Title :
Progress toward high energy electron cooling
Author_Institution :
Fermi Nat. Accel. Lab., Batavia, IL, USA
Abstract :
All electron cooling systems in operation to date can be classified as low energy systems. The electron beam kinetic energy in such a system is limited to about 0.6-1 MeV by the use of a conventional commercial Cockcroft-Walton high-voltage power supply. This, in turn, bounds the maximum ion kinetic energy, accessible for cooling with today´s standard technology, to about 2 GeV/nucleon (about a factor of 2-3 times higher than the electron systems in operation today). Electron cooling systems with kinetic energies above 1 MeV could provide economically justifiable improvements in the performance of many existing and proposed accelerator complexes, such as RHIC, Tevatron and HERA. This paper reviews the status of the development of the technology needed for high energy electron cooling
Keywords :
beam handling equipment; ion accelerators; proton accelerators; storage rings; 1 MeV; HERA; RHIC; Tevatron; electron beam kinetic energy; high energy electron cooling; Acceleration; Cooling; Electron accelerators; Electron beams; Ion accelerators; Kinetic energy; Magnetic fields; Particle beams; Power supplies; Protons;
Conference_Titel :
Particle Accelerator Conference, 2001. PAC 2001. Proceedings of the 2001
Conference_Location :
Chicago, IL
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-7191-7
DOI :
10.1109/PAC.2001.987613