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Experience at ATF To get a low emittance beam. Junji Urakawa KEK. Circumference: 138.56 m Arc Cell Type: FOBO Number of Arc Cells: 36
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Experience at ATF To get a low emittance beam Junji Urakawa KEK Circumference: 138.56 m Arc Cell Type: FOBO Number of Arc Cells: 36 Energy: 1.279 GeV Tunes: 15.192 / 8.542 Extracted Vertical Emittance: y≈ 10 pm-rad, y≈ 25 nm-rad Natural Emittance : 1nm
ATF Introduction Emittance status E=1.28GeV, Ne=2x1010 e-/bunch 1 ~ 20 bunches, Rep=3.125Hz X emit=2.5E-6( at 0 intensity) Y emit=1.25E-8( at 0 intensity) 2
QF2 SF SD Combined Function Bend (QD) QF1 ZV ZH BPM BPM Arc Cell Phase Advance Per Cell: 120.3° / 48.5° Phase Advance Between BPMs: 11.6° / 10.7° Each quadrupole has an independent trim Each sextupole has an independent skew quadrupole trim
Why BBA? • Damping rings for JLC/NLC/(ILC) will need to achieve very low vertical emittance • less than 5 pm (not normalized) 2pm for ILC • roughly factor 2 smaller than so far achieved in electron storage rings (2004) • Vertical emittance is an alignment issue • vertical quadrupole misalignments lead to vertical steering which gives vertical dispersion • vertical sextupole misalignments couple horizontal dispersion and betatron motion into the vertical plane • Vertical emittance is highly sensitive to misalignments • around 30 µm rms sextupole misalignment will generate 5 pm emittance in otherwiseperfect lattice • similar sensitivity in JLC/NLC damping rings • Effective correction relies on good performance and understanding of diagnostics • BBA can help • “BBA at the KEK ATF”, M. Ross et al, EPAC 2002.
Sextupole Alignment Vertical emittance after skew correction based on measured beam offset in sextupoles. Includes orbit distortion ~ 100 um.
ATF Damping Ring BPM Electronics: single pass detection for 96 BPMs DC-50MHz BW, base line clip & charge ADC, min. resolution ~20µm 7
Spectrum of DR BPM Signal peak at ~ 1GHz 8
BPM electronics improvement Electronics: 40MHz - 1GHz BW, base line clip & low noise LF amp min. resolution ~2µm 9
100 Oldfirst circuit (estimated by beam) m] m 10 Estimated Resolution [ Improved second circuit (estimated by calibration pulser) 1 8 9 10 11 10 10 10 10 Bunch Intensity [electrons/bunch] Resolution Improvement Min. resolution ~ 2µm 10
Laser wire beam size monitor in DR 14.7µm laser wire for X scan 5.7µm for Y scan (whole scan: 15min for X, 6min for Y) 300mW 532nm Solid-state Laser Fed into optical cavity 14
Beam profile by Laser wire e2 =meas2 - lw2 = e2 – [(p/p)]2 :measured by Q-trim excitation 15
Emittance by Laser wire < 0.5% y/x emittance ratio Y emittance =4pm at small intensity 16
BPM Offset Measurement Technique • make a closed local bump at target BPM • use quadrupole or sextupole (skew quad) trims (ΔQ) • make grid scan of bump amplitude and trim setting • for each bump value make difference orbit w.r.t. to trim=0 • fit difference orbits for kick (k) at quadrupole or sextupole • for each bump value fit kick vs trim: k = f (ΔQ) = mΔQ+b • - m is offset from magnetic center • - for some trajectory through the magnet, m = 0 • plot fitted offset vs absolute reading of target BPM • - horizontal intercept is BPM offset
Measurement Challenges • intrinsic BPM resolution (intensity dependent; 20 μm @ 1010 e-/bunch, 40 μm @ 5109 e-/bunch) • orbit averaging • intensity dependent position calibration • monitor intensity stability during acquisition • beam losses in ring cause fluctuating BPM readings • acquisition: bump/trim range selection (too big … losses; too small … resolution) • analysis: monitor and cut on relative intensity (stored/injected) • energy drift • add energy error to horizontal orbit fits • time (single-turn orbit acquisition at 3 Hz machine rate; 20 orbit averaging; 5 bump steps; 5 trim settings; 100 BPMs; x and y) • automate data acquisition (8 minutes/magnet for a single plane)
IL IR IL IR SD SF differential saturation PossibleSextupole-SystematicErrorSources
