ELIC: An Electron Œ Light Ion Collider based at CEBAF · ELIC Layout ! Luminosity Potential! Accelerator Physics & Technology Issues ... Luminosities at the 1033 cm-2 sec-1 level
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Operated by the Southeastern Universities Research Association for the U. S. Department of EnergyThomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
Lia Merminga EPAC 2002 6/6/2002
ELIC: An Electron � Light Ion Collider based at CEBAF
L. Merminga, K. Beard, L. Cardman, Y. Chao, S. Chattopadhyay, K. de Jager, J. Delayen, Ya. Derbenev, J. Grames, A. Hutton,
G. Krafft, R. Li, M. Poelker, B. Yunn, Y. Zhang
Center for Advanced Studies of AcceleratorsJefferson Lab
Eight European Particle Accelerator ConferenceLa Villette � PARIS
3 - 7 June 2002
Operated by the Southeastern Universities Research Association for the U. S. Department of EnergyThomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
Lia Merminga EPAC 2002 6/6/2002
Outline! Nuclear Physics Motivation & Requirements! Early Design Studies! ELIC Layout ! Luminosity Potential! Accelerator Physics & Technology Issues
� Ion Ring� Electron Linac� Electron-Ion Collisions
! Integration with 25 GeV Fixed Target Program! R&D Topics/Strategy ! Conclusions
Operated by the Southeastern Universities Research Association for the U. S. Department of EnergyThomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
Lia Merminga EPAC 2002 6/6/2002
Nuclear Physics Motivation
! A high luminosity polarized electron � light ion collider has been proposed as a powerful new microscope to probe thepartonic (quarks and gluons) structure of matter
! Over the past two decades we have learned a great amount about the hadronic structure
! Some crucial questions remain open:� What is the structure of hadrons in terms of their quark
and gluon constituents? � How do quarks and gluons evolve into hadrons?
Operated by the Southeastern Universities Research Association for the U. S. Department of EnergyThomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
Lia Merminga EPAC 2002 6/6/2002
Nuclear Physics Requirements! The features of the facility necessary to address these issues:
� Center-of-mass energy between 20 GeV and 45 GeVwith energy asymmetry of ~10, which yieldsEe ~ 3 GeV on Ei ~ 30 GeV up to Ee ~ 5 GeV on Ei ~ 100 GeV
� CW Luminosity from 1033 to 1035 cm-2 sec-1
� Ion species of interest: protons, deuterons, 3He� Longitudinal polarization of both beams in the interaction
region ≥ 50% �80% required for the study of generalizedparton distributions and transversity
� Transverse polarization of ions extemely desirable� Spin-flip of both beams extremely desirable
Operated by the Southeastern Universities Research Association for the U. S. Department of EnergyThomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
Lia Merminga EPAC 2002 6/6/2002
Two Design Scenarios! Two accelerator design scenarios have been proposed:
� ring � ring*� linac � ring
! Linac � ring option presents advantages with respect to � spin manipulations � reduction of synchrotron radiation load on the detectors� wide range of continuous energy variability
! Feasibility studies were conducted at BNL� (based on RHIC) and Jefferson Lab� to determine whether the linac-ring option is viable
* Y. Shatunov et al., 2nd EPIC Workshop, 2000� I. Ben-Zvi, J. Kewisch, J. Murphy, S. Peggs, NIM A Vol. 463 (2001)� L. Merminga, G. Krafft, V. Lebedev, Proc. of HEACC 2001
Operated by the Southeastern Universities Research Association for the U. S. Department of EnergyThomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
Lia Merminga EPAC 2002 6/6/2002
Conclusions of Generic Linac-Ring Studies
! Luminosities at the 1033 cm-2 sec-1 level appear attainable with an electron linac-on-proton ring design
! Rf power and beam dump considerations require that the electron linac is an Energy Recovering Linac (ERL)
! Electron cooling of the protons is required for luminosity at or above 1033 cm-2 sec-1
Operated by the Southeastern Universities Research Association for the U. S. Department of EnergyThomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
Lia Merminga EPAC 2002 6/6/2002
ELIC LayoutOne accelerating & one decelerating pass through CEBAF
Ion Source RFQDTL CCL
IR IR
Beam Dump
Snake
Snake
CEBAF with Energy Recovery
5 GeV electrons 50-100 GeV light ions
Solenoid
Injector
Operated by the Southeastern Universities Research Association for the U. S. Department of EnergyThomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
Lia Merminga EPAC 2002 6/6/2002
