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Parametric Resonance in Linacs

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Resonance is when the driving frequency equals the natural frequency. ... (See Mechanics, 3rd edition, Landau and Lifshitz, Pergamon Press, pp. 80-84) ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Parametric Resonance in Linacs


1
Parametric Resonance in Linacs
2
Parametric resonance, a simple picture
3
Parametric resonance condition
  • Resonance is when the driving frequency equals
    the natural frequency.We have two possible
    driving frequencies.
  • For the sum term this requires w1w0w0. This is
    satisfied when w10,
  • which gives the usual condition w0w0 for an
    oscillator driven at natural frequency. Nothing
    new from the sum term.
  • For the difference term it requires w1-w0w0, or
    w12w0. Resonance when the modulation frequency
    is twice the natural frequency. This is called a
  • parametric resonance.

4
What conditions produce a parametric resonance?
  • There exist oscillators in which external forces
    produce a time variation in the natural
    frequency. (See Mechanics, 3rd edition, Landau
    and Lifshitz, Pergamon Press, pp. 80-84)
  • A simple example is an oscillating pendulum whose
    point of support executes periodic vertical
    motion.
  • Parametric resonances are important for
    accelerators.
  • An important example for ion linacs is the
    beam-dynamics resonance known as the kl2kT
    resonance. (See R.L.Gluckstern, in Linear
    Accelerators, Lapostolle and Septier, 1970, Wiley
    Sons, pp. 799-801, R.L.Gluckstern, Linear
    Accelerator Conf. 1966, LA Rept. 3609, p.250.)

5
Longitudinal equation of motion in a linac
including  longitudinal-transverse coupling
(nonrelativistic)
6
Including the transverse coupling term for the
longitudinal equation
The transverse coupling term is sometimes ignored
when writing the longitudinal equation of
motion. This is OK near the beam axis wherethe
Bessel function I0 is near 1, but more generally
I0 depends on y.
7
Next write transverse equation of motion in a
linac including transverse-longitudinal
coupling
8
Summary of the kl2kT resonance in ion linacs
  • Coupling of longitudinal and transverse motion
    takes place through phase dependence of the RF
    defocusing and radial dependence of the
    accelerating gradient.
  • Simulations show that this resonance causes
    transverse emittance growth.
  • The coupling terms decrease rapidly with
    increasing b so this effect is most important at
    low velocities.
  • A dangerous scenario is when kl gt2kT initially
    and if kl falls off with b faster than kT until
    the resonance condition is satisfied, or if the
    resonance condition is not passed through rapidly
    enough.

9
A longitudinal beam-dynamics constraint on
accelerating gradient encountered for very low
velocities in a conceptual design of a
high-gradient superconducting linac.
  • Another example (unpublished) of a parametric
    resonance.

10
Conceptual design to see what problems we would
encounter pushing the superconducting linac to
lower velocities
  • Our design attempted to extended the
    superconducting linac to very low velocities all
    the way down to the RFQ.
  • 5-cell spoke cavities were used in first three
    sections to increase the real-estate accelerating
    gradient at low beta 7-cell cavities (spoke and
    elliptical) were used for entire remaining linac.
    The 5-spoke and 7-spoke would need RD for
    development.
  • We found that using high accelerating gradients
    at low velocities produced a longitudinal
    envelope instability. We had to reduce the
    accelerator gradient.
  • Design modifications to be described mitigated
    the effect and allowed higher gradients to be
    used.

11
  • We found that longitudinal rms beam size is
    resonantly driven (parametric resonance) by the
    focusing cavities, when the longitudinal phase
    advance per focusing period of the mismatch
    oscillations equaled 180.

12
Longitudinal 1D envelope equation of motion
  • Z is longitudinal beam envelope size
  • kl02 is smoothed longitudinal phase advance per
    period
  • L is period length of array of RF cavities that
    provide the longitudinal focusing.
  • a is amplitude of periodic part of cavity
    focusing
  • e is the longitudinal emittance
  • Kl is longitudinal space-charge term from the 3D
  • ellipsoid model. It is proportional to the beam
    current.
  • The periodic longitudinal focusing from the
    cavities is treated here in a
  • quasi-smooth approximation. This means smooth
    approx with a small periodic term to induce an
    instability from the periodic focusing lattice.

