2008 Annual Meeting of the Division of Nuclear Physics
Volume 53, Number 12
Thursday–Sunday, October 23–26, 2008;
Oakland, California
Session DA: CEU Poster Session (14:00 - 15:48)
2:00 PM,
Friday, October 24, 2008
Room: Lobby
Abstract ID: BAPS.2008.DNP.DA.4
Abstract: DA.00004 : Searching for a Betatron Tune Working Point for the Proposed Electron-Ion Collider at Jefferson Laboratory
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Scott Alton
(MSU/ODU/JLab)
Collaboration:
REU at ODU
The mechanics of relativistic particles in storage rings are well
understood. The particles oscillate around the intended orbit in the
transverse X and Y directions--called the betatron oscillations.
The number
of oscillations per orbit is known as the betatron tune. If the
betatron
tune is an integer or a special resonance value, the oscillations
will build
in amplitude due to constructive interference and the beam will
become less
focused. This becomes complicated in the proposed ELectron-Ion
Collider at
Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility (ELIC). The ELIC
will be
similar to a storage ring except that there will be beams of
particles in
both directions through each other several times every turn
around the ring.
When the beams pass through one another, they give each other a
``kick'' which
alters the betatron tune often causing it to become one of the
resonance
values and degrading the beam quality and luminosity, which is a
measure of
the number of collisions per turn around the ring. This narrows
down the
range of betatron tunes that are available to operate the
collider with a
well focused beam. The purpose of this research was to find a
betatron tune
working point, or a set of betatron tunes in both transverse
directions,
which optimize the luminosity for both beams. A tune map shows
which areas
of the tune space are far from resonance values. The tune map was
used to
choose some betatron tune working points far from resonance. The
region that
was used was near half integer, because there was a large space
on the tune
map that was far from the regions of resonance. Simulations were
run that
broke down the collider rings into a series of linear maps around
the ring
and elementary forces at the point where the two beams interact.
The goal
was to find a betatron tune point where the beams stayed focused
after many
turns. An effort was made to separate the different tunes to find
out how
each one affected the luminosity but due to the highly nonlinear
nature of
the forces involved, this was ineffective. A stable working point
has been
found in the half integer region of the tune map. The point
maintained about
65{\%} of its peak luminosity after 30000 turns. This compares
well with
some of the best working points that have been found which top
out at around
70{\%} of the peak luminosity. It was found that there are
certainly stable
working points in the half integer region, and more points should be
explored in this promising region of values. With a good working
point, it
will be possible to build a high luminosity collider allowing new
experiments involving quantum chromo dynamics.
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2008.DNP.DA.4