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Wilson, M.

Paper Title Page
TOAA009 Recent Test Results of the Fast-Pulsed 4 T COSO Dipole GSI 001 683
 
  • G. Moritz, J. Kaugerts
    GSI, Darmstadt
  • B. Auchmann, S. Russenschuck, R. de Maria
    CERN, Geneva
  • J. Escallier, G. Ganetis, A.K. Jain, A. Marone, J.F. Muratore, R.A. Thomas, P. Wanderer
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York
  • M. Wilson
    Oxford Instruments, Accelerator Technology Group, Oxford, Oxon
 
  For the FAIR-project at GSI a model dipole was built at BNL with the nominal field of 4 T and a nominal ramp rate of 1 T/s. The magnet design was similar to the RHIC dipole with some changes for loss reduction and better cooling. The magnet was already successfully tested in a vertical cryostat with good training behaviour. Cryogenic losses were measured and first results of field harmonics were published. However, for a better understanding of the cooling process quench currents at several ramp rates were investigated. Detailed measurements of the field harmonics at different ramp rates and at several cycles were performed. To separate the effects of the coil and the iron yoke the magnet was disassembled and tested as collared coil only. Recent test results will be presented.  
FOAD005 Commissioning of the University of Maryland Electron Ring (UMER) 469
 
  • S. Bernal, G. Bai, D.W. Feldman, R. Feldman, T.F. Godlove, I. Haber, J.R. Harris, M. Holloway, R.A. Kishek, J.G. Neumann, P.G. O'Shea, C. Papadopoulos, B. Quinn, D. Stratakis, K. Tian, J.C. Tobin Thangaraj, M. Walter, M. Wilson
    IREAP, College Park, Maryland
  • M. Reiser
    University Maryland, College Park, Maryland
 
  Funding: This work is funded by the U.S. Department of Energy under grants DE-FG02-94ER40855 and DE-FG02-92ER54178, and the office of Naval Research under grant N00014-02-1-0914.

The University of Maryland electron ring (UMER) is a low-energy, high current recirculator for beam physics research. The ring is completed for multi-turn operation of beams over a broad range of intensities and initial conditions. UMER is addressing issues in beam physics with relevance to many applications that rely on intense beams of high quality. Examples are advanced accelerators, FEL’s, spallation neutron sources and future heavy-ion drivers for inertial fusion. We review the motivation, ring layout and operating conditions of UMER. Further, we present a summary of beam physics areas that UMER is currently investigating and others that are part of the commissioning plan: from transverse beam dynamics (matching, halo formation, strongly asymmetric beams, space-charge waves, etc), longitudinal dynamics (bunch capture/shaping, evolution of energy spread, longitudinal space-charge waves, etc.) to future upgrades and planned research (acceleration and resonance traversal, modeling of galactic dynamics, etc.) We also emphasize the computer simulation work that is an integral part of the UMER project.