A muon ionization cooling channel consists of three major components: the magnet optics, an acceleration cavity, and an energy absorber. The absorber of liquid hydrogen contained by thin aluminum windows is the only component which introduces stochastic processes into the otherwise deterministic acc
Muon beam ionization cooling in a linear quadrupole channel
โ Scribed by C Johnstone; M Berz; D Errede; K Makino
- Publisher
- Elsevier Science
- Year
- 2004
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 476 KB
- Volume
- 519
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 0168-9002
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โฆ Synopsis
In a scenario for either a Neutrino Factory or Muon Collider, the anticipated transverse beam emittance subsequent to capture and phase rotation is so large that it permits a relaxation of the requirements on beam spot size in the early stages relative to the final stages of ionization cooling. Staging the cooling process according to initial emittances, coupled with modest cooling factors, permits more optimal and efficient cooling channel designs and avoids much of the difficulty encountered with channels which attempt to maintain strong focusing (large, 300-500 mrad, divergences) across ultra-large momentum ranges (X720% dp=p). Relaxation of spot size at the absorber, especially in the ''precooling'' stage, allowed development of an efficient transverse cooling channel based simply on a quadrupole FODO cell. This work describes the design of such a cooling channel and its application as an upstream stage of beam cooling. Being a linear channel with no bends, it serves to reduce the large transverse beam size delivered from muonbeam capture and bunching before entering more restricted optical structures such as transverse plus longitudinal cooling channels or accelerators.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
A linear radio-frequency quadrupole ion guide and beam buncher has been installed at the ISOLTRAP mass spectrometry experiment at the ISOLDE facility at CERN. The apparatus is being used as a beam cooling, accumulation, and bunching system. It operates with a buffer gas that cools the injected ions