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Ionization Cooling Introduction

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Emittance Exchange - Partition Numbers. Solenoidal focusing ... Energy loss at liquid H2 density is ~30MV/m (800atm-e gas) At ~ 15MV/m energy loss, need ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Ionization Cooling Introduction


1
Ionization CoolingIntroduction
  • David Neuffer
  • Fermilab
  • 4/20/08

2
Outline
  • Ionization Cooling
  • Cooling description
  • Heating Longitudinal Cooling
  • Emittance Exchange - Partition Numbers
  • Solenoidal focusing
  • Helical Cooler-PIC-REMEX
  • Low-Energy Cooling
  • Cooling Scenarios
  • Other Applications
  • Nuclear physics, stopped ?s
  • Experimental Studies

3
References
  • A. N. Skrinsky and V.V. Parkhomchuk, Sov. J.
    Nucl. Physics 12, 3(1981).
  • D. Neuffer, Particle Accelerators 14, 75 (1983)
  • D. Neuffer, ??- Colliders, CERN report 99-12
    (1999).
  • D. Neuffer, Introduction to Muon Cooling, NIM
    A532, p. 26 (2004).
  • C. X. Wang and K. J. Kim, MuCOOL Note 240 (2002).
  • Y. Derbenev and R. Johnson, Phys. Rev. ST Accel.
    Beams 8, E041002 (2005)
  • Simulation tools
  • R. Fernow, ICOOL http//pubweb.bnl.gov/users/ferno
    w/www/icool/readme.html
  • T. Roberts, G4BeamLine (Muons, Inc.)
    http//www.muonsinc.com/
  • Collaboration Efforts
  • Muon Collaboration http//www.cap.bnl.gov/mumu/mu
    _home_page.html
  • Muon Collider Task Force https//mctf.fnal.gov/
  • MICE Collaboration http//hep04.phys.iit.edu/cool
    demo/
  • UKNF group (RAL)

4
Overview of ?-Factory
  • Proton Driver (1-4 MW) proton bunches on target
    produce ??s
  • Front-end ? decay ? ? ? collect and cool
    ??s (phase rotation
    ionization cooling)
  • Accelerator - to full energy (
    linac RLAs to 2050 GeV)
  • ? - Storage ring
  • Store ?s until decay (300 B turns)
  • ?? e ?? ??e decays produce
    neutrino beams toward
  • Long base line neutrino detector (20008000 km
    away )
  • 1020 to 1021(?e, ??) /SS/year

5
Overview of ????? Collider
  • Proton Driver (1-4 MW) proton bunches on target
    produce ??s
  • Front-end ? decay ? ? ? collect and cool
    ??s (phase rotation
    ionization cooling)
  • Accelerator - to full energy (
    linac RLAs to TeV)
  • ? - Collider Ring
  • Store ?s until decay (300 B turns)
  • ?- ?- ? X
  • high-energy collisions

6
????? Collider Parameters
7
Producing and Capturing ???
  • Target is immersed in high field solenoid
  • Particles are trapped in Larmor orbits
  • B 20T -gt 2T
  • Spiral with radius r p?/(0.3 Bsol) B??/B
  • Particles with p? lt 0.3 BsolRsol/2 are trapped
  • Focuses both and - particles

?-Factory Rf 200 MHz, 12 MV/m Capture in
string Of 30 bunches
µ-Collider Rf 200 MHz, Capture string of 10
bunches- Recombine after cooling
8
Target to Cooling channel match
  • Transverse match 20T to 2T solenoid
  • R 25cm sx 0.1m ?x 0.1
  • Longitudinal match
  • rf 200 MHz (?1.5m) V gt10 MV/m
  • Optimum cooling is P 200MeV/c, dP/P 10
  • Want both signs (µ, µ-)
  • Solution
  • High-Frequency bunching and phase-energy Rotation
    (350 to 200 MHz rf)
  • Capture into string of 12 bunches

500 MeV/c
0
-10m
10m
9
Cooling Requirements
  • Beam from target has
  • ??,rms ? 210-2 m-rad ?,rms ? 1m
  • ?-Storage Ring ?-Factory
  • Goal is to collect maximum number of ? and/or
    ?- that fit within accelerator / storage
    ring acceptances
  • Transverse cooling by 10? is sufficient
  • ??,rms ? 0.02 to 0.006m-rad ?,rms ? 0.06
    m-rad/bunch
  • ????? Collider
  • Goal is maximal cooling of maximum number of both
    ? AND ?- high luminosity needed.
  • Cooling by gt 100? in each of ?x, ?y, ?z is
    required
  • ??,rms ? 0.5 to 0.02510-4m-rad ?,rms ? 0.04
    m-rad
  • Cool before decay Ionization cooling

10
Ionization Cooling-general principle
  • Transverse cooling
  • Particle loses momentum P(? and ?) in
    material
  • Particle regains P? (only) in RF
  • Multiple Scattering in material increases rms
    emittance

11
Ionization Cooling Principle
Loss of transverse momentum in absorber
Heating by multiple scattering
12
Combining Cooling and Heating
  • Low-Z absorbers (H2, Li, Be, ) to reduce
    multiple scattering
  • High Gradient RF
  • To cool before ?-decay (2.2? ?s)
  • To keep beam bunched
  • Strong-Focusing at absorbers
  • To keep multiple scattering
  • less than beam divergence
  • ? Quad focusing ?
  • ? Li lens focusing ?
  • ? Solenoid focusing?

