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HIGH-INTENSITY EFFECTS IN THE LONGITUDINAL MOTION OF STORED PARTICLE BEAMS
Author(s) -
Andrew M. Sessler
Publication year - 1973
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/937057
Subject(s) - physics , transverse plane , electron , storage ring , intensity (physics) , motion (physics) , longitudinal field , beam (structure) , nuclear physics , classical mechanics , optics , magnetic field , quantum mechanics , engineering , structural engineering
A brief review is given of the various self-field phenomena associated with the longitudinal motion of particles in storage rings. Although there are some high-intensity phenomena for which the coupling of longitudinal and transverse motion is essential, such as, for example, the headtail effect; the great majority of high-intensity phenomena primarily involve either longitudinal or transverse degrees of freedom. In this review, we restrict our attention to phenomena which are essentially longitudinal in nature. It is convenient to consider separately the behavior of unbunched (coasting) and bunched (external RF system in operation) beams. Detailed experimental information on coasting beams has been obtained on the ISR, on the (old) CERN electron model CESAR, and on electron ring accelerators. All high-energy electron storage rings have bunched beams and, of course, so do synchrotrons, so that there are a large number of sources of experimental information about the longitudinal motion of bunched beams

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