Title: Timing and RF Distribution NLC ILC
1Timing and RF DistributionNLC -gt ILC
2History
- RF phase and timing distribution concept
developed for NLC - Prototype of phase stabilized long fiber links
tested - Redundant high reliability design concept
developed - Many design concepts transfer to ILC
- Note Presentation is a slightly updated version
of the NLC system (without much reference of the
current ILC timing / phase distribution designs). - Discussion to focus on Availability / Reliability.
3Requirements (for purposes of discussion NOT a
specification)
- RF phase distribution with stability to 1
picosecond peak to peak. - The compressor has tighter requirements which may
require a special system. - Trigger timing distribution with stability to a
fraction of a cycle of L-band 100ps peak peak
(30ps RMS). - This is to allow resynchronization circuits to
reliably select a single cycle of L-band. - Single point failure resistant.
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5Components Fiducial Generator
- The machine is assumed synchronized to a 5 (or
possibly 10) Hz fiducial. The fiducial generator
would be enabled under software control,
synchronized to the 60Hz power line, and to the
1.3GHz RF. - This is a single point failure, but there is only
one unit in the accelerator, so the failure rate
is expected to be low.
6Components Master Oscillator
- This must be low noise 1.3Ghz oscillator.
- A variety of technologies are available, for
example Sapphire disciplined by Rubidium or GPS. - PSI specifies a sapphire based oscillator at
- -120dBc/Hz at 100Hz
- -152dBc/Hz at 1KHz
- -160dBc/Hz at 10KHz and above.
- This should meet ILC phase noise requirements.
- The Master Oscillator is a single point failure,
but there is only one unit, so failure rate is
expected to be low.
7Fiber Links
- Point to Point links using standard telecom
fiber. - 1550nm laser diode source, modulated at RF
- 357MHz for NLC test, 1300MHz OK for ILC.
- Fiber spool in oven for fiber length compensation.
8Phase shift for 10 degree C fiber change, 1 month
(note 1 degree X-band 250 fsec).
9Components Fiber Transmitter (1)
- Use conventional Telecom laser diode at 1550nm,
directly modulated with RF. - NLC tests done at 357MHz
- Modern diodes OK for direct 1.3GHz modulation,
and have (20dB) lower noise - Best to pulse diode so that reflected power
measured with transmitter off. - Note, must limit transmitter power to 1mW, or
get nonlinear effects in fiber which degrade
performance. - Fiber length compensation using 5Km spool of
fiber in oven - Requires few X 100 Watts
- Continuously cool, heat with fan and wire grid.
- Get 10 second time delay from fiber. (with
integration term). - Easy to close feedback loop
- Reflected phase measurement same as for receiver.
Use downmix and digitizer system. - Fiber transmitter is broad band, so fiducial can
be applied as a bipolar phase shift to the RF. - System cost low all conventional components
(except oven!). - Requires 6 rack units per transmitter.
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11Components Fiber transmitter (2)
- Ovens are unpopular large and consume power
- Alternate scheme Use wavelength tunable fiber
working against the fiber dispersion. - Need approximately 4nm/C tuning range, with 0.5pm
wavelength resolution. - Available commercially 100nm range, without mode
hops, .02pm resolution. - Cost 25K. (From New Focus).
- Expanded use of DWDM telecom systems may
substantially reduce the price of tunable laser
systems. - Scheme was briefly tested for NLC and worked, but
at that time wide band, hop free tuning was not
available. - Probably this is the technology of choice as the
laser costs decrease.
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13Fiber Transmitter Reliability
- Transmitters are redundant. Auto fail over is
performed by the phase comparison unit. - Transmitters can detect broken fibers from
reflected signal - In principal can automatically TDR fiber to help
quickly find break or reflection.
14Components Fiber
- Long haul fibers can use standard SMF-28 telecom
fiber. - Need low reflections want fusion splices, not
connectors except at transmit and receive
chassis. - Note that standard SMF-28 fiber is about as
radiation sensitive as a human a few hundred
Rads can degrade its performance. - This varies dramatically with the exact fiber
composition. - Need to test transmission system with real
installed fiber.
15Components Fiber Receiver
- Simple
- Converts optical to electrical signal
- Re-generates fiducial
- Error checking on optical signals
- Redundant, fail over in phase comparison unit.
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17Phase Comparison Unit
- Located at the crate level
- System design should allow accelerator operation
with a failed crate. - Local narrow band Phase Locked Loop
- Lock to either fiber system
- Standby system has phase shifted to match active
system - Prevents sudden global phase shifts (MPS issue)
- Diagnostics to determine which fiber system is
bad - Must be relatively low cost high multiplicity
item.
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19Phase Compare Unit detecting failed channel
- If channel signal level drops, or if fiducials
are not detected. - Phase noise relative to narrow band VCO
- If slow drift is detected, use head / tail
monitors, or beam phase measurement to decide - Phase shifter on standby channel allows smooth
changeover
20Phase Control Unit Low Noise VCO
- Need good narrow band noise to allow phase memory
between pulses - Need low cost since this is a high multiplicity
unit. - Commercial multiplied VCXOs
- Integrated phase noise few ps at 1Hz
- Slew rate limit PLL feedback for MPS to prevent
sudden beam phase shifts - Can detect noise in fibers at frequencies above
30Hz
21Head / Tail Monitor
- Phase detection to compare neighboring sectors.
- Used in conjunction with Phase Comparison units
to detect failed fiber transmission systems.
22Beam Phase Monitor
- Can use Monopole HOM modes.
- (have a hammer, everything looks like a nail!)
- Data taken at TTF as part of HOM alignment / BPM
experiments - Experiment was primarily looking at Dipole modes
Monopole modes were only used for testing
system - Directly digitize cavity HOM signals with fast
(5Gs/s) scope - Look at phase of HOM Monopole modes relative to
1.3GHz phase reference - HOM modes are a good detector high Q and
mechanical stability (in helium) give accurate
measurement.
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24HOM phase results / comments
- 1.4 ps RMS for each mode.
- Mode difference 1ps RMS -gt mode noise of 700fs
RMS - Can probably do much better with an optimized
system. - HOM couplers also see 1.3GHz signal in cavity.
- Provides a direct comparison of 1.3GHz vs beam
time. - Electronics specific to monopole modes would be
low cost (standard down-mix / digitize system) - Effect of Lorentz detuning not known could be a
major problem for this type of measurement. - If so, can always use conventional phase cavities.
25Triggers
- Assume triggers derived from 1.3GHz countdowns,
reset by Fiducial. - 1.3GHz too fast for present day programmable
logic limit few hundred MHz - Can work at a divided down frequency
- Expect faster programmable devices by time ILC is
constructed - Countdowns similar to SLAC PDUs (now running at
476Mhz). - Due to need to reset frequency dividers running
at 1.3GHz, need trigger stability lt100ps!
26Issues / Conclusions
- Base technologies for a redundant phase and
timing distribution system for the ILC have been
demonstrated - Compressor phase is the exception! Needs RD.
- Much engineering required to build a complete
system - Various alternate technologies available
- Example is fiber laser based phase / timing
distribution system developed at MIT and DESY. - Need to do detailed engineering to evaluate
trade-offs.-