Title :
High power ubitron-klystron
Author :
Balkcum, A.J. ; McDermott, D.B. ; Phillips, R.M. ; Luhmann, N.C.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Appl. Sci., California Univ., Davis, CA, USA
Abstract :
Summary form only given, as follows. A coaxial ubitron is being considered as the RF driver for the Next Linear Collider (NLC). Prior simulation of a traveling-wave ubitron using a self-consistent code found that 200 MW of power and 53 dB of gain could be achieved with 37% efficiency. In a ubitron-klystron, a series of cavities are used to obtain an even tighter electron bunch for higher efficiency. A small-signal theory of the ubitron-klystron shows that gain scales with the square of the cavity separation distance. A linear stability theory has also been developed. Verification of the stability theory has been achieved using the 2-1/2-D PIC code, MAGIC, and our particle-tracing code. Saturation characteristics of the amplifier are presented using both MAGIC and a simpler self-consistent slow-timescale code currently under development. The ubitron can also operate as a compact, highly efficient oscillator. Cavities only two wiggler periods in length have yielded up to 40% RF conversion efficiency in simulation. An initial oscillator design for directed energy applications is also presented.
Keywords :
accelerator RF systems; cavity resonators; klystrons; linear accelerators; linear colliders; microwave oscillators; microwave power amplifiers; microwave tubes; stability; travelling wave amplifiers; travelling wave tubes; 2-1/2-D PIC code; MAGIC code; Next Linear Collider; RF conversion efficiency; RF driver; cavities; cavity separation distance; coaxial ubitron; electron bunch; energy applications; high power ubitron-klystron; linear stability theory; oscillator; oscillator design; particle-tracing code; saturation characteristics; self-consistent code; self-consistent slow-timescale code; small-signal theory; stability theory; traveling-wave ubitron; wiggler periods; Bandwidth; Circuit testing; Contracts; Electron beams; Gain; Oscillators; Power amplifiers; Power generation; Radiofrequency amplifiers; Stability;
Conference_Titel :
Plasma Science, 1997. IEEE Conference Record - Abstracts., 1997 IEEE International Conference on
Conference_Location :
San Diego, CA, USA
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-3990-8
DOI :
10.1109/PLASMA.1997.604918