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Accelerator Physics

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GOAL: Design 8-GeV high-power linac in a cost-effective manner ... inside the separatrix. Defocusing Factor. March 15-17, 2005. Proton Driver Director's Review ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Accelerator Physics


1
Accelerator Physics
  • Petr Ostroumov (ANL)
  • March 15 , 2005

2
Outline
  • Basic concepts for the Linac design
  • Choice of lattice parameters
  • High-intensity beam physics
  • Detailed design and simulations
  • RD issues
  • Conclusion

3
8-GeV Linac conceptual design
  • GOAL Design 8-GeV high-power linac in a
    cost-effective manner
  • Apply ILC-style cavities above 1.2 GeV
  • Feed multiple cavities from one klystron
  • Develop and use S-ILC cavities (beta0.81) in the
    energy range 400 MeV-1.2 GeV
  • Select sub-harmonic frequency for the front end
    1/4. Motivation multi-spoke cavities are
    developed at 345-350 MHz. Requires 30 less
    number of cavities compared to 433 MHz option.
    Klystrons are available from JHF developments.
  • No need in SRF cavities below 15 MeV use 21
    RT-TSR with very high shunt impedance. Power
    distribution is similar to those for SRF cavities

4
Linac conceptual design (contd)
  • 325 MHz SSR, DSR and TSR from 15 MeV to 400 MeV
  • Apply SC solenoid focusing to obtain compact
    lattice in the front end including MEBT
  • JHF-SNS-style RFQ delivers axial-symmetric 3 MeV
    beam
  • MEBT consists of 2 re-bunchers and a chopper.
    Smooth axial-symmetric focusing mitigates beam
    halo formation
  • Beam matching between the cryostats adjust
    parameters of outermost elements (solenoid
    fields, rf phase)
  • Frequency transition 14 at 400 MeV, matching in
  • (?, ?W)-plane is provided by 90? bunch
    rotation
  • Avoid beam losses due to H-minus stripping

5
Linac Structure
Major Linac Sections Front end Squeezed
ILC-style ILS-style
325 MHz 1300 MHz 1300 MHz
6
MEBT, Linac entrance, 28 mA
Chopper
7
RT-TSR, f325 MHz
Shunt Impedance 160 M?/m - 80 M?/mIH
structure application for heavy ions GSI, LMU
(Munich), CERN-ISOLDA, TRIUMF-ISAC, several Labs
in Japan
8
Energy gain per resonator vs distance
9
Stability Diagram (transverse motion)
Unstable due to parametric resonance
Linac operating tunes (black dots) Stable for
all particles inside the separatrix
Defocusing Factor
10
Defocusing Factor vs Energy
Defocusing factor
S-ILC 6 cavities/period ILC 16 cavities/period
S-ILC 4 cavities/period ILC 8
cavities/period Upper Limit for Defocusing
Factor
Beam Energy (MeV)
11
Focusing lattice
12
High intensity beam physics
  • Current independent lattice (Developed at LANL
    for ATP, SNS )
  • Smooth kT0 and kL0 avoid jumps in the
    transition, very important in the SC linac
  • Space charge and higher order internal resonances
  • Beam matching in the transitions
  • Parameters should be close to equipartitioning
  • Avoid obvious resonance ?T0 90?
  • Watch for higher order resonances (Hoffmans
    Chart)
  • Final verification by multi-particle simulations
  • Front End
  • The length of focusing period should be
    minimized SC solenoids provide shortest focusing
    period
  • Analyze HOM and avoid excessive power losses on
    cavity walls

13
RMS analysis wavenumebrs of T- and L-oscillations
14
RMS analysis Phase advance
15
Detailed design and simulation
  • RFQ design
  • Linac design on the base of rms equations (TRACE
    3D, TRACK-fitting)
  • Simulations with the codes PARMILA, IMPACT (in
    progress) and TRACK
  • End-to-end simulations TRACK
  • All fields are 3-D, resonators fields - MWS,
    solenoid fields - EMS
  • Most time-consuming work is beam matching in the
    transitions between different sections and
    cryostats

16
End-to-end BD simulations (20K particles)
Beam current 30 mA-RFQ, 28 mA - Linac
aperture
17
End-to-end BD simulations, Log scale
Beam current 30 mA-RFQ, 28 mA - Linac
aperture
RFQ MEBT RT-TSR SSR,DSR TSR
S-ILC, ILC
18
Phase width (deg) along the linac
Beam current 30 mA-RFQ, 28 mA - Linac
19
The same tune, 10 mA, 0 mA
10 mA-RFQ entrance Zero current
20
Emittance growth
Emittance growth is almost negligible as soon as
beam is matched carefully.
30 mA (28 mA)
10 mA (9.3 mA)
21
Phase space plots of 8-GeV beam
Beam current 9.3 mA
22
RD issues
  • Develop optimized design of the linac
  • Error studies
  • Study of different options of the linac to
    provide the most cost-effective design.
  • Example frequency transition energy (110 MeV vs
    400 MeV)
  • Detailed studies of HOM in all ILC-style cavities
    and in TSRs
  • Iterate beam dynamics studies with hardware
    development
  • Some code development work is required
  • fitting in realistic fields
  • support many different types of lattice structure
  • include feedback loops of rf field for error
    simulations
  • Apply different codes for BD simulations
  • High-statistics simulations

23
CONCLUSIONS
  • Beam physics in the driver is predictable. Most
    problems are similar to the SNS and can be solved
    during RD phase
  • New approach in hadron Linacs - Pulsed SC Front
    End-provides high-quality beams
  • Extremely high accelerating gradients require
    shorter focusing periods. It is recommended to
    keep peak surface fields in the S-ILC section
    below 50 MV/m
  • The concept of current-independent tune similar
    to those developed for the SNS works well for the
    Proton Driver the same 30-mA tune is good for
    all beam currents in the range from 0 to 30 mA
  • RD work is required to eliminate uncertainties
    and provide cost-effective design and
    construction of the Linac
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