. Logan, P.N. Ni, L.R. Reginato, P.K. Roy, P.A. Seidl, J.H. Takakuwa, J.-L. Vay, W.L. Waldron
    LBNL, Berkeley, California, USA
  • R.C. Davidson, E.P. Gilson, I. Kaganovich, H. Qin, E. Startsev
    PPPL, Princeton, New Jersey, USA
  • I. Haber, R.A. Kishek
    UMD, College Park, Maryland, USA
 
  Funding: Work performed under the auspices of the US Department of Energy by LLNL under Contract DE-AC52-07NA27344, by LBNL under Contract DE-AC02-05CH11231, and by PPPL under Contract DE-AC02-76CH03073.
Intense heavy-ion beams have long been considered a promising driver option for inertial-fusion energy production. This paper briefly compares inertial confinement fusion (ICF) to the more-familiar magnetic- confinement approach and presents some advantages of using beams of heavy ions to drive ICF instead of lasers. Key design choices in heavy-ion fusion (HIF) facilities are discussed, particularly the type of accelerator. We then review experiments carried out at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (LBNL) over the past thirty years to understand various aspects of HIF driver physics. A brief review follows of present HIF research in the US and abroad, focusing on a new facility, NDCX-II, being built at LBNL to study the physics of warm dense matter heated by ions, as well as aspects of HIF target physics. Future research directions are briefly summarized.
 
slides icon Slides WEOAS1 [18.657 MB]  
 
WEODS1 Design and Optimization of Future X-ray FELs based on Advanced High Frequency Linacs linac, impedance, klystron, FEL 1491
 
  • F. Wang
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
 
  To drive future XFELs, normal-conducting linacs at various rf freqencies are being considered. With optimized accelerator structures and rf systems, a higher rf frequency linac has several advantages, such as high acceleration gradient and high rf-to-beam efficiency. This paper presents a comparison of possible S-band, C-band and X-band linac designs for two cases, single bunch operation and multibunch operation, where the bunch train length is longer than the structure fill time and the beam loading is small. General scaling laws for the main linac parameters, which can be useful in the design such linacs, are derived.  
slides icon Slides WEODS1 [5.795 MB]  
 
WEP042 FACET Emittance Growth emittance, simulation, plasma, wakefield 1573
 
  • J.T. Frederico, M.J. Hogan, M.D. Litos, Y. Nosochkov, T.O. Raubenheimer
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
 
  Funding: Work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy under contract number DE-AC02-76SF00515.
FACET, the Facility for Advanced Accelerator and Experimental Tests, is a new facility being constructed in sector 20 of the SLAC linac primarily to study beam driven plasma wakefield acceleration. The FACET beamline consists of a chicane and final focus system to compress the 23 GeV, 3 nC electron bunches to ~20μm long and ~10μm wide. Simulations of the FACET beamline indicate the short-duration and large, 1.5% rms energy spread beams may suffer a factor of four emittance growth from a combination of chromaticity, incoherent synchrotron radiation (ISR), and coherent synchrotron radiation (CSR). Emittance growth is directly correlated to head erosion in plasma wakefield acceleration and is a limiting factor in single stage performance. Studies of the geometric, CSR, and ISR components are presented. Numerical calculation of the rms emittance can be overwhelmed by long tails in the simulated phase space distributions; more useful definitions of emittance are given. A complete simulation of the beamline is presented as well, which agrees with design specifications.
 
 
WEP045 Measurement and Manipulation of Beta Functions in the Fermilab Booster booster, coupling, quadrupole, proton 1579
 
  • M.J. McAteer, S.E. Kopp
    The University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas, USA
  • E. Prebys
    Fermilab, Batavia, USA
 
  In order to meet the needs of Fermilab’s planned post- collider experimental program, the total proton throughput of the 8 GeV Booster accelerator must be nearly doubled within the next two years. A system of 48 ramped corrector magnets has recently been installed in the Booster to help improve efficiency and allow for higher beam intensity without exceeding safe radiation levels. We present the preliminary results of beta function measurements made using these corrector magnets. Our goal is to use the correctors to reduce irregularities in the beta function, and ultimately to introduce localized beta bumps to reduce beam loss or direct losses towards collimators.  
 
