An Apparatus for the Direct Measurement of Collimator Transverse Wakefields
Author(s) -
Peter G Tenenbaum
Publication year - 1999
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/10072
Subject(s) - collimator , optics , linear particle accelerator , physics , aperture (computer memory) , beam (structure) , resistive touchscreen , deflection (physics) , bunches , transverse plane , electrical engineering , engineering , acoustics , structural engineering
The design of the NLC Beam Delivery System requires a firmer understanding of the effects of collimators on short, intense bunches than is presently available. We describe an experiment to directly measure these effects through use of a dedicated apparatus located at the 1.19 GeV point in the SLAC Linac. The apparatus consists of an outer vacuum vessel and an interchangeable insertion containing up to 5 distinct collimator apertures. The insertion is capable of remote-controlled translation, allowing the collimator apertures to be misaligned relative to the electron beam without changing the incoming beam orbit; the wakefield deflection is then measured by observing the change in the outgoing orbit on 32 beam position monitors. The parameters of the apertures have been selected to allow confirmation of the scaling laws for collimator wakefields, and to strongly enhance either the geometric or resistive wall contribution of each aperture. Details of the apparatus design, the aperture parameters, and the experimental program are discussed
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