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Tompkins, J. C.

Paper Title Page
MOPAS019 Focusing Solenoid for the Front End of a Linear RF Accelerator 473
 
  • I. Terechkine, V. Kashikhin, T. M. Page, M. Tartaglia, J. C. Tompkins
    Fermilab, Batavia, Illinois
 
  Following a design study, a prototype of a focusing solenoid for use in a superconducting RF linac has been built and is being tested at FNAL. The solenoid cold mass is comprised of the main coil, two bucking coils, and a soft steel flux return. It is mounted inside a dedicated cryostat with a 20 mm diameter warm bore. At the maximum current of 250 A, the magnetic field reaches 7.2 T in the center of the solenoid and is less than 0.01 T at a distance of 200 mm from the center. The flange-to-flange length of the system is 270 mm. This report discusses the main design features of the solenoid and first test results.  
MOPAS021 Slowly Rotating Coil System for AC Field Measurements of Fermilab Booster Correctors 476
 
  • G. Velev, J. DiMarco, D. J. Harding, V. S. Kashikhin, M. J. Lamm, P. Schlabach, M. Tartaglia, J. C. Tompkins
    Fermilab, Batavia, Illinois
 
  Funding: Work supported by the U. S. Department of Energy

A method for measurement of rapidly changing magnetic fields has been developed and applied to the testing of new room temperature corrector packages designed for the Fermilab Booster Synchrotron. The method is based on fast digitization of a slowly rotating tangential coil probe, with analysis combining the measured coil voltages across a set of successive magnet current cycles. This paper presents results on the field quality measured for normal and skew dipole, quadrupole, and sextupole magnets in several of these corrector packages.

 
MOPAS023 Nb3Sn Accelerator Magnet Technology R&D at Fermilab 482
 
  • A. V. Zlobin, G. Ambrosio, N. Andreev, E. Barzi, R. Bossert, R. H. Carcagno, G. Chlachidze, J. DiMarco, SF. Feher, V. Kashikhin, V. S. Kashikhin, M. J. Lamm, A. Nobrega, I. Novitski, D. F. Orris, Y. M. Pischalnikov, P. Schlabach, C. Sylvester, M. Tartaglia, J. C. Tompkins, D. Turrioni, G. Velev, R. Yamada
    Fermilab, Batavia, Illinois
 
  Funding: This work was supported by the U. S. Department of Energy

Accelerator magnets based on Nb3Sn superconductor advances magnet operation fields above 10T and increases the coil temperature margin. Development of a new accelerator magnet technology includes the demonstration of main magnet parameters (maximum field, quench performance, field quality, etc.) and their reproducibility using short models, and then the demonstration of technology scale up using long coils. Fermilab is working on the development of Nb3Sn accelerator magnets using shell-type dipole coils and react-and-wind method. As a part of the first phase of technology development Fermilab built and tested six 1-m long dipole models and several dipole mirror configurations. The last three dipoles and two mirrors reached their design fields of 10-11 T. Reproducibility of magnet field quality was demonstrated by all six short models. The technology scale up phase has started by building 2m and 4m dipole coils and testing them in a mirror configuration. This effort complements the Nb3Sn scale up work being performed in the framework of US LHC Accelerator Research Program (LARP). The status and main results of the Nb3Sn accelerator magnet development at Fermilab are reported.

 
WEOCAB01 Design of the Beam Delivery System for the International Linear Collider 1985
 
