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Simulation study of electron response amplification in coherent electron cooling (open access)

Simulation study of electron response amplification in coherent electron cooling

In Coherent Electron Cooling (CEC), it is essential to study the amplification of electron response to a single ion in the FEL process, in order to proper align the electron beam and the ion beam in the kicker to maximize the cooling effect. In this paper, we use Genesis to simulate the amplified electron beam response of single ion in FEL amplification process, which acts as Green's function of the FEL amplifier.
Date: May 20, 2012
Creator: Y., Hao & Litvinenko, V. N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
PHYSICS RESULTS OF THE NSLS-II LINAC FRONT END TEST STAND (open access)

PHYSICS RESULTS OF THE NSLS-II LINAC FRONT END TEST STAND

The Linac Front End Test Stand (LFETS) was installed at the Source Development Laboratory (SDL) in the fall of 2011 in order to test the Linac Front End. The goal of these tests was to test the electron source against the specifications of the linac. In this report, we discuss the results of these measurements and the effect on linac performance.
Date: May 20, 2012
Creator: P., Fliller R.; Gao, F.; Yang, X.; Rose, J.; Shaftan, T. & Piel, C
System: The UNT Digital Library
Stochastic cooling in RHIC (open access)

Stochastic cooling in RHIC

The full 6-dimensional [x,x'; y,y'; z,z'] stochastic cooling system for RHIC was completed and operational for the FY12 Uranium-Uranium collider run. Cooling enhances the integrated luminosity of the Uranium collisions by a factor of 5, primarily by reducing the transverse emittances but also by cooling in the longitudinal plane to preserve the bunch length. The components have been deployed incrementally over the past several runs, beginning with longitudinal cooling, then cooling in the vertical planes but multiplexed between the Yellow and Blue rings, next cooling both rings simultaneously in vertical (the horizontal plane was cooled by betatron coupling), and now simultaneous horizontal cooling has been commissioned. The system operated between 5 and 9 GHz and with 3 x 10{sup 8} Uranium ions per bunch and produces a cooling half-time of approximately 20 minutes. The ultimate emittance is determined by the balance between cooling and emittance growth from Intra-Beam Scattering. Specific details of the apparatus and mathematical techniques for calculating its performance have been published elsewhere. Here we report on: the method of operation, results with beam, and comparison of results to simulations.
Date: May 20, 2012
Creator: M., Brennan J.; Blaskiewicz, M. & Mernick, K.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Kink instability suppression with stochastic cooling pickup and kicker (open access)

Kink instability suppression with stochastic cooling pickup and kicker

The kink instability is one of the major beam dynamics issues of the linac-ring based electron ion collider. This head-tail type instability arises from the oscillation of the electron beam inside the opposing ion beam. It must be suppressed to achieve the desired luminosity. There are various ways to suppress the instability, such as tuning the chromaticity in the ion ring or by a dedicated feedback system of the electron beam position at IP, etc. However, each method has its own limitation. In this paper, we will discuss an alternative opportunity of suppressing the kink instability of the proposed eRHIC at BNL using the existing pickup-kicker system of the stochastic cooling system in RHIC.
Date: May 20, 2012
Creator: Y., Hao; Blaskiewicz, M.; Litvinenko, V. N. & Ptitsyn, V.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Comparison of H-Mode Plasmas Diverted to Solid and Liquid Lithium Surfaces (open access)

Comparison of H-Mode Plasmas Diverted to Solid and Liquid Lithium Surfaces

Experiments were conducted with a Liquid Lithium Divertor (LLD) in NSTX. Among the goals was to use lithium recoating to sustain deuterium (D) retention by a static liquid lithium surface, approximating the ability of flowing liquid lithium to maintain chemical reactivity. Lithium evaporators were used to deposit lithium on the LLD surface. Improvements in plasma edge conditions were similar to those with lithiated graphite plasma-facing components (PFCs), including an increase in confinement over discharges without lithiumcoated PFCs and ELM reduction during H-modes. With the outer strike point on the LLD, the D retention in the LLD was about the same as that for solid lithium coatings on graphite, or about two times that achieved without lithium PFC coatings. There were also indications of contamination of the LLD surface, possibly due erosion and redeposition of carbon from PFCs. Flowing lithium may thus be needed for chemically active PFCs during long-pulse operation.
Date: July 20, 2012
Creator: R. Kaita, et. al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Novel technique of suppressing TBBU in high-energy ERLs (open access)

