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Highlights from COSY (JEDI project). August 29 , 2016 | Andreas Lehrach Forschungszentrum Jülich (IKP-4) & RWTH Aachen University (Ex.Physik IIIb) on behalf of the JEDI collaboration ( J ülich E lectric D ipole Moment I nvestigations). Outline. Introduction
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Highlights from COSY (JEDI project) August 29, 2016 | Andreas Lehrach Forschungszentrum Jülich (IKP-4) & RWTH Aachen University (Ex.Physik IIIb) on behalf of the JEDI collaboration (Jülich Electric Dipole Moment Investigations)
Outline Introduction • Motivation for EDM measurements • Principle and methods Achievements • Spin coherence time investigation • Spin tune measurement • Preparation for spin tune feedback • Preparation for improved closed-orbit correction • Technical developments • RF Wien filter • Electrostatic deflector • Polarimetry • Beam position monitor
Electric Dipole Moments Permanent EDMs violate parity P and time reversal symmetry T Assuming CPT to hold, combined symmetry CP violated as well. EDMs are candidates to solve mystery of matter-antimatter asymmetry
EDMs – Ongoing / planned Searches @CAPP/IBS P. Harris, K. Kirch … A huge worldwide effort
Limits for Electric Dipole Moments EDM searches - only upper limits up to now (in ecm): CP can have different sources It is important not only to measure neutron, but also proton, deuteron and light nuclei EDMs in order to disentangle various sources of CP violation
Storage Ring EDM Project … measure for development of vertical polarization EDM Challenges: Huge E-fields Shielding B-fields Spin coherence Beam position Polarimetry (...) JEDI Jülich Electric Dipole Moment Investigations ~ 136 members (11 countries and 37 institutes) http://collaborations.fz-juelich.de/ikp/jedi/
Spin Precession with EDM Equation for spin motion of relativistic particles in storage rings for . The spin precession relative to the momentum direction is given by: Thomas-BMT equation plus extension for EDM Magnetic Dipole Moment Electric Dipole Moment
Frozen-Spin Method for Storage Ring EDM Searches Approach: EDM search in time development of spin in a storage ring: B “Freeze“ horizontal spin precession; watch for development of a vertical component ! A magic storage ring for protons (electrostatic), deuterons, and helium-3 One machine with r ~ 30 m
Stepwise Approach Measurements of charged particle EDMs from COSY to a dedicated EDM storage ring Cooler Synchrotron COSY Dedicated EDM Storage Ring • R&D at COSY • Precursor experiment for first direct measurement • Injector for dedicated EDM ring • CW-CCW beams • Dedicated ring with high-precision beam diagnostics and polarimetry
Experimental Setup for R&D at COSY polarimeter precession Inject and accelerate vertically polarized deuterons Spin rotated with RF fields into horizontal plane Move beam slowly (in 100 s) on internal target Measure asymmetry and determine spin precession At 970 MeV/c deuterons: γG ·frev ≈ 120 kHz turn spin RF ExB Wien filter Electron Cooler RF Solenoid Cooler Synchrotron COSY Polarized protons, deuterons 300/600 MeV/c - 3.7 GeV/c Precision Polarimeter Sextupole Magnets Polarized proton and deuteron source Ideal starting point to investigate EDM measurements in storage rings
Measurement of Spin Coherence Time 109 polarized deuterons at 970 MeV/c, bunched and electron cooled adjust three arc sextupoles to increase spin coherence time Longest SCT for beam chromaticities close to zero at regular betatron tunes (Qx,y = 3.5 – 3.6)
Record In-Plane Polarization Lifetime Using a Gaussian width definition, the lifetime is 782 ±117 s. The exponential width 2280 ± 336 s. This is a new record for in-plane polarization lifetime, exceeding the Novosibirsk results for electrons by about three orders of magnitude. Phys. Rev. Lett. 117, 054801 (2016).
Spin Tune Measurement at COSY • EDDA Detector to measure asymmetries • Sophisticated read-out system, which can time stamp individual event arrival times with respect to turn number: • Map events into first spin oscillation period • Analyse the spin phase advance throughout the cycle Phys. Rev. STAB 17 (2014) Phys. Rev. Lett. 115 (2015)
Stability on a Turn-by-Turn Basis • Study long term stability of an accelerator • Develop feedback systems to minimize variations • Phase-locking the spin precession to RF devices possible
Resonance Method in Magnetic Rings RF ExB dipole in “Wien filter” mode Avoids coherent betatron oscillations • Modulation of horizontal spin precession in the RF Wien filter • EDM’s interaction with the motional electric field in the rest of the ring • continuous buildup of vertical polarization in a horizontally polarized beam. • net effect due to EDM • Investigation of sensitivity and systematic limitations In-plane polarization
Spin-tune Based Feedback System Left/right asymmetry as a measure of the vertical polarization. At t=85 s the spins are rotated into the horizontal plane, at t=115 s the solenoid is turned back on. The absolute values for the build-up for the two states are different as the initial polarization differs. Initial slope of the polarization build-up as function of the relative phase (online result). The difference in amplitude is due to the different degrees of polarization of the two initial states. Courtesy: V. Hejny
Systematic Limitations for EDM Measurements at COSY Absolute average change of the vertical spin component ΔSyper turn for different ΔyRMSand an initial Wien filter phase 0°. Utilized Wien filter magnetic field: 10-4 mT and corresponding electric field with a length of 0.8 m. Different ΔyRMSgenerated by randomized vertical quadrupole shifts assuming Gaussian distributed misalignment errors. Solid line shows the 90% upper confidence limit for pure misalignments. Dashed line refers to the location for which the false signal by misalignments is equal to an EDM signal corresponding to ηEDM = 10-4. This value corresponds to an EDM magnitude of dd ≈ 5∙10-19e cm. Courtesy: M. Rosenthal
Preparation for Improved Closed-Orbit Correction Horizontal closed-orbit Random positioning and rotation errors of dipoles and quadrupoles Gaussian distributed. For each point 1000 seeds. Dashed line: measured “rms” orbit at COSY. p0: slop of linear fit. New survey of COSY has been provided and discussed. Alignment procedure will be performed soon. Upgrade of beam position monitor electronics also in preparation. Courtesy: V. Schmidt
RF 𝑬×𝑩 Wien filter: Strip line design In cooperation with RWTH Aachen
New RF Wien Filter Support for geodetics Support structure for electrodes Inner support tube RF feedthrough Ferrit cage BPM (Rogowski coil) Beam pipe (CF 100) Copper electrodes Ferrit cage Mechanical support Vacuum vessel with small angle rotator Clamps for the Ferrit cage Magnetic fields were modelled with an accuracy of 10-6.