WEP080 Spin Tracking with GPUs to 250 GeV in RHIC Lattice resonance, lattice, quadrupole, longitudinal-dynamics 1624
 
  • V.H. Ranjbar
    Tech-X, Boulder, Colorado, USA
  • M. Bai, F. Méot
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York, USA
 
  Funding: Supported by DOE NP grant DE-SC0004432
We have benchmarked UAL-SPINK against Zgoubi and a list of well understood spin physics results. Along the way we addressed issues relating to longitudinal dynamics and orbit bump and distortion handling as well as appropriate slicing necessary for the TEAPOT-SPINK spin orbit integrator. We have also ported this TEAPOT-SPINK algorithm to the GPU’s. We present the challenges associated with this work.
 
 
WEP113 Low-Energy Run of Fermilab Electron Cooler's Beam Generation System electron, recirculation, gun, cathode 1695
 
  • L.R. Prost, A.V. Shemyakin
    Fermilab, Batavia, USA
  • A.V. Fedotov, J. Kewisch
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York, USA
 
  Funding: FNAL is operated by FRA, LLC under Contract No.DE-AC02-07CH11359 with US DoE. BNL is operated by BSA, LLC under Contract No.DE-AC02-98CH10886 with US DoE.
In the context of the evaluation of possibly using the Fermilab Electron Cooler for the proposed low-energy RHIC run at BNL, operating the cooler at 1.6 MeV electron beam energy was tested in a short beam line configuration. The main conclusion of this feasibility study is that the cooler's beam generation system is suitable for BNL needs. The beam recirculation was stable for all tested parameters. In particular, a beam current of 0.38 A was achieved with the cathode magnetic field up to the maximum value presently available of 250 G. The energy ripple was measured to be 40 eV. A striking difference with running the 4.3 MeV beam (nominal for operation at FNAL) is that no unprovoked beam recirculation interruptions were observed.
 
 
WEP131 A New Approach to Calculate the Transport Matrix in RF cavities cavity, linac, focusing, space-charge 1725
 
  • Y.I. Eidelman
    BINP SB RAS, Novosibirsk, Russia
  • N.V. Mokhov, S. Nagaitsev, N. Solyak
    Fermilab, Batavia, USA
 
  Funding: Work supported by USDoE
A realistic approach to calculate the transport matrix in RF cavities is developed. It is based on joint solution of equations of longitudinal and transverse motion of a charged particle in an electromagnetic field of the linac. This field is a given by distribution (measured or calculated) of the component of the longitudinal electric field on the axis of the linac. New approach is compared with other matrix methods to solve the same problem. The comparison with code ASTRA has been carried out. Complete agreement for tracking results for a TESLA-type cavity is achieved. A corresponding algorithm has been implemented into the MARS15 code.
 
 
WEP164 Accelerating Beam Dynamics Simulations with GPUs quadrupole, simulation, collective-effects, space-charge 1800
 
  • I.V. Pogorelov, K. Amyx, P. Messmer
    Tech-X, Boulder, Colorado, USA
 
  Funding: This work is funded by the DOE/BES Grant No. DE-SC0004585, and by Tech-X Corp.
We present recent results of prototyping general-purpose particle tracking on GPUs, discussing our CUDA implementation of transfer maps for single-particle dynamics and collective effects. Our goal being incorporation of the GPU-accelerated tracking into ANL's accelerator code ELEGANT, we used the code's quadrupole and drift-with-LSC elements as test cases. We discuss the use of data-parallel and hardware-assisted approaches (segmented scan and atomic updates) for resolving memory contention issues at the charge deposition stage of algorithms for modeling collective effects.
 
 
WEP178 Electromagnetic Field Measurement of Fundamental and Higher-order Modes for 7-cell Cavity of PETRA-II impedance, cavity, electromagnetic-fields, HOM 1822
 
  • Y. Kawashima, A. Blednykh, J. Cupolo, M.A. Davidsaver, B. Holub, H. Ma, J. Oliva, J. Rose, R. Sikora, M. Yeddulla
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York, USA
 
  The booster synchrotron for NSLS-II will include a 7-cell PETRA cavity, which was manufactured for the PETRA-II project at DESY. The cavity fundamental frequency operates at 500 MHz. In order to verify the impedances of the fundamental and higher-order modes (HOM) which were calculated by computer code, we measured the magnitude of the electromagnetic field of the fundamental acceleration mode and HOM’s, using the bead-pull method. To keep the cavity body temperature constant, we used a chiller system to supply cooling water at 20 degrees C. The bead-pull measurement was automated with a computer. We encountered some issues during the measurement process due to the difficulty in measuring the electromagnetic field magnitude in a multi-cell cavity as compared to a single-cell cavity. We describe the apparatus for the field measurement and the obtained results.  
 