Novel technique of suppressing TBBU in high-energy ERLs

Energy recovery linacs (ERLs) are an emerging generation of accelerators that promise to revolutionize the fields of high-energy physics and photon sciences. These accelerators combine the advantages of linear accelerators with that of storage rings, and augur the delivery of electron beams of unprecedented power and quality. However, one potential weakness of these devices is transverse beam break-up instability that could severely limit the available beam current. In this paper, I propose a novel method of suppressing these dangerous effects using the chromaticity of the transverse motion. In this short paper I am able only to touch the surface of the method and a complete description of the method with all relevant derivations can be found in [1].
Date: May 20, 2012
Creator: V., Litvinenko
System: The UNT Digital Library
Design, simulation and conditioning of the fundamental power couplers for BNL SRF gun (open access)

Design, simulation and conditioning of the fundamental power couplers for BNL SRF gun

The 704 MHz SRF gun for the BNL Energy Recovery Linac (ERL) prototype uses two fundamental power couplers (FPCs) to deliver up to 1 MW of CW RF power to the half-cell cavity. To prepare the couplers for high-power RF service and process multipacting, the FPCs should be conditioned prior to installation into the gun cryomodule. A room-temperature test stand was configured for conditioning FPCs in full reflection regime with varied phase of the reflecting wave. The FPCs have been conditioned up to 250 kW in pulse mode and 125 kW in CW mode. The multipacting simulations were carried out with Track3P code developed at SLAC. The simulations matched the experimental results very well. This paper presents the FPC RF and thermal design, multipacting simulations and conditioning of the BNL gun FPCs.
Date: May 20, 2012
Creator: Xu, W.; Altinbas, Z.; Belomestnykh, S. & Ben-Zvi, Ilan
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recent Improvements In Interface Management For Hanfords Waste Treatment And Immobilization Plant - 13263 (open access)

Recent Improvements In Interface Management For Hanfords Waste Treatment And Immobilization Plant - 13263

The U.S. Department of Energy (DOE), Office of River Protection (ORP) is responsible for management and completion of the River Protection Project (RPP) mission, which comprises both the Hanford Site tank farms operations and the Waste Treatment and Immobilization Plant (WTP). The RPP mission is to store, retrieve and treat Hanford's tank waste; store and dispose of treated wastes; and close the tank farm waste management areas and treatment facilities by 2047. The WTP is currently being designed and constructed by Bechtel National Inc. (BNI) for DOE-ORP. BNI relies on a number oftechnical services from other Hanford contractors for WTP's construction and commissioning. These same services will be required of the future WTP operations contractor. The WTP interface management process has recently been improved through changes in organization and technical issue management documented in an Interface Management Plan. Ten of the thirteen active WTP Interface Control Documents (ICDs) have been revised in 2012 using the improved process with the remaining three in progress. The value of the process improvements is reflected by the ability to issue these documents on schedule.
Date: November 20, 2012
Creator: Arm, Stuart T.; Pell, Michael J.; Van Meighem, Jeffery S.; Duncan, Garth M. & Harrington, Christopher C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Duplex Oxide Formation during Transient Oxidation of Cu-5%Ni(001) Investigated by In situ UHV-TEM and XPS (open access)

Duplex Oxide Formation during Transient Oxidation of Cu-5%Ni(001) Investigated by In situ UHV-TEM and XPS

The transient oxidation stage of a model metal alloy thin film was characterized with in situ ultra-high vacuum (UHV) transmission electron microscopy (TEM), X-ray photoelectron spectroscopy (XPS) and analytic high-resolution TEM. We observed the formations of nanosized NiO and Cu{sub 2}O islands when Cu-5a5%Ni(100) was exposed to oxygen partial pressure, pO{sub 2} = 1 x 10{sup -4} Torr and various temperatures in situ. At 350 C epitaxial Cu{sub 2}O islands formed initially and then NiO islands appeared on the surface of the Cu{sub 2}O island, whereas at 750 C NiO appeared first. XPS and TEM was used to reveal a sequential formation of NiO and then Cu{sub 2}O islands at 550 C. The temperature-dependant oxide selection may be due to an increase of the diffusivity of Ni in Cu with increasing temperature.
Date: May 20, 2012
Creator: Yang, J.C.; Starr, D.; Kang, Y.; Luo, L.; Tong, X. & Zhou, G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Flat Plate FCG Experimental System for Material Studies (open access)

