transverse emittance
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Author(s):  
Han Chen ◽  
Lianmin Zheng ◽  
Pengwei Huang ◽  
Chuangye Song ◽  
Yingchao Du ◽  
...  

Author(s):  
Jingru Zhang ◽  
Cai Meng ◽  
Dazhang Li ◽  
Dou Wang ◽  
Guoxi Pei ◽  
...  

The CEPC includes a main ring and an injector. The injector consists of a booster and a linac. In order to meet the requirements of the booster, the baseline design of the linac is a 10 GeV electron and positron linac. Two alternative linac designs have also been introduced in this paper. For the linac baseline design, one-bunch-per-pulse is adopted. A 1.1 GeV damping ring is used to reduce the transverse emittance of positron beam. The main RF system of the linac adopts normal conducting S-band structure. Some key technologies of linac are development. The S-band structure and pulse compressor have been researched and studied. In the damping ring, two cavities used to provide 2 MV voltage. The preliminary cavity design has finished.


Author(s):  
Dou Wang ◽  
Xiaohao Cui ◽  
Cai Meng ◽  
Daheng Ji ◽  
Yudong Liu ◽  
...  

A damping ring system which includes a small 1.1 GeV ring and two transport lines is introduced in CEPC linac in order to reduce the transverse emittance of positron beam at the end of linac and hence reduce the beam loss in the booster. This paper introduces the parameter choice and optics study of damping ring. The corresponding instability effect and IBS effect are also checked to make sure the design current and design emittance can be realized. Except for damping ring, two transport lines are needed to match the parameters between linac and damping ring. Both designs for energy compressor and bunch compressor including beam simulations are discussed in this paper.


Author(s):  
Takaaki Yasui ◽  
Susumu Igarashi ◽  
Yoichi Sato ◽  
Tadashi Koseki ◽  
Kazuhito Ohmi

Author(s):  
J. R. Hunt ◽  
J. Resta-López ◽  
C. P. Welsch ◽  
C. Carli ◽  
B. Dupuy ◽  
...  

2020 ◽  
pp. 295-336
Author(s):  
J. Seeman ◽  
D. Schulte ◽  
J. P. Delahaye ◽  
M. Ross ◽  
S. Stapnes ◽  
...  

AbstractLinear accelerators (linacs) use alternating radiofrequency (RF) electromagnetic fields to accelerate charged particles in a straight line. Linacs were invented about 95 years ago and have seen many significant technical innovations since. A wide range of particle beams have been accelerated with linacs including beams of electrons, positrons, protons, antiprotons, and heavy ions. Linac parameter possibilities include pulsed versus continuous wave, low and high beam powers, low and high repetition rates, low transverse emittance beams, short bunches with small energy spreads, and accelerated multiple bunches in a single pulse. The number of linacs around the world has grown tremendously with thousands of linacs in present use, many for medical therapy, in industry, and for research and development in a broad spectrum of scientific fields. Researchers have developed accelerators for scientific tools in their own right, being awarded several Nobel prizes. Moreover, linacs and particle accelerators in general have enabled many discovery level science experiments in related fields, resulting in many Nobel prizes as well.


2019 ◽  
Vol 30 (12) ◽  
Author(s):  
Yong-Chun Feng ◽  
Min Li ◽  
Rui-Shi Mao ◽  
Bing Wang ◽  
Sheng-Peng Li ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 1350 ◽  
pp. 012087
Author(s):  
E Senes ◽  
J Emery ◽  
M A Fraser ◽  
A Guerrero Ollacarizqueta ◽  
A Huschauer ◽  
...  

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