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Ultra-low current beams in UMER to model space-charge effects in high-energy proton and ion machines
Author(s) -
S. Bernal,
B. Beaudoin,
H. Baumgartner,
S. Ehrenstein,
I. Haber,
T. Koeth,
Eric Montgomery,
Kiersten Ruisard,
David Sutter,
Di Yun,
R. A. Kishek
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
aip conference proceedings
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Conference proceedings
eISSN - 1551-7616
pISSN - 0094-243X
DOI - 10.1063/1.4975919
Subject(s) - space charge , physics , beam (structure) , proton , spallation , electron , nuclear physics , ion , atomic physics , space (punctuation) , charge (physics) , neutron , ion beam , computational physics , optics , quantum mechanics , linguistics , philosophy
The University of Maryland Electron Ring (UMER) has operated traditionally in the regime of strong space-charge dominated beam transport, but small-current beams are desirable to significantly reduce the direct (incoherent) space-charge tune shift as well as the tune depression. This regime is of interest to model space-charge effects in large proton and ion rings similar to those used in nuclear physics and spallation neutron sources, and also for nonlinear dynamics studies of lattices inspired on the Integrable Optics Test Accelerator (IOTA). We review the definitions of beam vs. space-charge intensities and discuss three methods for producing very small beam currents in UMER. We aim at generating 60µA – 1.0mA, 100 ns, 10 keV beams with normalized rms emittances of the order of 0.1 − 1.0µm.The University of Maryland Electron Ring (UMER) has operated traditionally in the regime of strong space-charge dominated beam transport, but small-current beams are desirable to significantly reduce the direct (incoherent) space-charge tune shift as well as the tune depression. This regime is of interest to model space-charge effects in large proton and ion rings similar to those used in nuclear physics and spallation neutron sources, and also for nonlinear dynamics studies of lattices inspired on the Integrable Optics Test Accelerator (IOTA). We review the definitions of beam vs. space-charge intensities and discuss three methods for producing very small beam currents in UMER. We aim at generating 60µA – 1.0mA, 100 ns, 10 keV beams with normalized rms emittances of the order of 0.1 − 1.0µm.

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