DocumentCode
1628837
Title
Longitudinal Acceleration of Intense Beams in the University of Maryland Electron Ring (UMER)
Author
Beaudoin, B. ; Bernal, S. ; Haber, I. ; Kishek, R.A. ; Reiser, M. ; Thangaraj, J.C.T. ; Walter, M. ; Shea, P. G O
Author_Institution
Maryland Univ., College Park
fYear
2007
Firstpage
759
Lastpage
759
Abstract
Summary form only given. With the ability to inject bright beams into the University of Maryland electron ring (UMER) comes the problem of longitudinal end erosion of both the head and tail from high space charge. It is important therefore to apply suitably-designed longitudinal focusing forces to confine the beam and prevent it from its normal expansion. This paper presents the design and prototyping of an induction cell and the technology used to pulse this cell. With successful operation of the induction cell, the confinement of the beam within UMER would increase the number of turns and also enable us to perform studies of the longitudinal physics of such highly space-charge beams. The pulsed voltage requirements for a confinement system on UMER would require ear-fields that switch 3 kV in about ~8 ns or so at a maximum rate of 5 MHz for the most intense flat-top rectangular beam injected into the ring. This places a considerable challenge on the noise-free delivery to a compact core.
Keywords
electron beam focusing; electron ring accelerators; space charge; UMER; University of Maryland Electron Ring; highly space charge beams; induction cell; longitudinal acceleration; longitudinal end erosion; longitudinal focusing forces; Acceleration; Electron beams; Particle beams; Physics; Prototypes; Space charge; Space technology; Switches; Tail; Voltage;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Plasma Science, 2007. ICOPS 2007. IEEE 34th International Conference on
Conference_Location
Albuquerque, NM
ISSN
0730-9244
Print_ISBN
978-1-4244-0915-0
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/PPPS.2007.4346065
Filename
4346065
Link To Document