110 Matching Results

Results open in a new window/tab.

RHIC Performance During the FY10 200 GeV Au+Au Heavy Ion Run (open access)

RHIC Performance During the FY10 200 GeV Au+Au Heavy Ion Run

Since the last successful RHIC Au+Au run in 2007 (Run-7), the RHIC experiments have made numerous detector improvements and upgrades. In order to benefit from the enhanced detector capabilities and to increase the yield of rare events in the acquired heavy ion data a significant increase in luminosity is essential. In Run-7 RHIC achieved an average store luminosity of <L> = 12 x 10{sup 26} cm{sup -2} s{sup -1} by operating with 103 bunches (out of 111 possible), and by squeezing to {beta}* = 0.85 m. This year, Run-10, we achieved <L> = 20 x 10{sup 26} cm{sup -2} s{sup -1}, which put us an order of magnitude above the RHIC design luminosity. To reach these luminosity levels we decreased {beta}* to 0.75 m, operated with 111 bunches per ring, and reduced longitudinal and transverse emittances by means of bunched-beam stochastic cooling. In addition we introduced a lattice to suppress intra-beam scattering (IBS) in both RHIC rings, upgraded the RF control system, and separated transition crossing times in the two rings. We present an overview of the changes and the results of Run-10 performance.
Date: May 23, 2010
Creator: Brown, K. A.; Ahrens, L.; Bai, M.; Beebe-Wang, J.; Blaskiewicz, M.; Brennan, J. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
E-Cloud Drivent Single-Bunch Instabilities in PS2 (open access)

E-Cloud Drivent Single-Bunch Instabilities in PS2

One of the proposals under consideration for future upgrades of the LHC injector complex entails the replacement of the PS with the PS2, a longer circumference and higher energy synchrotron, with electron cloud effects representing a potentially serious limitation to the achievement of the upgrade goals. We report on ongoing numerical studies aiming at estimating the e-cloud density threshold for the occurrence of single bunch instabilities.
Date: May 23, 2010
Creator: Venturini, M.; Furman, M.; Penn, G.; Secondo, R.; Vay, J. L.; De Maria, R. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Carboxysome and Other Bacterial Microcompartments (open access)

The Carboxysome and Other Bacterial Microcompartments

- Carboxysomes are part of the carbon concentrating mechanism in cyanobacteria and chemoautotrophs. - Carboxysomes are a subclass of bacterial microcompartments (BMCs); BMCs can encapsulate a range of metabolic processes. - Like some viral particles, the carboxysome can be modeled as an icosahedron-in its case, having 4,000-5,000 hexameric shell subunits and 12 surface pentamers to generate curvature. - The threefold axis of symmetry of the CsoS1D protein in carboxysomes forms a pore that can open and close, allowing for selective diffusion. - Genetic modules encoding BMC shell proteins and the enzymes that they encapsulate are horizontally transferable, suggesting they enable bacteria to adapt to diverse environments.
Date: June 23, 2010
Creator: Kerfeld, Cheryl A.; Greenleaf, William B. & Kinney, James N.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Lattice design for the ERL electron ion collider in RHIC (open access)

Lattice design for the ERL electron ion collider in RHIC

We present electron ion collider lattice design for the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (eRHIC) where the electrons have multi-passes through recirculating linacs (ERL) and arcs placed in the existing RHIC tunnel. The present RHIC interaction regions (IR's), where the electron ion collisions will occur, are modified to allow for the large luminosity. Staging of eRHIC will bring the electron energy from 4 up to 20 (30) GeV as the superconducting cavities are built and installed sequentially. The synchrotron radiation from electrons at the IR is reduced as they arrive straight to the collision while ions and protons come with 10 mrad crossing angle using the crab cavities.
Date: May 23, 2010
Creator: Trbojevic, D.; Beebe-Wang, J.; Tsoupas, N.; Chang, X.; Kayran, D.; Ptitsyn, V. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Signal quality of the LHC AC dipoles and its impact on beam dynamics (open access)