  • A. Seryi, J. A. Amann, R. Arnold, F. Asiri, K. L.F. Bane, P. Bellomo, E. Doyle, A. F. Fasso, L. Keller, J. Kim, K. Ko, Z. Li, T. W. Markiewicz, T. V.M. Maruyama, K. C. Moffeit, S. Molloy, Y. Nosochkov, N. Phinney, T. O. Raubenheimer, S. Seletskiy, S. Smith, C. M. Spencer, P. Tenenbaum, D. R. Walz, G. R. White, M. Woodley, M. Woods, L. Xiao
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California
  • I. V. Agapov, G. A. Blair, S. T. Boogert, J. Carter
    Royal Holloway, University of London, Surrey
  • M. Alabau, P. Bambade, J. Brossard, O. Dadoun
    LAL, Orsay
  • M. Anerella, A. K. Jain, A. Marone, B. Parker
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York
  • D. A.-K. Angal-Kalinin, C. D. Beard, J.-L. Fernandez-Hernando, P. Goudket, F. Jackson, J. K. Jones, A. Kalinin, P. A. McIntosh
    STFC/DL/ASTeC, Daresbury, Warrington, Cheshire
  • R. Appleby
    UMAN, Manchester
  • J. L. Baldy, D. Schulte
    CERN, Geneva
  • L. Bellantoni, A. I. Drozhdin, V. S. Kashikhin, V. Kuchler, T. Lackowski, N. V. Mokhov, N. Nakao, T. Peterson, M. C. Ross, S. I. Striganov, J. C. Tompkins, M. Wendt, X. Yang
    Fermilab, Batavia, Illinois
  • K. Buesser
    DESY, Hamburg
  • P. Burrows, G. B. Christian, C. I. Clarke, A. F. Hartin
    OXFORDphysics, Oxford, Oxon
  • G. Burt, A. C. Dexter
    Cockcroft Institute, Warrington, Cheshire
  • J. Carwardine, C. W. Saunders
    ANL, Argonne, Illinois
  • B. Constance, H. Dabiri Khah, C. Perry, C. Swinson
    JAI, Oxford
  • O. Delferriere, O. Napoly, J. Payet, D. Uriot
    CEA, Gif-sur-Yvette
  • C. J. Densham, R. J.S. Greenhalgh
    STFC/RAL, Chilton, Didcot, Oxon
  • A. Enomoto, S. Kuroda, T. Okugi, T. Sanami, Y. Suetsugu, T. Tauchi
    KEK, Ibaraki
  • A. Ferrari
    UU/ISV, Uppsala
  • J. Gronberg
    LLNL, Livermore, California
  • Y. Iwashita
    Kyoto ICR, Uji, Kyoto
  • W. Lohmann
    DESY Zeuthen, Zeuthen
  • L. Ma
    STFC/DL, Daresbury, Warrington, Cheshire
  • T. M. Mattison
    UBC, Vancouver, B. C.
  • T. S. Sanuki
    University of Tokyo, Tokyo
  • V. I. Telnov
    BINP SB RAS, Novosibirsk
  • E. T. Torrence
    University of Oregon, Eugene, Oregon
  • D. Warner
    Colorado University at Boulder, Boulder, Colorado
  • N. K. Watson
    Birmingham University, Birmingham
  • H. Y. Yamamoto
    Tohoku University, Sendai
 
  The beam delivery system for the linear collider focuses beams to nanometer sizes at the interaction point, collimates the beam halo to provide acceptable background in the detector and has a provision for state-of-the art beam instrumentation in order to reach the physics goals. The beam delivery system of the International Linear Collider has undergone several configuration changes recently. This paper describes the design details and status of the baseline configuration considered for the reference design.  
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FRXKI01 Superconducting Magnet Needs for the ILC 3732
 
  • J. C. Tompkins, V. S. Kashikhin
    Fermilab, Batavia, Illinois
  • J. A. Clarke
    Cockcroft Institute, Warrington, Cheshire
  • M. A. Palmer
    CLASSE, Ithaca
  • B. Parker
    BNL, Upton, Long Island, New York
 
  The ILC Reference Design Report will be completed early in 2007. The Magnet Systems Group was formed to translate magnetic field requirements into magnet designs and cost estimates for the Reference Design. As presently configured, the ILC will have more than 11,000 magnetic elements of which more than 1200 will be based on superconducting technology. This paper will describe the major superconducting magnet needs for the ILC as presently determined by the Magnet Systems Group and the leaders of the Area Systems Groups, responsible for beamline design. The superconducting magnet components include the Main Linac quadrupoles, the Positron Source undulators, the Damping Ring wigglers, and the complex array of Final Focus superconducting elements in the Beam Delivery System.  
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