APS March Meeting 2011
Volume 56, Number 1
Monday–Friday, March 21–25, 2011;
Dallas, Texas
Session B7: Superconductivity in Accelerators
11:15 AM–2:15 PM,
Monday, March 21, 2011
Room: Ballroom C3
Sponsoring
Unit:
DPB
Chair: Soren Prestemon, Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Abstract ID: BAPS.2011.MAR.B7.1
Abstract: B7.00001 : Superconducting Accelerator Structures: An Historical Overview*
11:15 AM–11:51 AM
Preview Abstract
Abstract
Author:
Perry Wilson
(SLAC, Stanford)
In 1961 I began doing active research on RF superconducting cavities at the
High Energy Physics
Laboratory (HEPL) at Stanford University. At that time there were already
nascent research programs
exploring superconducting cavities at four other laboratories around the
world, including the one at the
Stanford physics department. However, all attempts to produce a substantial
accelerating field in a
superconducting cavity had failed. Since a cavity that is capable of
acceleration always has a surface
electric field, I decided that my first research effort would be to build
and test a cavity with only a
magnetic field at the surface. The frequency would need to be 2856 MHz, that
of the electron linac at
HEPL, so that available instrumentation could be used. In order to have only
a magnetic field at
the surface, the cavity would have to operate in the so-called TE mode. But
there was a problem: at
2856 MHz such a cavity would be considerably larger than the single-cell
accelerating mode cavities
previously built at the Stanford physics department. In collaboration with
the low temperature physics
group in the Stanford physics department, a larger electroplating facility
was built that was capable of
handling the cylindrical cavity body and two end plates. The initial
measurements gave stunning
results: a Q factor of about 10$^{8}$ at 4\r{ }K for a lead-plated cavity
was obtained, and there was no degradation in Q up to a surface magnetic
field of about 10 mT, (limited by the oscillator power). The results were
published in 1963. Experimentation on superconducting accelerator cavities
increased rapidly in the decade or so following this initial success.
Successful niobium TM-mode (accelerating mode) cavities were built with Q's
of about 10$^{11}$. Within a few years the multipactor problem in
accelerating cavities was solved by changing the shape of the outer
boundary. The initial impetus for superconducting accelerator research at
Stanford was to design and build a long pulse superconducting linac with an
energy of about one GeV. Such a linac has still not been realized, but in
the years from 1970 to 1990 there have been successful applications of RF
superconducting structures to storage rings, rf separators, drive linacs for
FEL's, and heavy ion accelerators. The evolution superconducting structures
and their applications, as outlined above, will be discussed in more detail
in my talk
*Work supported by Department of Energy contract DE-AC03-76SF00515
To cite this abstract, use the following reference: http://meetings.aps.org/link/BAPS.2011.MAR.B7.1