Signal quality of the LHC AC dipoles and its impact on beam dynamics

The adiabaticity of the AC dipole might be compromised by noise or unwanted frequency components in its signal. An effort has been put to characterize and optimize the signal quality of the LHC AC dipoles. The measured signal is used in realistic simulations in order to evaluate its impact on beam dynamics and to ultimately establish safe margins for the operation of the LHC AC dipoles.
Date: May 23, 2010
Creator: Miyamoto, R.; Cattin, M.; Serrano, J. & Tomas, R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recent Triplet Vibration Studies in RHIC (open access)

Recent Triplet Vibration Studies in RHIC

We report on recent developments for mitigating vibrations of the quadrupole magnets near the interaction regions of the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC). High precision accelerometers, geophones, and a laser vibrometer were installed around one of the two interaction points to characterize the frequencies of the mechanical motion. In addition actuators were mounted directly on the quadrupole cryostats. Using as input the locally measured motion, dynamic damping of the mechanical vibrations has been demonstrated. In this report we present these measurements and measurements of the beam response. Future options for compensating the vibrations are discussed.
Date: May 23, 2010
Creator: Thieberger, P.; Bonati, R.; Corbin, G.; Jain, A.; Minty, M.; McIntyre, G. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Versatile device for in-situ discharge cleaning and multiple coatings of long, small diameter tubes (open access)

Versatile device for in-situ discharge cleaning and multiple coatings of long, small diameter tubes

Electron clouds, which can limit machine performance, have been observed in many accelerators including RHIC at BNL. Additional concern for the RHIC machine, whose vacuum chamber is made from relatively high resistivity 316LN stainless steel, is high wall resistivity that can result in unacceptably high ohmic heating for superconducting magnets. The high resistivity can be addressed with a copper (Cu) coating; a reduction in the secondary electron yield can be achieved with a TiN or amorphous carbon (a-C) coating. Applying such coatings in an already constructed machine is rather challenging. We have been developing a robotic plasma deposition technique for in-situ coating of long, small diameter tubes. The technique entails fabricating a device comprising of staged magnetrons mounted on a mobile mole for deposition of about 5 ?m of Cu followed by about 0.1 ?m of a-C. As a first step, a 15-cm Cu cathode magnetron was designed, fabricated, and 30-cm long samples of the RHIC pipe have been coated with 2 ?m to 5.6 ?m of copper. Deposition rates of up to 92 A/sec with an average coating rate of 30 A/sec were measured. Effects on RF resistivity is also to be measured.
Date: May 23, 2010
Creator: Hershcovitch, A.; Blaskiewicz, M.; Brennan, J. M.; Custer, A.; Erickson, M.; Liaw, C. J. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Global Orbit Feedback in RHIC (open access)

Global Orbit Feedback in RHIC

For improved reproducibility of good operating conditions and ramp commissioning efficiency, new dual-plane slow orbit feedback during the energy ramp was implemented during run-10 in the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC). The orbit feedback is based on steering the measured orbit, after subtraction of the dispersive component, to either a design orbit or to a previously saved reference orbit. Using multiple correctors and beam position monitors, an SVD-based algorithm is used for determination of the applied corrections. The online model is used as a basis for matrix computations. In this report we describe the feedback design, review the changes made to realize its implementation, and assess system performance.
Date: May 23, 2010
Creator: Minty, M.; Hulsart, R.; Marusic, A.; Michnoff, R.; Ptitsyn, V.; Robert-Demolaize, G. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
A simple model based magnet sorting algorithm for planar hybrid undulators (open access)

A simple model based magnet sorting algorithm for planar hybrid undulators

Various magnet sorting strategies have been used to optimize undulator performance, ranging from intuitive pairing of high- and low-strength magnets, to full 3D FEM simulation with 3-axis Helmholtz coil magnet data. In the extreme, swapping magnets in a full field model to minimize trajectory wander and rms phase error can be time consuming. This paper presents a simpler approach, extending the field error signature concept to obtain trajectory displacement, kick angle and phase error signatures for each component of magnetization error from a Radia model of a short hybrid-PM undulator. We demonstrate that steering errors and phase errors are essentially decoupled and scalable from measured X, Y and Z components of magnetization. Then, for any given sequence of magnets, rms trajectory and phase errors are obtained from simple cumulative sums of the scaled displacements and phase errors. The cost function (a weighted sum of these errors) is then minimized by swapping magnets, using one's favorite optimization algorithm. This approach was applied recently at NSLS to a short in-vacuum undulator, which required no subsequent trajectory or phase shimming. Trajectory and phase signatures are also obtained for some mechanical errors, to guide 'virtual shimming' and specifying mechanical tolerances. Some simple inhomogeneities are …
Date: May 23, 2010
Creator: Rakowsky, G.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Progress in studies of Electron-Cloud-Induced Optics Distortions at CESRTA (open access)

