Open Access. Powered by Scholars. Published by Universities.®
Articles 1 - 3 of 3
Full-Text Articles in Physics
Cavity And Cryomodule Developments For Eic, R. A. Rimmer, E. Daly, J. Guo, J. Henry, J. Matalevich, H. Wang, S. Wang, D. Holmes, K. Smith, W. Xu, A. Zaltsman, B. Xiao, Subashini De Silva, Jean R. Delayen
Cavity And Cryomodule Developments For Eic, R. A. Rimmer, E. Daly, J. Guo, J. Henry, J. Matalevich, H. Wang, S. Wang, D. Holmes, K. Smith, W. Xu, A. Zaltsman, B. Xiao, Subashini De Silva, Jean R. Delayen
Physics Faculty Publications
The EIC is a major new project under construction at BNL in partnership with JLab. It relies upon a number of new SRF cavities at 197 MHz, 394 MHz, 591 MHz and 1773 MHz to pre-bunch, accelerate, cool and crab the stored beams. R&D is focusing on the 591 MHz elliptical cavity and 197 MHz crab cavity first as these are the most challenging. Preliminary designs of these cavities are presented along with an R&D status report. To avoid developing multiple different cryostats a modular approach is adopted using a high degree of commonality of parts and systems. This approach …
Eic 197 Mhz Crab Cavity Rf Optimization, Zenghai Li, Subashini U. De Silva, Jean R. Delayen, Robert A. Rimmer, Qiong Wu, Binping Xiao, Wencan Xu
Eic 197 Mhz Crab Cavity Rf Optimization, Zenghai Li, Subashini U. De Silva, Jean R. Delayen, Robert A. Rimmer, Qiong Wu, Binping Xiao, Wencan Xu
Physics Faculty Publications
Crab cavities, operating at 197 MHz and 394 MHz respectively, will be used to compensate the loss of luminosity due to a 25 mrad crossing angle at the interaction point in the Electron Ion Collider (EIC). Both crab cavities are of the RF Dipole (RFD) shape. To meet the machine design requirements, there are a few important cavity design considerations that need to be addressed. First, to achieve stable cavity operation at the design voltages, cavity geometry details must be optimized to suppress potential multipacting. Incorporating strong HOM damping in the cavity design is required for the beam stability and …
Crab Cavities For Ilc, P. A. Mcintosh, S. A. Belomestnykh, G. Burt, R. Calaga, S. U. De Silva, J. R. Delayen, I. V. Gonin, T. N. Khabiboulline, A. Lunin, T. Okugi, Y. M. Orlov, S. Verdú-Andrés, B. P. Xiao, V. P. Yakovlev, A. Yamamoto
Crab Cavities For Ilc, P. A. Mcintosh, S. A. Belomestnykh, G. Burt, R. Calaga, S. U. De Silva, J. R. Delayen, I. V. Gonin, T. N. Khabiboulline, A. Lunin, T. Okugi, Y. M. Orlov, S. Verdú-Andrés, B. P. Xiao, V. P. Yakovlev, A. Yamamoto
Physics Faculty Publications
For the 14 mrad crossing angle proposed, crab cavity systems are fundamentally anticipated for the viable operation of the International Linear Collider (ILC), in order to maximise its luminosity performance. Since 2021, a specialist development team have been defining optimum crab cavity technologies which can fulfil the operational requirements for ILC, both for its baseline centre-of-mass energy of 250 GeV, but also extending those requirements out to higher beam collision intensities. Five design teams have established crab cavity technology solutions, which have the capability to also operate up to 1 TeV centre-of-mass. This presentation showcases the key performance capabilities of …