Title: Undulator Alignment Concept
1Undulator Alignment Concept Conventional
AlignmentCatherine LeCocq, SLAC October 21, 2005
- Undulator Alignment Concept
- Conventional Alignment Steps
- Instrument and Tooling
- Network Design
- Alignment after Installation
2Current Undulator Alignment Concept
- Fiducialize all possible components
- (Yurii, Zack, Eric)
- Assemble and pre-align all relevant components on
a girder - (Robert)
- Build a tunnel network
- Set all girders in the tunnel
- Map all components to verify ab-initio alignment
for BBA - Launch monitoring systems
- (Franz, Georg)
- Perform BBA
- (Paul)
- ( ) Presenter
3Conventional Alignment Steps
- Gather all fiducial data and perform tunnel
network design - Install tunnel monuments (floor and wall)
- Survey tunnel network
- Mark floor for anchors
- Align floor plates
- Re-survey tunnel network
- Align girder stands (with CAM movers pre-set)
- Survey girders (fully loaded and pre-aligned)
4Instruments and Tooling (1)
5Instruments and Tooling (2)
- Laser Trackers
- FARO SI
- Precise Levels
- Trimble (Zeiss) DiNi12
- Leica DNA03
- Total Stations
- Leica TC2002
- Others
- FARO Platinum Arms (4ft and 8ft)
- Optical Tooling (KE and Brunson Jig Transits,
KE levels) - Portable Water Level (in development)
- SLAC Calibration Laboratories
- Sector 10 Horizontal and Vertical Comparators
- Heavy Fab KE Optical Comparator
6Network Design
- Parametric Model
- Stochastic Model
- Least Squares Solution
- Free Net Solution
- Recent Example of Network Design
http//www-group.slac.stanford.edu/met/Align/TechA
nalysis/2004/GLAST-Network.pdf
7Undulator Hall Network
- Warning
- This simulated network is based on very crude
undulator dimensions. It is made to present
typical laser tracker-precise leveling network
capabilities. - Further studies should involve in particular
real undulator hall drawing and in-situ
instrument analysis. - Simulation facts
- Tunnel dimensions 130 m long, 5 m wide and 2 m
high - Quad spacing based on current LCLS deck,
positioned arbitrarily in the tunnel (1/3 of the
width) - Floor is 1.0 m below beamline, wall monuments are
0.75 m above beamline, laser tracker set-ups are
0.4 m and 0.6 m above beamline. - Observation a-priori standard deviations
- Distances 30 µm
- Horizontal angles 30 µm / D
- Vertical angles 50 µm / D
- Height differences 50 µm
- Free network approach
8Undulator Hall Network Simulation
W23 sz 22 µm sx 47 µm sy 46 µm
9Network Simulation Facts
-
- number of laser tracker set-ups 17
- number of points 49 (16 floor, 33 wall)
- number of triplets173
- number of height differences 81
- number of coordinate unknowns 198
- number of nuisance parameters 51
- number of datum parameters 4
10Example of Single Total Station Set-up
11Undulator Coordinate System
- Definition given in LCLS TN-03-08
x,y,z SLAC linac SLAC-SLC system x,y,z LCLS
Undulator
12Alignment after Installation
- Gather records for last mapping survey and wait
for BBA to put all quads in line. - Align the loose end of each girder with respect
to the next quadrupole. - Solve the last girder loose end.
13In conclusion, the current undulator alignment
concept is solidifying. The conventional
alignment part is well integrated and relies on
previous experience.
End of Presentation