Progress in studies of Electron-Cloud-Induced Optics Distortions at CESRTA

The Cornell Electron Storage Ring Test Accelerator (CesrTA) program has included extensive measurements of coherent betatron tune shifts for a variety of electron and positron beam energies, bunch population levels, and bunch train configurations. The tune shifts have been shown to result primarily from the interaction of the beam with the space-charge field of the beam-induced lowenergy electron cloud in the vacuum chamber. Comparison to several advanced electron cloud simulation program packages has allowed determination of the sensitivity of these measurements to physical parameters characterizing the synchrotron radiation flux, the production of photoelectrons on the vacuum chamberwall, the beam emittance, lattice optics,and the secondary-electron yield model. We report on progress in understanding the cloud buildup and decay mechanisms in magnetic fields and in field-free regions, addressing quantitatively the precise determination of the physical parameters of the modeling. Validation of these models will serve as essential input in the design of damping rings for future high-energy linear colliders.
Date: May 23, 2010
Creator: Crittenden, J. A.; Calvey, J. R.; Dugan, G. F.; Kreinick, D. L.; Leong, Z.; Livezey, J. A. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Recommendation for the Feasibility of more Compact LC Damping Rings (open access)

Recommendation for the Feasibility of more Compact LC Damping Rings

As part of the international Linear Collider (ILC) collaboration, we have compared the electron cloud (EC) effect for different Damping Ring (DR) designs respectively with 6.4 km and 3.2 km circumference and investigated the feasibility of a shorter damping ring with respect to the electron cloud build-up and related beam instability. The studies for a 3.2 km ring were carried out with beam parameters of the ILC Low Power option. A reduced damping ring circumference has been proposed for the new ILC baseline design SB2009 [1] and would allow to considerably reduce the number of components, wiggler magnets and costs. We discuss the impact of the proposed operation of the ILC at high repetition rate 10 Hz and address the necessary modifications for the DRs. We also briefly discuss the plans for future studies including the luminosity upgrade option with shorter bunch spacing, the evaluation of mitigations and the integration of the CesrTA results into the Damping Ring design.
Date: May 23, 2010
Creator: Pivi, M. T. F.; Wang, L.; Demma, T.; Guiducci, S.; Suetsugu, Y.; Fukuma, H. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Study of beam-beam effects in eRHIC (open access)

Study of beam-beam effects in eRHIC

Beam-beam effects in eRHIC have a number of unique features, which distinguish them from both hadron and lepton colliders. Due to beam-beam interaction, both electron and hadron beams would suffer quality degradation or beam loss from without proper treatments. Those features need novel study and dedicate countermeasures. We study the beam dynamics and resulting luminosity of the characteristics, including mismatch, disruption and pinch effects on electron beam, in additional to their consequences on the opposing beam as a wake field and other incoherent effects of hadron beam. We also carry out countermeasures to prevent beam quality degrade and coherent instability.
Date: May 23, 2010
Creator: Hao, Y.; Litvinenko, V. & Ptitsyn, V.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Interaction region design for the electron-nucleon collider ENC at FAIR (open access)

Interaction region design for the electron-nucleon collider ENC at FAIR

To facilitate studies of collisions between polarized electron and protons at {radical}s = 14 GeV; constructing an electron-nucleon collider at the FAIR facility has been proposed. This machine would collide the stored 15 GeV polarized proton beam in the HESR with a polarized 3.3 GeV electron beam circulating in an additional storage ring. We describe the interaction region design of this facility, which utilizes the PANDA detector.
Date: May 23, 2010
Creator: Montag, C.; Jankowiak, A. & Lehrach, A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Microbunching and RF Compression (open access)