Flat Plate FCG Experimental System for Material Studies

None
Date: November 20, 2012
Creator: Goerz, D. A.; Reisman, D. B.; Javedani, J. B.; Paladichuk, J. T.; Hare, D. E.; Tallerico, L. J. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Research and development of RHIC injection kicker upgrade with nano second FID pulse generator (open access)

Research and development of RHIC injection kicker upgrade with nano second FID pulse generator

Our recent effort to test a 50 kV, 1 kA, 50 ns pulse width, 10 ns pulse rise time FID pulse generator with a 250 ft transmission cable, resistive load, and existing RHIC injection kicker magnet has produced unparalleled results. This is the very first attempt to drive a high strength fast kicker magnet with a nano second high pulsed power (50 MVA) generator for large accelerator and colliders. The technology is impressive. We report here the result and future plan of RHIC Injection kicker upgrade.
Date: May 20, 2012
Creator: Zhang, W.; Sandberg, J.; Hahn, H.; Fischer, W.; Liaw, C. J.; Pai, C. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Progress on the high-current 704 MHz superconducting RF cavity at BNL (open access)

Progress on the high-current 704 MHz superconducting RF cavity at BNL

The 704 MHz high current superconducting cavity has been designed with consideration of both performance of fundamental mode and damping of higher order modes. A copper prototype cavity was fabricated by AES and delivered to BNL. RF measurements were carried out on this prototype cavity, including fundamental pass-band and HOM spectrum measurements, HOM studies using bead-pull setup, prototyping of antenna-type HOM couplers. The measurements show that the cavity has very good damping for the higher-order modes, which was one of the main goals for the high current cavity design. 3D cavity models were simulated with Omega3P code developed by SLAC to compare with the measurements. The paper describes the cavity design, RF measurement setups and results for the copper prototype. The progress with the niobium cavity fabrication will also be described.
Date: May 20, 2012
Creator: Xu, W.; Astefanous, C.; Belomestnykh, S.; Ben-Zvi, Ilan & al, et
System: The UNT Digital Library
Influence of electron beam parameters on coherent electron cooling (open access)

Influence of electron beam parameters on coherent electron cooling

Coherent electron cooling (CeC) promises to revolutionize the cooling of high energy hadron beams. The intricate dynamics of the CeC depends both on the local density and energy distribution of the beam. The variations of the local density (beam current) are inevitable in any realistic beam. Hence, in this paper we propose a novel method of beam conditioning. The conditioning provides compensation of effect from such variation by a correlated energy modulation. We use our analytical FEL model for an electron bunch with Gaussian line charge density and cosine-type energy variation along bunch. We analyze the phase variation between the electron density modulation at the exit of the FEL-amplifier and the ions inducing it in the modulator as a function of the peak current and the electron beam energy. Based on this analysis, electron bunch parameters for optimal CeC cooling are found numerically.
Date: May 20, 2012
Creator: Wang, G.; Hao, Y.; Litvinenko, V. N. & Webb, S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Potential for luminosity improvement for low-energy RHIC operation (open access)

Potential for luminosity improvement for low-energy RHIC operation

At the Brookhaven National Laboratory, a physics program, motivated by the search of the QCD phase transition critical point, requires operation of the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) with heavy ions at very low beam energies corresponding to 2.5-20 GeV/n. Several physics runs were already successfully performed at these low energies. However, the luminosity is very low at lowest energies of interest (< 10 GeV/n) limited by the intra-beam scattering and space-charge, as well as by machine nonlinearities. At these low energies, electron cooling could be very effective in counteracting luminosity degradation due to the IBS, while it is less effective against other limitations. Overall potential luminosity improvement for low-energy RHIC operation from cooling is summarized for various energies, taking into account all these limitations as well as beam lifetime measured during the low-energy RHIC runs. We also explore a possibility of further luminosity improvement under the space-charge limitation.
Date: May 20, 2012
Creator: V., Fedotov A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The E-lens test bench for RHIC beam-beam compensation (open access)

