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Phys. Rev. E 65, 056506 (2002) [17 pages]

Measuring and optimizing the momentum aperture in a particle accelerator

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C. Steier1, D. Robin1, L. Nadolski1,2, W. Decking3, Y. Wu1,4, and J. Laskar2
1Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, California 94720
2Astronomie et Systèmes Dynamiques, IMC-CNRS, 75014 Paris, France
3DESY, 22603 Hamburg, Germany
4Duke University, Durham, North Carolina 27708

Received 24 December 2001; published 20 May 2002

Particle motion in storage rings is confined by various aperture limits, the size of which restricts the performance of the ring in terms of injection efficiency, lifetime, etc. Intrabeam scattering makes particles sweep a large portion of the phase space, where their motion may eventually be resonantly or chaotically excited to large amplitudes leading to collision with the vacuum chamber. We report here the studies performed at the Advanced Light Source (ALS) on the on- and off-momentum particle motion that provides a good understanding of these limitations. Using off-momentum simulations and experiments together with frequency map analysis, we could precisely correlate beam loss areas with resonance locations. The very good agreement between simulations and experiments allowed us to provide guidance for avoiding these dangerous areas. This analysis results in predictive improvements of the momentum aperture, which actually led to a lifetime increase of 25% at the ALS for very high bunch charge.

© 2002 The American Physical Society

URL:
http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevE.65.056506
DOI:
10.1103/PhysRevE.65.056506
PACS:
29.27.Bd, 05.45.Ac, 05.45.Pq, 29.20.Lq