Microbunching and RF Compression

Velocity bunching (or RF compression) represents a promising technique complementary to magnetic compression to achieve the high peak current required in the linac drivers for FELs. Here we report on recent progress aimed at characterizing the RF compression from the point of view of the microbunching instability. We emphasize the development of a linear theory for the gain function of the instability and its validation against macroparticle simulations that represents a useful tool in the evaluation of the compression schemes for FEL sources.
Date: May 23, 2010
Creator: Venturini, M.; Migliorati, M.; Ronsivalle, C.; Ferrario, M. & Vaccarezza, C.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Meteorology-induced variations in the spatial behavior of summer ozone pollution in Central California (open access)

Meteorology-induced variations in the spatial behavior of summer ozone pollution in Central California

Cluster analysis was applied to daily 8 h ozone maxima modeled for a summer season to characterize meteorology-induced variations in the spatial distribution of ozone. Principal component analysis is employed to form a reduced dimension set to describe and interpret ozone spatial patterns. The first three principal components (PCs) capture {approx}85% of total variance, with PC1 describing a general spatial trend, and PC2 and PC3 each describing a spatial contrast. Six clusters were identified for California's San Joaquin Valley (SJV) with two low, three moderate, and one high-ozone cluster. The moderate ozone clusters are distinguished by elevated ozone levels in different parts of the valley: northern, western, and eastern, respectively. The SJV ozone clusters have stronger coupling with the San Francisco Bay area (SFB) than with the Sacramento Valley (SV). Variations in ozone spatial distributions induced by anthropogenic emission changes are small relative to the overall variations in ozone amomalies observed for the whole summer. Ozone regimes identified here are mostly determined by the direct and indirect meteorological effects. Existing measurement sites are sufficiently representative to capture ozone spatial patterns in the SFB and SV, but the western side of the SJV is under-sampled.
Date: June 23, 2010
Creator: Jin, Ling; Harley, Robert A. & Brown, Nancy J.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Ion Species and Charge States of Vacuum Arc Plasma with Gas Feed and Longitudinal Magnetic Field (open access)

Ion Species and Charge States of Vacuum Arc Plasma with Gas Feed and Longitudinal Magnetic Field

The evolution of copper ion species and charge state distributions is measured for a long vacuum arc discharge plasma operated in the presence of a longitudinal magnetic field of several 10 mT and working gas (Ar). It was found that changing the cathode-anode distance within 20 cm as well as increasing the gas pressure did not affect the arc burning voltage and power dissipation by much. In contrast, burning voltage and power dissipation were greatly increased as the magnetic field was increased. The longer the discharge gap the greater was the fraction of gaseous ions and the lower the fraction of metal ions, while the mean ion charge state was reduced. It is argued that the results are affected by charge exchange collisions and electron impact ionization.
Date: June 23, 2010
Creator: Oks, Efim & Anders, Andre
System: The UNT Digital Library
Angular distribution of laser ablation plasma (open access)

Angular distribution of laser ablation plasma

An expansion of a laser induced plasma is fundamental and important phenomena in a laser ion source. To understand the expanding direction, an array of Langmuir probes were employed. The chosen ion for the experiment was Ag{sup 1+} which was created by a second harmonics of a Nd-YAG laser. The obtained angular distribution was about {+-}10 degree. This result also indicates a proper positioning of a solenoid magnet which enhances ion beam current.
Date: May 23, 2010
Creator: Kondo, K.; Kanesue, T.; Dabrowski, R. & Okamura, M.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Muon acceleration with RLA and non-scaling FFAG ARCS (open access)

Muon acceleration with RLA and non-scaling FFAG ARCS

Recirculating Linear Accelerators (RLA) are the most likely means to achieve the rapid acceleration of short-lived muons to multi-GeV energies required for Neutrino Factories and TeV energies required for Muon Colliders. In this paper, we present a novel return-arc optics design based on a Non Scaling Fixed Field Alternating Gradient (NS-FFAG) lattice that allows 5 and 9 GeV/c muons of both charges to be transported in the same string of magnets. The return arcs are made up of super cells with each super cell consisting of three triplets. By employing combined function magnets with dipole, quadrupole, sextupole and octupole magnetic field components, each super cell is designed to be achromatic and to have zero initial and final periodic orbit offsets for both 5 and 9 GeV/c muon momenta. This solution would reduce the number of arcs by a factor of 2, simplifying the overall design.
Date: May 23, 2010
Creator: Morozov, V.S.; Trbojevic, D. & Bogacz, A.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Bunch Length Effects in the Beam-Beam Compensation With an Electron Lens (open access)

