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TUODA1 |
High Pressure Gas-Filled RF Cavities for Use in a Muon Cooling Channel |
419 |
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- B.T. Freemire, P.M. Hanlet, Y. Torun
IIT, Chicago, Illinois, USA
- M. Chung, M.R. Jana, M.A. Leonova, A. Moretti, T.A. Schwarz, A.V. Tollestrup, Y. Torun, K. Yonehara
Fermilab, Batavia, USA
- M.G. Collura
Politecnico di Torino, Torino, Italy
- R.P. Johnson
Muons, Inc, Illinois, USA
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A high pressure hydrogen gas-filled RF (HPRF) cavity can operate in the multi-Tesla magnetic fields required for a muon accelerator cooling channel. A beam test was performed at the Fermilab MuCool Test Area by sending a 400 MeV proton beam through an 805 MHz cavity and quantifying the effects of the resulting plasma within the cavity. The resulting energy loss per electron-ion pair produced has been measured at 10-18 to 10-16 J every RF cycle. Doping the hydrogen gas with oxygen greatly decreases the lifetime of an electron, thereby improving the performance of the HPRF cavity. Electron lifetimes as short as 1 ns have been measured. The recombination rate of positive and negative ions in the cavity has been measured on the order of 10-8 cm3/s. Extrapolation in both gas pressure and beam intensity are required to obtain Muon Collider parameters, however the results indicate HPRF cavities can be used in a muon accelerator cooling channel.
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Slides TUODA1 [12.191 MB]
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WEPMA12 |
Investigation of Breakdown Induced Surface Damage on 805 MHz Pill Box Cavity Interior Surfaces |
1007 |
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- M.R. Jana, M. Chung, M.A. Leonova, A. Moretti, A.V. Tollestrup, K. Yonehara
Fermilab, Batavia, USA
- D.L. Bowring
LBNL, Berkeley, California, USA
- G. Flanagan
Muons, Inc, Illinois, USA
- B.T. Freemire, Y. Torun
IIT, Chicago, Illinois, USA
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The MuCool Test Area (MTA) at Fermilab is a facility to develop the technology required for ionization cooling for a future Muon Collider and/or Neutrino Factory. As part of this research program, we have tested an 805 MHz Pill Box RF cavity in multi-Tesla magnetic field to study the effects of the static magnetic field on the cavity operation. This study gives useful information on field emitters in the cavity, dark current, surface conditioning, breakdown mechanism and material properties of the cavity. All these factors determine the maximum accelerating gradient in the cavity. This paper discusses the image processing technique for the quantitative estimation of spark damage spot distribution on the Pill Box RF cavity interior surfaces. The distribution is compared with the electric field distribution predicted by computer code calculation. The local spark density is proportional to probability of surface breakdown and shows a power law dependence on the maximum electric field (E). This E dependence is consistent with dark current calculated from Fowler-Nordheim equation.
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