Electrostatic Deflector Development Courtesy K. Grigoryev
Polarimeter Development The current engineering drawing (detector and the target chamber). From left to right there are two cross type flanges, one for beam position monitors (BPM's) and the second one for the target. In the middle there is a vacuum chamber. Next, the two layer of φ-sensitive plastic scintillator and the LYSO HCAL are placed to absorb the total energy of the scattered particles. LYSO calorimeter module in the carbon fiber enclosure. Courtesy: I Keshelashvilli
Challenge BPMs: Rogowski coil Integral signal measures beam current Quadrant signals sensitive to position EDM experiment needs bunched beams • Rogowski coils well suited • Small size allows flexible installation up left right down Quadrant signals of Rogowski coil sensitive to beam position.
Rogowski Type Beam Position Monitor Half and quarter winded Rogowski coils in the defined coordinate system. The shown configuration on the left enables a position measurement in x-direction. The configuration shown on the right corresponds to a measurement in both directions: x and y. Test of the linearity of the BPM response to the corrector magnet excitation, which is proportional to a horizontal beam displacement at the BPM. Courtesy: F. Hinder, F. Trinkel
Highlights Experimental Achievements at COSY • Record In-Plane Polarization Lifetime • Ultra-High Precision Spin Tune Measurement • Spin-tune Based Feedback System Progress of Technical Developments • Novel Waveguide RF Wien Filter • Electrostatic Deflector Development • Polarimeter Development • RogowskiType Beam Position Monitor Beam and Spin Dynamics • Systematic Limitations for EDM Measurements at COSY • Investigation of Lattices for a Deuteron EDM Ring
Zusammenfassung Conclusion Achievements: - Spin tune measurement with precision of 10-10 in a single cycle - Long spin coherence time of more than 1000s - Spin tracking codes developed and benchmarked - Investigation of systematic limit for resonance methods Goals: - Beam and spin dynamics studies at COSY - First direct EDM measurement at COSY - R&D work and design study for dedicated EDM storage ring
Source(s) for EDMs Multiple experimental inputisrequired … … todisentanglethe fundamental source(s) of EDMs
JEDI R&D Program(Jülich Electric Dipole Moment Investigations) 1. Studies of spin coherence time (SCT) • Phase space cooling and adjusting sextupole settings at COSY to reach a SCT of 1000 s 2. Investigation of systematic effect • Alignment of the ring magnets and closed-orbit correction • Opening angle of spin ensemble 3. Development and benchmark precision simulation programsfor spin dynamics in storage rings • COSY-Infinity, integrating code and COSY experiments for bench marking 4. Development ofhigh-efficiency polarimetry and high-precision BPMs 5. ExB Deflector development
Ultra-High Precision Spin Tune Measurement (a) Polarization phase, or direction, in the plane of the ring as a function of time during an experiment along with a quadratic polynomial fit. (b)The deviation of the spin tune from a reference value of 0.160 975 407 along with an error band based on the statistical precision shown in the upper panel. At about 38 s, the most precise spin tune value is (16 097 540 628.3 ± 9.7) ∙10-11. Courtesy: D. Eversmann
Design of a Novel Waveguide RF Wien Filter Magnetic fields were modelled with an accuracy of 10-6. Design model of the RF Wien filter showing the parallel-plates waveguide and the support structure. 1: BPM; 2: copper electrodes; 3: vacuum vessel; small angle rotor; 4: clamps to hold the ferrite cage; 5: belt drive for 90° rotation, with a precision of 0.01° (0.17 mrad); 6: ferrite cage; 7: CF100 feedthrough; 8: support structure of the electrodes; 9: inner support tube. Courtesy: A. Nass
History of Neutron EDM Limits • Smith, Purcell, Ramsey PR 108, 120 (1957) • RAL-Sussex-ILL(dn 2.9 10-26ecm) PRL 97,131801 (2006) 50 years of effort Adopted from K. Kirch
Different shape of the electrodes Electrostatic deflectors: Some results Material : Stainless steel, Aluminum Mechanical polished and cleaned Stainless steel Two small half-spheres (R = 10mm) 17kV at 1mm distance → 17 MV/m Half-sphere vs. flat surface 12kV at 0.05 mm distance → 240 MV/m Aluminum Two small half-spheres (R = 10mm) 3kV at 0.1mm distance → 30 MV/m