The E-lens test bench for RHIC beam-beam compensation

To compensate for the beam-beam effects from the proton-proton interactions at IP6 and IP8 in the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), we are fabricating two electron lenses that we plan to install at RHIC IR10. Before installing the e-lenses, we are setting-up the e-lens test bench to test the electron gun, collector, GS1 coil, modulator, partial control system, some instrumentation, and the application software. Some e-lens power supplies, the electronics for current measurement will also be qualified on test bench. The test bench also was designed for measuring the properties of the cathode and the profile of the beam. In this paper, we introduce the layout and elements of the e-lens test bench; and we discuss its present status towards the end of this paper.
Date: May 20, 2012
Creator: Gu, X.; Altinbas, F. Z.; Aronson, J. & Beebe, E.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Status of proof-of-principle experiment for coherent electron cooling (open access)

Status of proof-of-principle experiment for coherent electron cooling

Coherent electron cooling (CEC) has a potential to significantly boost luminosity of high-energy, high-intensity hadron colliders. To verify the concept we conduct proof-of-the-principle experiment at RHIC. In this paper, we describe the current experimental setup to be installed into 2 o'clock RHIC interaction regions. We present current design, status of equipment acquisition and estimates for the expected beam parameters. We use a dogleg to merge the electron and ion beams. The ions 'imprint' their distribution into the electron beam via a space charge density modulation. The modulation is amplified in an FEL comprised of a 7-m long helical wiggler. The ions are co-propagating with electron beam through the FEL. The ion's average velocity is matched to the group velocity of the wave-packet of e-beam density modulation in the FEL. A three-pole wiggler at the exit of the FEL tune the phase of the wave-packet so the ion with the central energy experience the maximum of the e-beam density modulation, where electric field is zero. The time-of-flight dependence on ion's provides for the electrical field caused by the density modulation to reduce energy spread of the ion beam. The used electron beam is bent off the ion path and damped.
Date: May 20, 2012
Creator: Pinayev, I.; Belomestnykh, S.; Bengtsson, J.; Ben-Zvi, Ilan & Elizarov, A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Calculation of synchrotron radiation from high intensity electron beam at eRHIC (open access)

Calculation of synchrotron radiation from high intensity electron beam at eRHIC

The Electron-Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (eRHIC) at Brookhaven National Lab is an upgrade project for the existing RHIC. A 30 GeV energy recovery linac (ERL) will provide a high charge and high quality electron beam to collide with proton and ion beams. This will improve the luminosity by at least 2 orders of magnitude. The synchrotron radiation (SR) from the bending magnets and strong quadrupoles for such an intense beam could be penetrating the vacuum chamber and producing hazards to electronic devices and undesired background for detectors. In this paper, we calculate the SR spectral intensity, power density distributions and heat load on the chamber wall. We suggest the wall thickness required to stop the SR and estimate spectral characteristics of the residual and scattered background radiation outside the chamber.
Date: May 20, 2012
Creator: Y., Jing; Chubar, O. & Litvinenko, V.
System: The UNT Digital Library
RFQ LINAC commissioning and carbon4+ acceleration for Ag15+ acceleration via direct plasma injection scheme (open access)

RFQ LINAC commissioning and carbon4+ acceleration for Ag15+ acceleration via direct plasma injection scheme

N/A
Date: May 20, 2012
Creator: T., Yamamoto; Kondo, K.; Sekine, M.; Okamura, M. & Washio, M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
1 GeV CW nonscaling FFAG for ADS, and magnet parameters (open access)

1 GeV CW nonscaling FFAG for ADS, and magnet parameters

Multi-MW proton driver capability remains a challenging, critical technology for many core HEP programs, particularly the neutrino ones such as the Muon Collider and Neutrino factory, and for high-profile energy applications such as Accelerator Driven Subcritical Reactors (ADS) and Accelerator Transmutation of Waste for nuclear power and waste management. Work is focused almost exclusively on an SRF linac, as, to date, no re-circulating accelerator can attain the 10-20 MW capability necessary for the nuclear applications. Recently, the concept of isochronous orbits has been explored and developed for nonscaling FFAGs using powerful new methodologies in FFAG accelerator design. Work is progressing on a stable, high-intensity, 1 GeV isochronous FFAG. Initial specifications of novel magnets with the nonlinear radial fields required to support isochronous operation are also reported here.
Date: May 20, 2012
Creator: Johnstone, C.; Meot, F.; Snopok, P. & Weng, W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Simulations of coherent beam-beam effects with head-on compensation (open access)