13
Equation of motion of a longitudinal mismatch
perturbation
  • Write ZZ0 as matched solution and introduce a
    small perturbation z that produces mismatch
    oscillations. Then the longitudinal envelope is
    ZZ0z, and we assume zltltZ0.
  • Substituting ZZ0z into envelope equation and
    assuming the matched envelope Z0 is uniform and
    Z00, we obtain an equation of motion for the
    mismatch perturbation z.

Notice the oscillator on the left, and the
driving term on the right.
14
Equation for a mismatch parametric resonance
  • The equation for the mismatch perturbation z is
    that of a driven
  • oscillator .
  • The right side of the equation for z is the
    product of two sinusoids, a sum term (2p/Lkmm)
    and a difference term (2p/L-kmm) .
  • Parametric resonance corresponds to the
    difference term,
  • kmm2p/L-kmm, or kmmLp. The modulating frequency
    with 2p phase
  • advance per focusing period comes from the
    periodic focusing array.
  • Parametric resonance occurs when the phase
    advance per period of the envelope mismatch
    oscillation kmmL is p, i.e. the period of the
    envelope mismatch oscillation is twice the
    period of the focusing lattice.

15
Introduce a parameter h that measures the
importance of longitudinal space charge
  • Phase advance of longitudinal oscillations per
    unit lengthwithout space charge, kl0
  • Phase advance of longitudinal oscillations per
    unit length with space charge , kl
  • Define longitudinal space-charge tune-depression
    ratio,
  • h kl/kl0 where 0lthlt1.
  • h1 is no space charge, h0 is space charge limit
    (where space charge cancels the external
    focusing) .

16
Express the resonance condition in terms of the
tune-depression parameter h
17
Avoiding the mismatch resonance
  • These two equations give the phase advance per
    focusing period kl0L and klL as a function of the
    tune depression h. See next vugraph.
  • Resonance is always avoided if kl0Lltp/2. This is
    controlled by limiting the longitudinal focusing
    strength.
  • Realizing that the model is approximate, we
    conservatively adopt this kl0Lltp/2 criterion for
    kl0 to ensure we avoid the instability.

18
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19
Safe criterion to avoid longitudinal instability
for all beam currents is kl0Lltp/2. This will
limit the average (real estate) accelerating
gradient ltE0Tgt.
  • The longitudinal constraint becomes important
    for highcharge-to-mass ratio, low
    velocities(cubic dependence), high frequencies,
    and long focusing periods (quadratic dependence).
  • Reducing magnitude of phase f below 30 deg
    doesnt help because phase width of bucket
    shrinks causing beam losses.

20
Our beam-dynamics approach for overcoming the
constraint on the accelerating gradient
  • Make each cryomodule with identical elements and
    as a short FODO lattice with its characteristic
    period L.
  • Allow period L to change from one cryomodule to
    the next. -Do not require that focusing period
    must be large enough to span the large space
    between cryomodules.
  • Shorten the focusing period L. -Include only one
    cavity and one solenoid per focusing period.
    -For compactness use solenoids instead of
    quadrupoles for transverse focusing.
  • Use cavities and solenoids at both ends of
    cryomodule for matching between cryomodules.
  • Gradients are still limited by kl0L ltp/2
    requirement but these measures help a lot.

21
Example of two cryomodules Cryomodules are short
FODO lattices with different focusing periods.
Each period consists of one cavity and one
solenoid.
Solenoid
Cavity
L1
Cryomodule 2 (b2), period L2
Cryomodule (b1)period L1
22
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23
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24
Beam profiles for 8 superconducting sections from
6.7 to 600 MeV after approximate matching between
cryomodules. Matching not perfect but
satisfactory.
25
Summary
  • The longitudinal instability limits the
    accelerating gradient especially at
    low-velocities (blt0.2). You may not be able to
    operate at these low velocities with the
    accelerating gradient that the cavities are
    technically capable of.
  • However for CW applications at these low
    velocities, superconducting may still be more
    attractive than normal conducting.
  • Our longitudinal beam-dynamics design approach
    has been to keep
  • kl0Llt p/2 and to minimize the focusing
    period.
  • The cryomodules form piecewise constant FODO
    lattices where each period contains one cavity
    and one solenoid.
  • For 350-MHz proton linac in b range of 0.2 to 0.5
    (20 to 150 MeV) we could use cavity gradients up
    to about 8 MV/m without longitudinal
    beam-dynamics problems.
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