WEP208 Design of an Antiproton Recycler Ring antiproton, target, ion, quadrupole 1879
 
  • A.I. Papash, G.A. Karamysheva, A.V. Smirnov
    MPI-K, Heidelberg, Germany
  • O. Karamyshev
    JINR/DLNP, Dubna, Moscow region, Russia
  • H. Knudsen
    Aarhus University, Aarhus, Denmark
  • A.I. Papash
    JINR, Dubna, Moscow Region, Russia
  • M.R.F. Siggel-King
    The University of Liverpool, Liverpool, United Kingdom
  • C.P. Welsch
    Cockcroft Institute, Warrington, Cheshire, United Kingdom
 
  Funding: Work supported by the EU under contract PITN-GA-2008-215080, the Helmholtz Association of National Research Centers (HGF) under contract VH-NG-328, and the GSI Helmholtz Centre for Heavy Ion Research.
At present, the only place in the world where experiments utilising low-energy antiprotons can be performed is the AD at CERN. The MUSASHI trap, as part of the ASACUSA collaboration, enables access to antiproton energies in the order of a few hundreds of eV. Whilst MUSASHI produces cutting-edge research, the available beam quality and luminosity is not sufficient for collision experiments on the level of differential cross sections. A small electrostatic ring, and associated electrostatic acceleration section, is being designed and developed by the QUASAR Group. It will serve as a prototype for the future ultra-low energy storage ring (USR), to be integrated at the facility for low-energy antiproton and ion research (FLAIR). This small AD recycler ring will be unique due to its combination of size, electrostatic nature and energy of the circulating particles. In this contribution, the design of the ring is described and details about the injection section are given.
 
 
WEP226 Commissioning Results of the ReA RFQ at MSU* rfq, ion, cryomodule, emittance 1912
 
  • D. Leitner, C. Benatti, S.W. Krause, D. Morris, S. Nash, J. Ottarson, G. Perdikakis, M. Portillo, R. Rencsok, T. Ropponen, L. Tobos, N.R. Usher, D. Wang
    NSCL, East Lansing, Michigan, USA
  • J. Haeuser
    Kress GmbH, Biebergemuend, Germany
  • O.K. Kester
    GSI, Darmstadt, Germany
  • F. Marti, E. Tanke, X. Wu, Q. Zhao
    FRIB, East Lansing, Michigan, USA
  • A. Schempp, J.S. Schmidt, H. Zimmermann
    IAP, Frankfurt am Main, Germany
 
  Funding: Project funded by Michigan State University
The Facility for Rare Isotope Beams (FRIB) is currently in the preliminary design phase at Michigan State University (MSU). FRIB consists of a driver LINAC for the acceleration of heavy ion beams, followed by a fragmentation target station and a ReAccelerator facility (ReA3). ReA3 comprises gas stopper systems, an Electron Beam Ion Trap (EBIT) charge state booster, a room temperature radio frequency quadrupole (RFQ), a LINAC using superconducting quarter wave resonators and an achromatic beam transport and distribution line to the new experimental area. Beams from ReA3 will range from 3 MeV/u for heavy ions to about 6 MeV/u for light ions. The ReA3 RFQ, which is of the 4 rod type, is designed to accelerate ions with an Q/A of 0.2 to 0.5 from 12 keV/u to 600 keV/u. The RFQ operates at a frequency of 80.5 MHz and power levels up to 120 kW at 10% duty factor. In this paper we will report on commissioning results from the ReA3 RFQ using a H2+ and He+ beam from an auxiliary ion source.
 
 
WEP234 Longitudinal Dynamics in the EMMA ns-FFAG induction, extraction, injection, resonance 1927
 
  • J.M. Garland, H.L. Owen
    UMAN, Manchester, United Kingdom
  • N. Bliss
    STFC/DL, Daresbury, Warrington, Cheshire, United Kingdom
  • J.A. Clarke, N. Marks, B.D. Muratori
    STFC/DL/ASTeC, Daresbury, Warrington, Cheshire, United Kingdom
 
  Funding: Work supported by the Science and Technology Facilities Council UK. Grant Number: ST/G004277/1
EMMA is the first non-scaling FFAG to be constructed, whose use of linear magnets means that the accelerating electron bunch rapidly crosses many resonances. We have modeled the capture and acceleration of bunches in the serpentine channel created by the radio-frequency cavities, and compare it to a proposed experiment in which induction cells allow slow acceleration. Two induction cores each providing ~20kV over 1.65 μs enable a number of resonance crossing experiments.
 
