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Fast Transverse Beam Instability Caused by Electron Cloud Trapped in Combined Function Magnets

  • Book
  • © 2018

Overview

  • Nominated as an outstanding PhD thesis by the University of Chicago
  • Provides deep insights into beam instabilities in the Recycler Ring at Fermilab, one of the most compelling problems in beam physics
  • Presents a methods to stabilize the beam via a clearing bunch thus revealing that the instability is caused by an electron cloud
  • Gives insights into beam dynamics via experiment, numerical simulation of electron cloud build-up, and analytical modeling of electron cloud-driven instability

Part of the book series: Springer Theses (Springer Theses)

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Table of contents (6 chapters)

Keywords

About this book

This thesis presents profound insights into the origins and dynamics of beam instabilities using both experimental observations and numerical simulations. When the Recycler Ring, a high-intensity proton beam accelerator at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, was commissioned, it became evident that the Recycler beam experiences a very fast instability of unknown nature. This instability was so fast that the existing dampers were ineffective at suppressing it. The nature of this phenomenon, alongside several other poorly understood features of the beam, became one of the biggest puzzles in the accelerator community.

The author investigated a hypothesis that the instability arises from an interaction with a dense cloud of electrons accompanying the proton beam. He studied the phenomena experimentally by comparing the dynamics of stable and unstable beams, by numerically simulating the build-up of the electron cloud and its interaction with the beam, and by constructing an analytical model of an electron cloud-driven instability with the electrons trapped in combined-function dipole magnets. He has devised a method to stabilize the beam by a clearing bunch, which conclusively revealed that the instability is caused by the electron cloud, trapped in a strong magnetic field. Finally, he conducted measurements of the microwave propagation through a single dipole magnet. These measurements have confirmed the presence of the electron cloud in combined-function magnets.


Authors and Affiliations

  • CERN, Geneva, Switzerland

    Sergey A. Antipov

About the author

Sergey Antipov received his PhD from the University of Chicago in 2017 where his doctoral research earned him the 2018 Outstanding Doctoral Thesis Research in Beam Physics Award from the American Physical Society Division of the Physics of Beams. He is currently a Postdoctoral Fellow at CERN.

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