Circulator Ring
J
t
Circulator Ring
Injector
J
t
1/fc CCR/c f
~100 CCR/c f
Y. Derbenev
Different filling patterns are being explored (Hutton, Litvinenko)
Operated by the Southeastern Universities Research Association for the U. S. Department of EnergyThomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
Lia Merminga EPAC 2002 6/6/2002
Parameter Table
YesYesNoNoCR
6x1034 / 1x10351 x 10341 x 10331 x 1032cm-2
sec-1Lumi
-
0.2
0.1
2/1
10
4.5/3.2
2.5
1500
1x1010
-
5
e-
Point Design 3
0.09
0.01
1
1
0.1
4.5/3.2
2.5
1x1010
Yes
50/100
Protons
0.05-0.05-0.005 --∆νL
0.010.10.0060.5.00060.5-ξe / ξi
10.150.150.1 cm σz
145205200cm β*
0.2100.210210µmεn
6614144545µmσ*
0.41.60.60.240.60.24AIave
500150150MHzfc
5x1092x10102.5x10101x10102.5x10101x1010ppbNbunch
Yes-Yes-No--Cooling
505505505GeVEnergy
Protonse-Protonse-Protonse-
Point Design 2Point Design 1Point Design 0UnitsParameter
Operated by the Southeastern Universities Research Association for the U. S. Department of EnergyThomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
Lia Merminga EPAC 2002 6/6/2002
Accelerator Technology Issues! Electron Source
� State of the art in high average current, polarized sources: ~1 mA at 80% polarization [C. Sinclair, Cornell University]Circulator ring appears promising
! RF Issues� ERLs favor high Qext for rf power savings, increased system
efficiency � Optimum Qext~3x107 (25 Hz amplitude of microphonic noise)� RF Control becomes more difficult with high Qext at high gradient
! Superconducting RF Issues� Demonstrate high CW gradient (18 MV/m) at high Q0 (1x1010)
! Cryogenics� At Q0=1x1010 dynamic load ~10 kW, installed ~20 kW (x2 Upgrade
CEBAF)
Operated by the Southeastern Universities Research Association for the U. S. Department of EnergyThomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
Lia Merminga EPAC 2002 6/6/2002
Jefferson Lab 7-cell Cavity
Operated by the Southeastern Universities Research Association for the U. S. Department of EnergyThomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
Lia Merminga EPAC 2002 6/6/2002
Jefferson Lab 7-cell Cavity Performance
!!!!
!!!!!!! !!!!!!!!! !
! !! !! !! ! ! ! ! !! ! ! ! ! !! ! ! ! !!!
10.00E+7
1.00E+9
1.00E+10
1.00E+11
0 2 4 6 8 10 12 14 16 18 20
Qo
Eacc [MV/m]
! Baseline
! e-polished
7-cell cavity JL7-2 Required for 5 GeV(single pass)
Courtesy P. Kneisel
R&D aims at improving Q0
Operated by the Southeastern Universities Research Association for the U. S. Department of EnergyThomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
Lia Merminga EPAC 2002 6/6/2002
Accelerator Physics Issues of the Ion Ring ! Intrabeam scattering: Transverse and longitudinal
⇒ For luminosity >1032 cm-2sec-1 electron cooling is required
� Electron cooling of 100 GeV protons requires 50 MeV electrons. Practical only if based on SRF-ERL technology, which is routinely used at the JLab IR FEL
� BNL/BINP, with help from JLab, seriously pursuing an ERL-based electron cooling device for heavy ions at RHIC*
! Collective Effects� Longitudinal mode coupling � Transverse mode coupling instability
* V. Parkhomchuk and I. Ben-Zvi, C-A/AP/47, 2001
Operated by the Southeastern Universities Research Association for the U. S. Department of EnergyThomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
Lia Merminga EPAC 2002 6/6/2002
Accelerator Physics Issues of the ERL
! Accelerator Transport� Demonstrate energy recovery with large energy ratio
! Beam Loss! Collective Effects
� Single-bunch effects � Multipass, Multibunch Beam Breakup (BBU) Instability
! HOM Power Dissipation� ~kW per cavity (Circulator ring greatly ameliorates this
problem)
Operated by the Southeastern Universities Research Association for the U. S. Department of EnergyThomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
Lia Merminga EPAC 2002 6/6/2002
Linac Optics! Two beams of different energies must remain confined in the
same focusing channel. A possible solution (I. Bazarov, Cornell University) for a 5 GeV ERL
! CEBAF-ER: An energy recovery experiment at CEBAF, has been proposed and planned for March 2003 to address energy recovery issues in large scale systems
0
10
20
30
40
50
60
70
0 100 200 300 400 500 600position (m)
beta
func
tion
(m)
beta xbeta y r
ecirculation
acceleration " energy recovery "
Operated by the Southeastern Universities Research Association for the U. S. Department of EnergyThomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
Lia Merminga EPAC 2002 6/6/2002
CEBAF-ER Experimentinjector
extracted, energy-recovered beam
λ/4 path length chicane
λ/2 path length chicane 1L22
