Author: Burrows, P.
Paper Title Page
TUPC128 Transverse Beam Jitter Propagation in Multi-bunch Operation at ATF2 1320
 
  • J. Resta-López, J. Alabau-Gonzalvo
    IFIC, Valencia, Spain
  • P. Burrows, G.B. Christian
    JAI, Oxford, United Kingdom
  • B. Constance
    CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
 
  Pulse-to-pulse orbit jitter, if not controlled, can drastically degrade the luminosity in future linear colliders. The second goal of the ATF2 project at the KEK accelerator test facility is to stabilize the vertical beam position down to approximately 5% of the nominal rms vertical beam size at the virtual interaction point (IP). This will require control of the orbit to better than 1 micrometer at the entrance of the ATF2 final focus system. In this paper, by means of computer simulations, we study the vertical jitter propagation along the ATF2 from the start of the extraction line to the IP. For this study pulse-to-pulse vertical jitter measurements using three stripline beam position monitors are used as initial inputs. This study is performed for the case of a bunch-train with three bunches, but could easily be extended for a larger number of bunches. The cases with and without intra-train orbit feedback correction in the extraction line of ATF2 are compared.  
 
MOPO017 Latest Performance Results from the FONT5 Intra-train Position and Angle Feedback System at ATF2 520
 
  • G.B. Christian, D.R. Bett, M.R. Davis, C. Perry
    JAI, Oxford, United Kingdom
  • R. Apsimon, P. Burrows
    Oxford University, Physics Department, Oxford, Oxon, United Kingdom
  • B. Constance, A. Gerbershagen
    CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
  • J. Resta-López
    IFIC, Valencia, Spain
 
  A prototype Interaction Point beam-based feedback system for future electron-positron colliders, such as the International Linear Collider, has been designed and tested on the extraction line of the KEK Accelerator Test Facility (ATF). The FONT5 intra-train feedback system aims to stabilize the beam orbit by correcting both the position and angle jitter in the vertical plane on bunch-to-bunch timescales, providing micron-level stability at the entrance to the ATF2 final-focus system. The system comprises three stripline beam position monitors (BPMs) and two stripline kickers, custom low-latency analogue front-end BPM processors, a custom FPGA-based digital processing board with fast ADCs, and custom kicker-drive amplifiers. An overview of the hardware, and the latest results from beam tests at ATF2, will be presented. A total system latency as low as approximately 140 ns has been demonstrated.  
 
TUPC013 Simulation of Phase Stability at the Flat Top of the CLIC Drive Beam 1018
 
  • A. Gerbershagen, D. Schulte
    CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
  • P. Burrows
    Oxford University, Physics Department, Oxford, Oxon, United Kingdom
 
  Funding: University of Oxford
The drive beam phase stability is one of the critical issues of the Compact Linear Collider (CLIC). In this paper the generation and propagation of drive beam phase errors is studied for effects that vary during the drive beam pulse. This includes the influence of drive beam current and phase errors as well as of drive beam accelerator RF phase and amplitude errors on the drive beam phase after the compressor chicanes and the analysis of the propagation of these errors through the drive beam combination scheme. The impact of the imperfections on the main beam is studied including the possible correction with help of a feedforward system.
 
 
TUPC023 Status of Ground Motion Mitigation Techniques for CLIC 1048
 
  • J. Snuverink, K. Artoos, C.G.R.L. Collette, F. Duarte Ramos, A. Gaddi, H. Gerwig, S.M. Janssens, J. Pfingstner, D. Schulte
    CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
  • G. Balik, L. Brunetti, A. Jeremie
    IN2P3-LAPP, Annecy-le-Vieux, France
  • P. Burrows
    Oxford University, Physics Department, Oxford, Oxon, United Kingdom
  • B. Caron
    SYMME, Annecy-le-Vieux, France
  • J. Resta-López
    IFIC, Valencia, Spain
 
  The Compact Linear Collider (CLIC) accelerator has strong stability requirements on the position of the beam. In particular, the beam position will be sensitive to ground motion. A number of mitigation techniques are proposed - quadrupole stabilisation and positioning, final doublet stabilisation as well as beam based orbit and interaction point (IP) feedback. Integrated studies of the impact of the ground motion on the CLIC Main Linac (ML) and Beam Delivery System (BDS) have been performed, which model the hardware and beam performance in detail. Based on the results future improvements of the mitigation techniques are suggested and simulated. It is shown that with the current design the tight luminosity budget for ground motion effects is fulfilled and accordingly, an essential feasibility issue of CLIC has been addressed.  
 
TUPC157 Design and Initial Results of a Turn-by-Turn Beam Position Monitoring System for Multiple Bunch Operation of the ATF Damping Ring 1398
 
  • G.B. Christian, D.R. Bett, M.R. Davis, C. Perry
    JAI, Oxford, United Kingdom
  • R. Apsimon, P. Burrows
    Oxford University, Physics Department, Oxford, Oxon, United Kingdom
  • B. Constance, A. Gerbershagen
    CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
  • J. Resta-López
    IFIC, Valencia, Spain
 
  An FPGA-based monitoring system has been developed to study multi-bunch beam instabilities in the damping ring (DR) of the KEK Accelerator Test Facility (ATF), utilising a stripline beam position monitor (BPM) and existing BPM processor hardware. The system is designed to record the horizontal and/or vertical positions of up to three bunches in the DR in single-bunch multi-train mode or the head bunch of up to three trains in multi-bunch mode, with a bunch spacing of 5.6 ns. The FPGA firmware and data acquisition software were modified to record turn-by-turn data for up to six channels and 1–3 bunches in the DR. An overview of the system and initial results will be presented.