Numerical determination of injector design for high beam quality (open access)

Numerical determination of injector design for high beam quality

The performance of a free electron laser strongly depends on the electron beam quality or brightness. The electron beam is transported into the free electron laser after it has been accelerated to the desired energy. Typically the maximum beam brightness produced by an accelerator is constrained by the beam brightness deliverd by the accelerator injector. Thus it is important to design the accelerator injector to yield the required electron beam brightness. The DPC (Darwin Particle Code) computer code has been written to numerically model accelerator injectors. DPC solves for the transport of a beam from emission through acceleration up to the full energy of the injector. The relativistic force equation is solved to determine particle orbits. Field equations are solved for self consistent electric and magnetic fields in the Darwin approximation. DPC has been used to investigate the beam quality consequences of A-K gap, accelerating stress, electrode configuration and axial magnetic field profile.
Date: October 15, 1985
Creator: Boyd, J.K.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library
Thermal stress analysis of the SLAC moveable mask. Addendum 2 (open access)

Thermal stress analysis of the SLAC moveable mask. Addendum 2

X-ray beams emerging from the new SLAC electron-positron storage ring (PEP) can impinge on the walls of tangential divertor channels. A moveable mask made of 6061-T6 aluminum is installed in the channel to limit wall heating. The mask is cooled with water flowing axially at 30/sup 0/C. Beam strikes on the mask cause highly localized heating in the channel structure. Analyses were completed to determine the temperatures and thermally-induced stresses due to this heating. The current design and operating conditions should result in the entrance to the moveable mask operating at a peak temperature of 88/sup 0/C with a peak thermal stress at 19% of the yield of 6061-T6 aluminum.
Date: October 15, 1985
Creator: Johnson, G. L.
Object Type: Report
System: The UNT Digital Library
Optimum ranges for x-ray thickness measurements (open access)

Optimum ranges for x-ray thickness measurements

Film thicknesses can be measured by two x-ray methods: x-ray absorption (gauging or radiography) and x-ray fluorescence. Optimization of both methods is discussed.
Date: October 15, 1985
Creator: Ryon, R.W.
Object Type: Article
System: The UNT Digital Library