JACoW logo

Journals of Accelerator Conferences Website (JACoW)

JACoW is a publisher in Geneva, Switzerland that publishes the proceedings of accelerator conferences held around the world by an international collaboration of editors.


BiBTeX citation export for TH2I1: Experimental Single Electron 6d Tracking in IOTA (remote contribution)

@unpublished{romanov:ibic2022-th2i1,
  author       = {A.L. Romanov},
  title        = {{Experimental Single Electron 6d Tracking in IOTA (remote contribution)}},
% booktitle    = {Proc. IBIC'22},
  booktitle    = {Proc. 11th Int. Beam Instrum. Conf. (IBIC'22)},
  language     = {english},
  intype       = {presented at the},
  series       = {International Beam Instrumentation Conference},
  number       = {11},
  venue        = {Kraków, Poland},
  publisher    = {JACoW Publishing, Geneva, Switzerland},
  month        = {12},
  year         = {2022},
  note         = {presented at IBIC'22 in Kraków, Poland, unpublished},
  abstract     = {{This talk focuses on the upcoming first ever direct 6-dimensional tracking of a single electron in a storage ring with the goal to enable a new class of beam diagnostic technologies. This will allow high precision characterization of a single-particle dynamics. This works builds off previous experimental 3-dimensional tracking of the dynamics of a single electron in the Fermilab Integrable Optics Test Accelerator (IOTA)*. At IOTA, we will detect single photons randomly emitted by an electron over many turns to precisely reconstruct its trajectory. State of the art technologies of photon detection have temporal and spatial resolution sufficient for the high-precision tracking if coupled with advanced analysis algorithms. Complete tracking of a point-like object will enable the first measurements of single-particle dynamical properties, including dynamical invariants, amplitude-dependent oscillation frequencies, and chaotic behavior. These single-particle measurements will be employed for long-term tracking simulations, training of AI/ML algorithms, and ultimately for precise predictions of dynamics in present and future accelerators.}},
}