Simulations of coherent beam-beam effects with head-on compensation

Electron lenses are under construction for installation in RHIC in order to mitigate the head-on beam-beam effects. This would allow operation with higher bunch intensity and result in a significant increase in luminosity. We report on recent strong-strong simulations and experiments that were carried out using the RHIC upgrade parameters to assess the impact of coherent beam-beam effects in the presence of head-on compensation.
Date: May 20, 2012
Creator: S., White; Fischer, W. & Y., Luo.
System: The UNT Digital Library
In-Flight Measurement of the Absolute Energy Scale of the Fermi Large Area Telescope (open access)

In-Flight Measurement of the Absolute Energy Scale of the Fermi Large Area Telescope

The Large Area Telescope (LAT) on-board the Fermi Gamma-ray Space Telescope is a pair-conversion telescope designed to survey the gamma-ray sky from 20 MeV to several hundreds of GeV. In this energy band there are no astronomical sources with sufficiently well known and sharp spectral features to allow an absolute calibration of the LAT energy scale. However, the geomagnetic cutoff in the cosmic ray electron-plus-positron (CRE) spectrum in low Earth orbit does provide such a spectral feature. The energy and spectral shape of this cutoff can be calculated with the aid of a numerical code tracing charged particles in the Earth's magnetic field. By comparing the cutoff value with that measured by the LAT in different geomagnetic positions, we have obtained several calibration points between {approx}6 and {approx}13 GeV with an estimated uncertainty of {approx}2%. An energy calibration with such high accuracy reduces the systematic uncertainty in LAT measurements of, for example, the spectral cutoff in the emission from gamma ray pulsars.
Date: September 20, 2012
Creator: Ackermann, M.; Ajello, M.; Allafort, A.; Atwood, W. B.; Axelsson, M.; Baldini, L. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Analysis of beam loss induced abort kicker instability (open access)

Analysis of beam loss induced abort kicker instability

Through more than a decade of operation, we have noticed the phenomena of beam loss induced kicker instability in the RHIC beam abort systems. In this study, we analyze the short term beam loss before abort kicker pre-fire events and operation conditions before capacitor failures. Beam loss has caused capacitor failures and elevated radiation level concentrated at failed end of capacitor has been observed. We are interested in beam loss induced radiation and heat dissipation in large oil filled capacitors and beam triggered thyratron conduction. We hope the analysis result would lead to better protection of the abort systems and improved stability of the RHIC operation.
Date: May 20, 2012
Creator: Zhang, W.; Sandberg, J.; Ahrens, L.; Fischer, W.; Hahn, H.; Mi, J. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
DI-MMAP: A High Performance Memory Map Runtime for Data-Intensive Applications (open access)

DI-MMAP: A High Performance Memory Map Runtime for Data-Intensive Applications

Describes the kernel module and shows performance results on a benchmark test suite.
Date: September 20, 2012
Creator: Van Essen, B.; Hsieh, H.; Ames, S. & Gokhale, M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ion bunch length effects on the beam-beam interaction and its compensation in a high-luminosity ring-ring electron-ion collider (open access)

Ion bunch length effects on the beam-beam interaction and its compensation in a high-luminosity ring-ring electron-ion collider

One of the luminosity limits in a ring-ring electron-ion collider is the beam-beam effect on the electrons. In the limit of short ion bunches, simulation studies have shown that this limit can be significantly increased by head-on beam-beam compensation with an electron lens. However, with an ion bunch length comparable to the beta-function at the IP in conjunction with a large beam-beam parameter, the electrons perform a sizeable fraction of a betatron oscillation period inside the long ion bunches. We present recent simulation results on the compensation of this beam-beam interaction with multiple electron lenses.
Date: May 20, 2012
Creator: Montag, C.; Oeftiger, A. & Fischer, W.
System: The UNT Digital Library