Title :
The NEPTUNE facility for 2nd generation advanced accelerator experiments
Author :
Clayton, C.E. ; Joshi, C. ; Marsh, K.A. ; Pellegrini, C. ; Rosenzwieg, J.
Author_Institution :
Dept. of Electr. Eng., California Univ., Los Angeles, CA, USA
Abstract :
The NEPTUNE Laboratory, under construction at UCLA, will be a user facility for exploring concepts useful for advanced accelerators. The programmatic goal for the laboratory is to inject extremely high quality electron bunches into a laser-driven plasma beat wave accelerator (PBWA) and explore ideas for extracting a high quality ΔE/E<0.1, εn<10 π mm-mrad, high energy (100 MeV) beam from a plasma structure operating at about 1 THz and about 3 GeV/m. The lab will combine an upgraded MARS CO2 laser and the state-of-the-art SATURNUS RF gun and linac. The new MARS laser will be about 1 TW (1005, 100 ps), up from 0.2 TW (70 J, 350 ps). This allows for doubling the spot size at the IP and quadrupling the interaction length while still driving gradients of 3 GeV/m. The SATURNUS gun will be upgraded to the Brookhaven 1.6 cell design. A novel, multi-cell plane-wave transformer (PWT) RF gun is also under development. A sync-pumped, sub-ps dye laser is available to directly produce ultrashort electron pulses (1/5 of an accelerating bucket). Part of the research program will be devoted to studying pulse compression and phase-locking techniques at these ultrahigh frequencies and diagnosing microbunches generated by such structures. Finally, shaped electron pulses will be studied for the electron driven PWFA concept
Keywords :
collective accelerators; electron accelerators; gas lasers; particle beam bunching; 0.2 TW; 1 THz; 1 TW; 100 J; 70 J; CO2; MARS CO2 laser; NEPTUNE facility; SATURNUS RF gun; advanced accelerators; electron bunches; laser-driven plasma beat wave accelerator; linac; phase-locking; plane-wave transformer RF gun; pulse compression; shaped electron pulses; Acceleration; Electron accelerators; Electron beams; Laboratories; Mars; Particle beams; Plasma accelerators; Plasma waves; Pulse transformers; Radio frequency;
Conference_Titel :
Particle Accelerator Conference, 1997. Proceedings of the 1997
Conference_Location :
Vancouver, BC
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-4376-X
DOI :
10.1109/PAC.1997.749803