Title: Low energy Beamstrahlung at CESR and the ILC
1Low energy Beamstrahlung at CESR and the ILC
2With
- M. Dubrovin, M. Billings, E. Wisniewski, several
REU students over the years (E. Luckwald, N.
Detgen, N. Powell, M. West) - and much help from many LEPP people
- I will discuss both visible (incoherent) and
microwave (coherent) beamstrahlung (IB and CB)
3Outline
- Why develop low energy beamstrahlung
- Phenomenology of IB
- Phenomenology of CB
- ILC detector concepts
- Current status of CESR IB monitor
- Feasibility of CESR CB observation
- Summary
4What is beamstrahlung
- The radiation of the particles of one beam due to
the bending force of the EM field of the other
beam - Many similarities with SR but
- Also some substantial differences due to very
short magnet (L?z/2v2),very strong magnet
(3000T at the ILC). Short magnets produce a much
broader angular distribution and have different
coherence properties
5Beam-beam collision (BBC) d.o.f. (gaussian
approximation)
6More realistic cartoon with asymmetric tails
7BBC d.o.f. counting at the ILC
- 7 gaussian transverse d.o.f.
- 2 beam lengths
- At least 4 wake field parameters, and possibly 2
longitudinal - currents well measured
- Beam energy spread not measurable by techniques
described here but affected by properties of BBC - Beam angle(s) and angular spread(s)?
8Other possible BBC detectors
- Beam-beam deflection via BPMs. Limited to 2
quantities by Newtons 3rd law. Semi-passive
device. - Gamma ray beamstrahlung monitor. Almost certainly
a powerful device if it can be built with enough
pixels, interferes with the beam dump (340kW) - Pairs spectrometer (105 per BBC)
9The rationale for developing CB and IB
- Very complex BBC phenomena in a large dimensional
space - Sensitivity to different variables than hard
beamstrahlung, mainly through observation of
polarization - Simple, relatively inexpensive passive devices
which can be located away from the beam line - CB may provide imaging of the BBC
- CB so abundant (O(1kW)) so as to be a potential
disruption for downstream sensors
10IB power (stiff beams)
- CB largely leaves the spectrum unaffected and
adds a factor N1
11Large angle incoherent power
- Wider angular distribution (compared to
quadrupole SR) provides main background rejection - CESR regime exponent is about 10
- ILC regime exponent is very small
12IB power dependence in CESR configuration
13Some examples of IB pattern recognition
14Coherence vs incoherence
15Coherent beamstrahlung
- Coherent synchrotron radiation has been observed
many times for very short beams - Coherence condition is ?gt?z (there is also a
transverse coherence condition, negligible here) - A similar situation arises when beams are
separated - coherent beamstrahlung - Coherent enhancement always proportional to N
16Coherent enhancement at the ILC (dynamic beams,
complete coherence)
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19CB coherent enhancement (vacuum, no angular
divergence)
- CP(CB)/P(IB)
- C(?,?)N exp(-(2??z / ?)2) (G. Bonvicini,
unpublished) - Angular effects reduce radiation by
- O ((?div/?rad)2) (not important at CESR,
factor of 100 at the ILC). This gives a maximum
CB power at the ILC in the neighborhood of 1kW
20Beam pipe shielding
- Beam pipe effects are important for long magnets
(Heifets, Mikhailichenko, SLAC-AP-083) - However in the case of beamstrahlung the magnet
is shorter than the beam. This needs to be
computed. ILC CB not in doubt
21Main low energy beamstrahlung observables
- Strong current dependence (N3 and N4
respectively) - Strong ?z dependence
- Observable dependence on beam-beam offset (very
strong for CB) - Correlated side-to-side radiation
- Strongly varying frequency spectrum which peaks
at lower frequencies
22ILC CB detector concept
23ILC IB detector concept (1-2 mrad)
24Large Angle Beamstrahlung Monitor
- Giovanni Bonvicini,
- Mikhail Dubrovin
25¼ Set-up principal scheme
- Transverse view
- Optic channel
- Mirrors
- PBS
- Chromatic mirrors
- PMT numeration
26Azimuth angle dependence of radiated power
- Radiated power for
- horizontal and vertical polarizations
- Two optic ports are reserved for each direction
(E and W)
27Set-up general view
- East side of CLEO
- Mirrors and optic port 6m apart from I.P.