 
THOBN2 Muon Collider Final Cooling in 30-50 T Solenoids emittance, solenoid, simulation, induction 2061
 
  • R. B. Palmer, R.C. Fernow
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York, USA
  • J.L. Lederman
    UCLA, Los Angeles, California, USA
 
  Muon ionization cooling to the required transverse emittance of 25 microns can be achieved with liquid hydrogen in high field solenoids, provided that the momenta are low enough. At low momenta, the longitudinal emittance rises because of the negative slope of energy loss versus energy. Assuming initial emittances that have been achieved in six dimensional cooling simulations, optimized designs are given using solenoid fields limited to 30, 40, and 50 T. The required final emittances are achieved for the two higher field cases.  
slides icon Slides THOBN2 [0.319 MB]  
 
THOBN4 Experiment to Demonstrate Acceleration in Optical Photonic Bandgap Structures laser, wakefield, simulation, electron 2067
 
  • R.J. England, E.R. Colby, R. Laouar, C. McGuinness, D. Mendez, C.-K. Ng, J.S.T. Ng, R.J. Noble, K. Soong, J.E. Spencer, D.R. Walz, Z. Wu, D. Xu
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
  • E.A. Peralta
    Stanford University, Stanford, California, USA
 
  Funding: This work was funded by Department of Energy Grants DE-AC02-76SF00515, DE-FG06-97ER41276.
Optical scale dielectric structures offer a promising medium for high-gradient, compact, low-cost acceleration of charged particles. An experimental program is underway at the SLAC E163 facility to demonstrate acceleration in photonic bandgap structures driven by short laser pulses. We present initial experimental results, discuss structure and experimental design, and present first estimates of achievable gradient.
 
slides icon Slides THOBN4 [5.925 MB]  
 
THOBN6 Wakefield Breakdown Test of a Diamond-Loaded Accelerating Structure wakefield, vacuum, simulation, laser 2074
 
  • S.P. Antipov, C.-J. Jing, A. Kanareykin, P. Schoessow
    Euclid TechLabs, LLC, Solon, Ohio, USA
  • M.E. Conde, D.S. Doran, W. Gai, J.G. Power, Z.M. Yusof
    ANL, Argonne, USA
 
  Funding: DOE SBIR
Diamond has been proposed as a dielectric material for dielectric loaded accelerating (DLA) structures. It has a very low microwave loss tangent, the highest available thermoconductive coefficient and high RF breakdown field. In this paper we report the results from a wakefield breakdown test of diamond-loaded rectangular accelerating structure and development of a cylindrical diamond DLA. We expect to achieve field levels on the order of 100 MV/m in the structure using the 100nC beam at the Argonne Wakefield Accelerator Facility. Single crystal diamond plates produced by chemical vapor deposition (CVD) are used in the structure. The structure is designed to yield up to 0.5 GV/m fields on the diamond surface to test it for breakdown. A surface analysis of the diamond is performed before and after the beam test.
 
slides icon Slides THOBN6 [1.629 MB]  
 
THOCN7 Isochronous (CW) High Intensity Non-scaling FFAG Proton Drivers focusing, cyclotron, proton, simulation 2116
 
  • C. Johnstone
    Fermilab, Batavia, USA
  • M. Berz, K. Makino
    MSU, East Lansing, Michigan, USA
  • S.R. Koscielniak
    TRIUMF, Canada's National Laboratory for Particle and Nuclear Physics, Vancouver, Canada
  • P. Snopok
    IIT, Chicago, Illinois, USA
 