BPM Performance • Measurements of changes in the closed orbit are subject to systematic and random errors • BPM dependence on current • changes in beam energy • BPM noise • All relevant effects need to be understood to extract meaningful results from BBA data • Model Independent Analysis provides a simple but powerful tool for identifying systematic effects • collect a data set consisting of a large number of orbits, with no deliberate changes in machine settings • analyze the data set to identify correlated changes in BPM readings • correlated changes arise from different sources • orbit changes • energy changes • current changes • uncorrelated changes indicate BPM noise
Current Dependence Effect of calibration What affects the systematic current dependence? Red boxes = current correlation, no calibration: Black boxes = correlation with calibration Effect of changing the duty cycle Red boxes = current correlation, reduced duty cycle: Black boxes = correlation, full duty cycle Variation over 24 hours Red boxes = current correlation, March 7: Black boxes = correlation, March 6
Good, Bad, Ugly Good Fit Bad Fit
Fits to BBA Orbits Green line = MIA modes 1-4 Points = measured difference orbits
Dispersion Correction First attempt RMS reduced from 2.3 mm to 1.6 mm black boxes = measured dispersion before correction red boxes = measured dispersion after correction red line = predicted dispersion after correction Second attempt (after using BBA results to steer through sextupoles) RMS increased from 3.7 mm to 6.5 mm - as predicted! black boxes = measured dispersion before correction red boxes = measured dispersion after correction red line = predicted dispersion after correction
ATF achieved ~4pm vertical emittance • More challenges to reach ~1pm • simulation: • BPM offset error should be < 0.1 mm. (“BBA”) • --> εy ~ 2 pm • DR BPM upgrade (SLAC,FNAL,KEK) • Magnet re-alignment, < 30 μm. • --> εy ~ 1 pm Single bunch Measured in DR
DR-BPM Upgrade (FNAL/SLAC/KEK) • Goal: • Generation and extraction of • low emittance beam (εy < 2 pm) • at the nominal ILC bunch charge • A major tool for low emittance corrections: a high resolution BPM system • Optimization of the closed-orbit, beam-based alignment (BBA) studies to investigate BPM offsets and calibration. • Correction of non-linear field effects, i.e. coupling, chromaticity,… • Necessary: a state-or-the-art BPM system, utilizing • a broadband turn-by-turn mode (< 10 µm resolution) • a narrowband mode with high resolution (~ 100 nm range)
DR BPM upgrade- Hardware Overview - • Narrowband Mode Resolution • Triggered at turn #500,000 • ~200 ms position data per shot (1280 narrowband mode BPM measurements). • 126 tap box car filter to reject 50 Hz: ~ 800 nm resolution • removing modes with hor./ vert. correlation: ~200 nm resolution
DR BPM resolution improvement by digital read-out system (SLAC, FNAL, KEK) beam position read-out vs. beam intensity: scattered plot : existing analog circuit. line plot : digital read-out introduced for test. εy ~ 1 pmへの挑戦 Digital read-out Stored Beam – 10 minute time scale; ATF lifetime ~ few minutes Analogue read-out
The ATF Damping Ring 20 / 96 BPMs were upgraded. Planning to upgrade all (96) BPMs. 30
Fast Ion Instability -observed at ATF in 2004- Bunch ILCシンポジウム,物理学会2008春
Study on the Fast Ion Instability(KEK,DESY,SLAC,KNU) 2007/Dec~ Under tuning… ILCシンポジウム,物理学会2008春
Gas Injection system in ATF-DR • Continuous gas leak into the beam chamber. • We can control the leak rate of N2 gas. • Pressure range: 10-7 Pa ~10-3 Pa.
Multi-bunch Turn-by-turn monitor The beam blowup at tail bunches was measured by the laser wire in ATF, which is assumed coming from FII effect. In order to observe the individual beam oscillation in the multi-bunch beam, multi-bunch turn-by-turn monitor has been developed. This monitor consists of front end circuits(amplifier and filter) and DPO7254 scope. The scope can store the waveform up to 2ms with 100ps time resolution. When one bunch from many bunches is kicked, we hope other bunches have almost no oscillation. 1st 2nd The preliminary results shows the different oscillation amplitude of the tune-X and the tune-Y for the 1st and 2nd bunches at just after injection. Tune-X Tune-Y