- Optic channel with wide band mirrors
- Installed ¼ detector
- Prilim. experiments, VIS and IR PMTs
28On the top of set-up
- Input optics channel
- Radiation profile scanner
- Optics path extension volume
29The ¼ detector
- Input channel
- Polarizing Beam Splitter
- Dichroic filters
- PMTs assembly
- Cooling
30Sensitivity of R6095 vs R316-02
31CESR beam pipe profile
32Check for alignment _at_ 4.2GeV
332D profile of radiation
- System is aligned
- Clear signal of
- radiation from
- dipoles and quads
- Radiation from IP is covered by this geometry
34Horizontal vertical projections
35Some late surprises
Parameter CESR-C proposal Current IB change
Curr.(mA) 185 80/60 0.15
?z (mm) 10 11.5 0.03
?obs(mr) 11 12-13 0.01-0.001
? (nm) 900-1000 600-700 0.01
Calc. err. N/A N/A 10
36PMT rate correlations with beam currents
RED VIS PMTs for this exp. are R6095 for
visible light
37Records selection
- For further analysis we exclude non-stable
radiation periods at CESR currents re-fill - In some cases we leave data for no-beam intervals
38I(e) vs I(e-)
- Depending on shift the 2D plot area of CESR
currents might be different - It can be used to search for correlations with
observed PMT rate
- P1 PMT dark noise
- P2 SR from dipoles and quads
- P3 SR reflected from masks
- P4 Luminosity term
- P5 Coherent beamstrahlung term
39Fit to the rate for one of PMTs
- Rate vs record
- Fit to the observed rate
40Residuals
- In most cases everything is fine with data for
vertical polarization - Data can be used for all day in the same fit
- Pull distribution is consistent with statistics
41Poor residuals for horizontal polarization
- Horizontal polarization is more sensitive to
CESR tuning - Data should be split for uniformly performing
periods to get fit consistent with statistics
42Fitting strategies and results
- Separate fit for each PMT (no constrains for
correlations) - We find stable results for vertical polarization,
use only PMT1,3 - Fix / float coefficients for correlating terms
- Good quality fits are achieved in folowing cases
- Fit1 w/o LUM and CBR terms (p4,p5 fixed to 0)
- fit returns 10-30 fraction of I term that
does not look right - Fit2 Const, SR, and CBR terms are float (p3,p4
fixed to 0) - CBR for RED 7-16 (3-5 sigma significance)
!!! - CBR for VIS always consistent with 0 !!!
- Fit3 Const, SR, and LUM terms are float (p3,p5
fixed to 0) - LUM term is 2 times larger than CBR in Fit2
(arithmetic effect)
Term ltRategt, Hz Fraction,
const
I(e-)
I(e)
I(e-) I(e)
I(e-) I(e) I(e)
43Discussion of results
- Fit2 is the only indication on CBR so far
- But CBR term can be easily superimposed by the
LUM term - Const term is not a constant!
- It has 1hour time constant for relaxation
after illumination depends on radiation
background in the hall. Needs in special
calibration. - We may look at West-East and double-port
correlations need to install full scale setup - We need to improve cooling of IR PMTs
44The best try with IR R316-02
- Should be operating _at_ T-40C
- Use cold gas N2
- Cooling is not effective
- Noise rate varies with temperature
- No correlated signal have been observed
45Acknowledgments
We appreciate many people who were involved or
helped us to work on this project
- Mike Billing
- John Sikora
- Stu Peck
- Mike Comfort
- Yulin Li
- Sasha Temnykh
- Richard Ehrlich
- Steven Gray
- Scott Chapman
- John Dobbins
- John Galander
- Valera Mdjidzade
- Georg Trout
- Margee Carrier
- et al.
46Summary
- ¼ of setup is installed on CESR and aligned
- Parts for the full scale set-up are produced at
WSU and we are working on their installation - Preliminary measurements show that system can
observe VIS and RED radiation from IP/magnets
region - Experiencing technical problems with observation
of IR Need in better cooling system for IR PMTs - Working on improvement of the cooling system for
IR band
47CB Observability at CESR
- Radiated power is propagating essentially in
waveguide mode - A short beam is still crucial. Observability at
KEK-B (?z 6mm) appears very promising - Waves will probably propagate in TM mode (M.
Billings). TM cutoff is 0.82d and TM maximum
power (for ?z10mm) is 2 pJ per BBC (1.7d and 2nJ
for TE mode) - Observation possible at two BPM stations, located
at 0.68m and 3.6m from the IP respectively(M.
Billings). One can look at both time and
frequency domain - Beam pipe bottleneck at SR mask a potential
problem - E. Wisniewski, S. Belomestnykh, M. Billings,
computing the magnetic wake fields at the BPMs
48CESR beam pipe profile
49Possible plan for CESR
- Compare vacuum CB expectation vs ABCI-computed
wake fields at BPMs - If comparison is favorable, try a test with
highest beam population, shortest beam
50Future developments
- Design both detectors for the ILC
- Quadrupole radiation (A. Mikhailichenko)
- Detailed CB simulation
- Observables available in CB imaging
- Beam pipe effects and the possibility of
waveguide CB at the ILC
51Conclusions
- Some progress in IB. We have hopes that it will
be seen this fall - CB at the ILC will certainly be present in large
but not threatening amounts. Potentially
extremely useful for BBC imaging - CB observation at present accelerators would be
most useful - If both these techniques develop, there is a
tremendous amount of work to do
52Spare slides
53PMT and HV divider
- Hamamatsu PMTs
- VIS R6095
- IR R316-02
- HV divider
- E990-07
54Hamamatsu PMT R6095
28mm head on PMT for 300-650nm
55Hamamatsu PMT R316-02
28mm head on PMT for Near IR Detection from
400-1200nm
56Current version of N2 cooling
- IR photocathods are blown by the cold N2
- Non-efficient cooling scheme, large termal flows
through the metallic parts - Working on improvement
57Glan-Taylor Polarizers
58Hot Mirrors
59Cold Mirrors
6045 Reflective Dichroic Color Filters
61Mirror coating
62Glass Specifications
63The best try with IR PMT R316-02(next day, March
31, 2005)
64Beam-beam vertical separation
- For beam-beam separation one would expect a
camel-back dependence of CBR power vs
separation distance
65Beam-beam vertical separation (cont.)
- 2004/10/14 dedicated shift
- John Sikora Mikhail Dubrovin
- VIS PMTs ok but does not show CBR
- IR PMTs does not show any correlations with beam
currents, presumably are not sensitive to IR