  Funding: Work supported in part under SBIR grant DE-FG02-08ER85222 and by Fermi Research Alliance, under contract DEAC02-07CH11359, both with the U.S. Dept. of Energy
The drive for higher beam power, duty cycle, and reliable beams at reasonable cost has focused world interest on fixed field accelerators, notably FFAGs. High-intensity GeV proton drivers encounter duty cycle and space-charge limits in the synchrotron and machine size concerns in cyclotrons. A 10-20 MW proton driver is challenging, if even technically feasible, with conventional circular accelerators. Recently, the concept of isochronous orbits has been developed for nonscaling FFAGs using powerful new methodologies in FFAG accelerator design. Isochronous orbits enable the simplicity of fixed RF and, by tailoring the field profile, the FFAG can remain isochronous beyond the energy reach of cyclotrons. With isochronous orbits, the machine proposed here has the high average current advantage and duty cycle of the cyclotron in combination with the strong focusing, smaller losses that are more typical of the synchrotron. With the cyclotron as the current industrial and medical standard, a competing CW FFAG would impact facilities using medical accelerators, proton drivers for neutron production, and accelerator-driven nuclear reactors. This work reports on these new advances.
 
slides icon Slides THOCN7 [2.429 MB]  
 
THP005 High Power Cyclotron Complex for Neutron Production cyclotron, proton, electron, extraction 2145
 
  • Yu.G. Alenitsky, A.A. Glazov, G.A. Karamysheva, S.A. Kostromin, E. Samsonov
    JINR, Dubna, Moscow Region, Russia
  • S.N. Dolya, L.M. Onischenko, S.B. Vorozhtsov, N.L. Zaplatin
    JINR/DLNP, Dubna, Moscow region, Russia
 
  Now the cyclotron seems as the most suitable accelerator for production of proton beams with energy up to Ep= 800 MeV and the power Pp=10 MW. There are some offers on creation of such complexes, all of them have common properties. A full cycle of acceleration consists of three stages: high-voltage injection with bunching of continuous beam, then preliminary acceleration in fore sectors cyclotron and acceleration up to the maximal energy 500-800 MeV in the ring cyclotron with six or more sectors. At the first stage of acceleration instead of high-voltage injection one can use the parallel work of two cyclotrons with injection in the subsequent cascade of a beam of the double intensity. In our department of New Accelerators the magnetic and high-frequency systems of a ring cyclotron on the energy 50 - 800 MeV (so-called “supercyclotron”) have been developed. A project of cyclotron injector with energy of protons about 10 MeV has been suggested as injector for Fasotron JINR LNP. It is offered to continue development of the project of cyclotron facility with energy of protons Ер ~ 800 MeV and average current of beam up to 10 mA.  
 
THP102 Simulation Studies of Accelerating Polarized Light Ions at RHIC and AGS resonance, proton, ion, betatron 2315
 
  • M. Bai, E.D. Courant, W. Fischer, F. Méot, T. Roser, A. Zelenski
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York, USA
 
  Funding: This work was supported by the Department of Energy of U.S.A
As the worlds’s first high energy polarized proton col- lider, RHIC has made significant progresses in measuring the proton spin structure in the past decade. In order to have better understanding of the contribution of u quark and d quark to the proton spin structure, collisions of high energy polarized neutron beams are required. In this paper, we discuss the perspectives of accelerating polarized light ions, like deuteron, Helium-3 and tritium. We also repre- sent simulation studies of accelerating polarized Helium-3 in RHIC.
Brookhaven National Lab., Upton, NY 11973
 
 
FROBN2 Technical Challenges in Design and Construction of FRIB linac, ion, target, cryomodule 2561
 
  • R.C. York, G. Machicoane
    NSCL, East Lansing, Michigan, USA
  • S. Assadi, G. Bollen, T . Glasmacher, W. Hartung, M.J. Johnson, F. Marti, E. Pozdeyev, M.J. Syphers, E. Tanke, J. Wei, X. Wu, Q. Zhao
    FRIB, East Lansing, Michigan, USA
 
  Funding: Work supported by DOE CA DE-SC0000661 and Michigan State University.
The Facility for Rare Isotope Beams (FRIB) will be a world-leading, DOE national users facility for the study of nuclear structure, reactions and astrophysics on the campus of Michigan State University. A superconducting, heavy-ion, driver linac will be used to provide stable beams of >200 MeV/u at beam powers up to 400 kW (~650 electrical micro-amps for uranium) that will be used to produce rare isotopes by in flight fragment separation. The selected rare isotopes will be used at velocity (~0.5 c), stopped, or reaccelerated. FRIB is a challenging technical project. An overview of the project, project challenges, and mitigating strategies will be presented.
 
slides icon Slides FROBN2 [14.690 MB]