2009 ◽  
Vol 18 (02) ◽  
pp. 411-419 ◽  
Author(s):  
M. STECK ◽  
C. DIMOPOULOU ◽  
A. DOLINSKII ◽  
O. GORDA ◽  
V. GOSTISHCHEV ◽  
...  

Three storage rings with a maximum magnetic rigidity of 13 Tm are foreseen as part of the FAIR project. They will mainly serve the preparation of intense secondary beams of antiprotons and rare isotopes, which are produced with high intensity proton and heavy ion beams, respectively. Cooling, by stochastic and electron cooling, and accumulation as well as deceleration of the secondary beams are manipulation techniques which are foreseen. Internal targets and collisions of rare isotope beams with electrons or antiprotons in a collider set-up will be employed in physics experiments studying the properties of the secondary beams. This report summarizes the latest design work for the FAIR storage rings.


Author(s):  
Michiko G. Minty ◽  
Frank Zimmermann

AbstractMany applications of particle accelerators require beam cooling, which refers to a reduction of the beam phase space volume or an increase in the beam density via dissipative forces. In electron and positron storage rings cooling naturally occurs due to synchrotron radiation, and special synchrotron-radiation damping rings for the production of low-emittance beams are an integral part of electron-positron linear colliders. For other types of particles different cooling techniques are available. Electron cooling and stochastic cooling of hadron beams are used to accumulate beams of rare particles (such as antiprotons), to combat emittance growth (e.g., due to scattering on an internal target), or to produce beams of high quality for certain experiments. Laser cooling is employed to cool ion beams down to extremely small temperatures. Here the laser is used to induce transitions between the ion electronic states and the cooling exploits the Dopper frequency shift. Electron beams of unprecedentedly small emittance may be obtained by a different type of laser cooling, where the laser beam acts like a wiggler magnet. Finally, designs of a future muon collider rely on the principle of ionization cooling. Reference [1] gives a brief review of the principal ideas and the history of beam cooling in storage rings; a theoretical dicussion and a few practical examples can be found in [2].


1988 ◽  
Vol T22 ◽  
pp. 204-215 ◽  
Author(s):  
M Sedlacek ◽  
H Poth ◽  
D Krämer ◽  
L Tecchio ◽  
H O Meyer

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