2L22
CEBAF-ER: 45 MeV injected, 845 MeV full, 45 MeV extracted
-50
0
50
100
150
200
250
0 500 1000 1500 2000 2500
beta xbeta y10*eta x10*eta y
Arc 1, up Arc 2, full energy Arc 1, down
D. Douglas & A. Bogacz
Operated by the Southeastern Universities Research Association for the U. S. Department of EnergyThomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
Lia Merminga EPAC 2002 6/6/2002
Accelerator Physics Issues of the Electron-Ion Collisions
! IR design integrated with real detector geometry
! Crab crossing
! Emittance growth of the electrons (which have to be recirculated and energy recovered) due to collisions with the ions
! Beam-beam head-tail instability
Operated by the Southeastern Universities Research Association for the U. S. Department of EnergyThomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
Lia Merminga EPAC 2002 6/6/2002
Beam-Beam Head-Tail Instability! The beam-beam force due to the relative offset between the
head of the proton bunch and the electron beam will deflect the electrons. The deflected electrons subsequently interact with the tail of the proton bunch through beam-beam kick
! The electron beam acts as a transverse impedance to the proton bunch, and can lead to an instability
! The instability has been observed in numerical simulations [R. Li, J. Bisognano, Phys. Rev. E (1993)] during the beam-beam studies of linac-ring B-Factory. The code is presently being used to simulate unequal bunches and a nonlinear force
! Landau damping introduced by tunespread caused by electron beam and perhaps chromaticity expected to increase the threshold current of the instability
Operated by the Southeastern Universities Research Association for the U. S. Department of EnergyThomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
Lia Merminga EPAC 2002 6/6/2002
The same electron accelerator can also provide 25 GeVelectrons for fixed target experiments for physics
! Implement 5-pass recirculator, at 5 GeV/pass, as in present CEBAF(One accelerating & one decelerating pass through CEBAF ⇒ 20-45 GeV CM Collider Program)
! Exploring whether collider and fixed target modes can run simultaneously
Operated by the Southeastern Universities Research Association for the U. S. Department of EnergyThomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
Lia Merminga EPAC 2002 6/6/2002
R&D Strategy! Several important R&D topics have been identified ! Our R&D strategy is multi-pronged:
! Conceptual development� �Circulator Ring� concept promises to ease high current polarized
photoinjector and ERL requirements significantly� Additional concepts for luminosity improvements are being explored
! Analysis/Simulations� Electron cooling and short bunches� Beam-beam physics� Circulator ring dynamics� ERL physics
! Experiments� JLab FEL (10mA), Cornell/JLab ERL Prototype (100mA), BNL
Cooling Prototype (50-100mA) to address high current ERL issues� CEBAF-ER: The Energy Recovery experiment at CEBAF to address
ERL issues in large scale systems
Operated by the Southeastern Universities Research Association for the U. S. Department of EnergyThomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
Lia Merminga EPAC 2002 6/6/2002
Conclusions
! The hadron physics community is asking for a high luminosity, polarized electron-light ion collider
! Our design studies have led to an approach that promises luminosities up to 1035 cm-2 sec-1
! This design can be realized cost-effectively using energy recovery on the JLab site and can be integrated with a 25 GeV fixed target program for physics
! Planned R&D will address open issues
Operated by the Southeastern Universities Research Association for the U. S. Department of EnergyThomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility
Lia Merminga EPAC 2002 6/6/2002
251.2520
Mon Jun 07 16:16:01 1999 OptiM - MAIN: - F:\SRG\S4_4Q_4_proto1.opt100
0
1
-4
BETA_X&Y[m]
DISP_X&Y[m]
BETA_X BETA_Y DISP_X DISP_Y
U n -n o rm a liz e d X e m itta n c e (m m ) B a s e lin e v s A rc 5 -8 re d u c e d b y 5 , A rc 9 -1 0 re d u c e d b y 1 2 a t 2 5 G e V
0 .0 0 E + 0 0
2 .0 0 E -0 5
4 .0 0 E -0 5
6 .0 0 E -0 5
8 .0 0 E -0 5
1 .0 0 E -0 4
1 .2 0 E -0 4
1 .4 0 E -0 4
1 .6 0 E -0 4
1 .8 0 E -0 4
2 .0 0 E -0 4
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 1 0
Feasibility of 25 GeV FT Program at CEBAF
SR leads to spot sizes at the IP of 0.3-0.5 mm at 25 GeVSee Y. Chao, Jlab TN 99-037
Arc 9 β-functions ~70 m Emittance incl. SR at arc 9: 2x10-8 m rad
Optics for arcs 5-8
Optics for arcs 9, 10
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