Bunch Length Effects in the Beam-Beam Compensation With an Electron Lens

N/A
Date: May 23, 2010
Creator: Fischer, W.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Chromaticity Feedback at RHIC (open access)

Chromaticity Feedback at RHIC

Chromaticity feedback during the ramp to high beam energies has been demonstrated in the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC). In this report we review the feedback design and measurement technique. Commissioning experiences including interaction with existing tune and coupling feedback are presented together with supporting experimental data.
Date: May 23, 2010
Creator: Marusic, A.; Minty, M. & Tepikian, S.
System: The UNT Digital Library
CesrTA Retarding Field Analyzer Modeling Results (open access)

CesrTA Retarding Field Analyzer Modeling Results

Retarding field analyzers (RFAs) provide an effective measure of the local electron cloud density and energy distribution. Proper interpretation of RFA data can yield information about the behavior of the cloud, as well as the surface properties of the instrumented vacuum chamber. However, due to the complex interaction of the cloud with the RFA itself, understanding these measurements can be nontrivial. This paper examines different methods for interpreting RFA data via cloud simulation programs. Techniques include postprocessing the output of a simulation code to predict the RFA response; and incorporating an RFA model into the cloud modeling program itself.
Date: May 23, 2010
Creator: Calvey, J. R.; Celata, C. M.; Crittenden, J. A.; Dugan, G. F.; Greenwald, S.; Leong, Z. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
The Transverse Linac Optics Design in Multi-pass ERL (open access)

The Transverse Linac Optics Design in Multi-pass ERL

In this paper, we analyzed the linac optics design requirement for a multi-pass energy recovery linac (ERL) for arbitrary number of linacs. A set of general formula of constrains for the 2-D transverse matrix is derived to ensure design optics acceptance matching throughout the entire accelerating and decelerating process. Meanwhile, the rest free parameters can be adjusted for fulfilling other requirements or optimization purpose. As an example, we design the linac optics for the future MeRHIC (Medium Energy eRHIC) project and show the optimization for small {beta} function.
Date: May 23, 2010
Creator: Hao, Y.; Kewisch, J.; Litvinenko,V.; Pozdeyev, E.; Ptitsyn, V.; Trbojevic, D. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library
Confinement of laser plasma by solenoidal field for laser ion source (open access)

Confinement of laser plasma by solenoidal field for laser ion source

A laser ion source can provide high current, highly charged ions with a simple structure. However, it was not easy to control the ion pulse width. To provide a longer ion beam pulse, the plasma drift length, which is the distance between laser target and extraction point, has to be extended and as a result the plasma is diluted severely. Previously, we applied a solenoid field to prevent reduction of ion density at the extraction point. Although a current enhancement by a solenoid field was observed, plasma behavior after a solenoid magnet was unclear because plasma behavior can be different from usual ion beam dynamics. We measured a transverse ion distribution along the beam axis to understand plasma motion in the presence of a solenoid field.
Date: May 23, 2010
Creator: Okamura, M.; Kanesue,T.; Kondo, K. & Dabrowski, R.
System: The UNT Digital Library
RHIC Spin Flipper Commissioning Status (open access)

RHIC Spin Flipper Commissioning Status

The commissioning of the RHIC spin flipper in the RHIC Blue ring during the RHIC polarized proton run in 2009 showed the detrimental effects of global vertical coherent betatron oscillation induced by the 2-AC dipole plus 4-DC dipole configuration. This global orbital coherent oscillation of the RHIC beam in the Blue ring in the presence of collision modulated the beam-beam interaction between the two RHIC beams and affected Yellow beam polarization. The experimental data at injection with different spin tunes by changing the snake current also demonstrated that it was not possible to induce a single isolated spin resonance with the global vertical coherent betatron oscillation excited by the two AC dipoles. Hence, a new design was proposed to eliminate the coherent vertical betatron oscillation outside the spin flipper by adding three additional AC dipoles. This paper presents the experimental results as well as the new design.
Date: May 23, 2010
Creator: Bai, M.; Meot, F.; Dawson, C.; Oddo, P.; Pai, C.; Pile, P. et al.
System: The UNT Digital Library