Paper | Title | Page |
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MOPOTK040 | Progress on the Measurement of Beam Size Using Sextupole Magnets | 550 |
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Funding: This work is supported by National Science Foundation award number DMR-1829070. Variations in strength of a sextupole magnet in a storage ring result in changes to the closed orbit, phase functions and tunes which depend on the position of the beam relative to the center of the sextupole and on the beam size. Such measurements have been carried out with 6 GeV positrons at the Cornell Electron Storage Ring. The initial analysis presented at IPAC21 has been extended to both transverse coordinates, introducing additional tune shifts and coupling kicks caused by skew quadrupole terms arising from the vertical position of the positron beam relative to the center of the sextupole. Variations of strength in each of the 76 sextupoles provide measurements of difference orbits, phase and coupling functions. An optimization procedure applied to these difference measurements determines the horizontal and vertical orbit kicks and the normal and skew quadrupole kicks corresponding to the the strength changes. Continuously monitored tune shifts during the sextupole strength scans provide a redundant, independent determination of the two quadrupole terms. Following the recognition that the calculated beam size is highly correlated with the calibration of the sextupole, a campaign was undertaken to obtain precise calibrations of the sextupoles and to measure their offsets relative to the reference orbit, which is defined by the quadrupole centers. We present the measured distributions of calibration correction factors and sextupole offsets together with the accuracy in their determination. |
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DOI • | reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2022-MOPOTK040 | |
About • | Received ※ 07 June 2022 — Accepted ※ 16 June 2022 — Issue date ※ 24 June 2022 | |
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WEIXGD1 | EIC Beam Dynamics Challenges | 1576 |
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The Electron Ion Collider aims to produce luminosities of 1034 cm-2s-1 . The machine will operate over a broad range of collision energies with highly polarized beams. The coexistence of highly radiative electrons and nonradiative ions produce a host of unique effects. Strong hadron cooling will be employed for the final factor of 3 luminosity boost. | ||
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Slides WEIXGD1 [3.952 MB] | |
DOI • | reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2022-WEIXGD1 | |
About • | Received ※ 06 June 2022 — Revised ※ 13 June 2022 — Accepted ※ 16 June 2022 — Issue date ※ 14 June 2022 | |
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WEPOPT042 | Designing the EIC Electron Storage Ring Lattice for a Wide Energy Range | 1946 |
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Funding: Work supported by Brookhaven Science Associates, LLC, under Contract No. DE-SC0012704, by Jefferson Science Associates, LLC, under Contract No. DE-AC05-06OR23177, by UT-Battelle, LLC, under contract DE-AC05-00OR22725, and by SLAC under Contract No. DE-AC02-76SF00515 with the U.S. Department of Energy. The Electron-Ion Collider (EIC) will collide electrons with hadrons at center-of-mass energies up to 140 GeV (in the case of electron-proton collisions). A 3.8-kilometer electron storage ring is being designed, which will store electrons with a range of energies up to 18 GeV for collisions at one or two interaction points. At energies up to 10 GeV the arcs will be tuned to provide 60 degree phase advance per cell in both planes, whereas at top energy of 18 GeV a 90 degree phase advance per cell will be used, which largely compensates for the horizontal emittance increase with energy. The optics must be matched at three separate energies, and the different phase-advance requirements in both the arc cells and the straight sections make this challenging. Moreover, the spin rotators must fulfill requirements for polarization and spin matching at widely different energies while satisfying technical constraints. In this paper these challenges and proposed solutions are presented and discussed. |
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DOI • | reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2022-WEPOPT042 | |
About • | Received ※ 16 May 2022 — Revised ※ 14 June 2022 — Accepted ※ 16 June 2022 — Issue date ※ 25 June 2022 | |
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WEPOPT044 | Electron-Ion Collider Design Status | 1954 |
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Funding: Work supported under Contract No. DE-SC0012704, Contract No. DE-AC05-06OR23177, Contract No. DE-AC05-00OR22725, and Contract No. DE-AC02-76SF00515 with the U.S. Department of Energy. The Electron-Ion Collider (EIC) is being designed for construction at Brookhaven National Laboratory. Activities have been focused on beam-beam simulations, polarization studies, and beam dynamics, as well as on maturing the layout and lattice design of the constituent accelerators and the interaction region. The latest design advances will be presented. |
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DOI • | reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2022-WEPOPT044 | |
About • | Received ※ 03 June 2022 — Revised ※ 14 June 2022 — Accepted ※ 16 June 2022 — Issue date ※ 03 July 2022 | |
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WEPOMS053 | Using Taylor Maps with Synchrotron Radiation Effects Included | 2376 |
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Funding: DOE Routinely, particle tracking in accelerators is done either by tracking element-by-element which is slow, or by using a transfer map that does not take into account radiation effects. However, there is a fairly straight forward way for constructing Taylor maps that do have radiation effects included. This paper shows how, by partial map inversion, non-symplectic effects due to the finite truncation of the Taylor series can be eliminated. This enables tracking simulations to use maps of lower order than what would otherwise be necessary leading to a speedup of the simulation. |
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DOI • | reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2022-WEPOMS053 | |
About • | Received ※ 08 June 2022 — Revised ※ 21 June 2022 — Accepted ※ 23 June 2022 — Issue date ※ 08 July 2022 | |
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WEPOMS055 | Cathode Space Charge in Bmad | 2380 |
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Funding: This project was supported by Brookhaven Science Associates, LLC under Contract No. DE-SC0012704 with the U.S. Department of Energy. We present an implementation of charged particle tracking with the cathode space charge effect included which is now openly available in the Bmad toolkit for charged particle simulations. Adaptive step size control is incorporated to improve the computational efficiency. We demonstrate its capability with a simulation of a DC gun and compare it with the well-established space charge code Impact-T. |
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DOI • | reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2022-WEPOMS055 | |
About • | Received ※ 08 June 2022 — Revised ※ 13 June 2022 — Accepted ※ 16 June 2022 — Issue date ※ 05 July 2022 | |
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WEPOMS056 | Spin Matching and Monte-Carlo Simulation of Radiative Spin Depolarization in e+e− Storage Rings with Bmad | 2383 |
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Funding: This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of High Energy Physics, under Award Numbers DE-SC0018008 and DE-SC0018370. The Bmad/Tao software toolkit has been extended to estimate the rate of radiative spin depolarization in e+/e− storage rings. First estimates are made using the SLIM algorithm of linearized spin-orbit motion. The extension implements the effects on s-o motion of stochastic photon emission using a Monte-Carlo tracking algorithm. Spins are tracked in 3-D along particle trajectories with the aid of Taylor expansions of quaternions provided by PTC*. The efficiency of long-term tracking is guarantied by the use of a sectioning technique that was exploited in previous-generation software**. Sectioning is the construction of the deterministic s-o maps for sections between the dipoles during the initialization phase. Maps can be reused during the tracking. In a simulation for a realistic storage ring, the computational cost of initial map construction is amortized by the multi-turn tracking computational cost. The use of 1st-order terms in the quaternion expansions to construct the s-o coupling matrices in the matrices of the SLIM algorithm. These matrices are then available for an extension of the optimization facilities in Bmad to minimize depolarizing effects by spin matching. *SLICKTRACK and SITROS ** Polymorphic Tracking Code by Etienne Forest |
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DOI • | reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2022-WEPOMS056 | |
About • | Received ※ 08 June 2022 — Revised ※ 16 June 2022 — Accepted ※ 17 June 2022 — Issue date ※ 08 July 2022 | |
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