13
Transverse cooling limits
  • Transverse Cooling equilibrium emittance

equilibrium scattering angle
  • Want materials with small multiple scattering
    (large LR),
  • but relatively large dE/ds, density (?)
  • Want small ?? at absorbers gt strong focusing
  • - equilibrium emittances (/??) smallest for low-Z
    materials

14
Ionization Cooling problems
  • Must focus to very small ß?
  • ß? 1m ? 1mm
  • Intrinsic scattering of beam is large
  • ?rms gt 0.1 radians
  • Intrinsic momentum spread is large
  • sP/P gt 0.03
  • Cooling must occur within muon lifetime
  • ?? 2.2? ?s or L? 660 ß? m pathlength
  • Does not (directly) cool longitudinally

15
Longitudinal Cooling
  • Energy cooling occurs if the derivative
  • ?(dE/ds)/?E gL(dp/ds)/p gt 0
  • gL(E) is negative for E lt 0.2 GeV
  • and only weakly positive for
  • E gt 0.2 GeV
  • Ionization cooling does not
  • effectively cool longitudinally

Energy straggling increases energy spread
16
Emittance exchange enables longitudinal cooling
  • Cooling derivative is changed by use of
    dispersion wedge
  • (Dependence of energy loss on energy can be
    increased)

(if due to path length)
17
Partition Numbers, dE-dt cooling
With emittance exchange the longitudinal
partition number gL changes
But the transverse cooling partition number
decreases
The sum of the cooling partition numbers (at P
P? ) remains constant
Sg gt 0
18
Cooling Energy straggling ...
Energy spread (sE) cooling equation
Equilibrium sp
Longitudinal Emittance Cooling equation
  • Longitudinal Cooling requires
  • Positive gL (?, wedge), Strong bunching (ßct
    small)
  • Large Vrf, small ?rf

Energy loss/recovery Before decay requires
19
µ Cooling Regimes
  • Efficient cooling requires
  • Frictional Cooling (lt1MeV/c) Sg3
  • Ionization Cooling (0.3GeV/c) Sg2
  • Radiative Cooling (gt1TeV/c) Sg4
  • Low-et cooling Sg2ß2
  • (longitudinal heating)

20
Focusing for Cooling
  • Strong focussing needed magnetic quads,
    solenoids, Li lens ?
  • Solenoids have been used in most (recent) studies
  • Focus horizontally and vertically
  • Focus both ? and ?-
  • Strong focussing possible
  • ß? 0.13m for B10T, p? 200 MeV/c
  • ß? 0.0027m for B50T, p? 20 MeV/c
  • But
  • Solenoid introduces angular motion
  • L damped by cooling field flips
  • B within rf cavities ?

?? ? ??(? ??)
21
Solenoidal focusing for coolingKim, Penn,
Sessler, Fernow, Palmer
  • Lattices are sequences of solenoids and drifts
    (rf interlaced) (,-)
  • FOFO, ASOL, RFOFO, SFOFO, DODO, SOSO
  • Can have nearly constant focusing or focusing to
    small ?
  • Large ?p/p acceptance possible
  • Need gt 10 ?p/p
  • Low ? can be much less than
  • gt5? smaller
  • Recent example ? 1cm (!!)
  • At 200 MeV/c, Bmax25T
  • Field flip not required

22
Cooling with ?? ? exchange and solenoids
Example rms Cooling equations with dispersion
and wedges (at ????) in x-plane
?? ? ??(? ??)
C. X. Wang and K. J. Kim, MuCOOL Note 240
(2002).
The additional correlation and heating terms are
small in well-designed systems.
23
Study 2 Cooling Channel (for MICE)
108 m cooling channel consists of 16 2.75m cells
40 1.65m cells Focusing increases along
channel Bmax increases from 3 T to 5.5 T
sFOFO 2.75m cells
  • Cell contains
  • Rf for acceleration/bunching
  • H2 absorbers
  • Solenoidal magnets

Simulation Results
24
?-Factory Study 2A cooling channel
  • Lattice is weak-focusing
  • Bmax 2.5T, solenoidal ß? ? 0.8m
  • ? ? from 0.018 to 0.0075m
  • eeq ? 0.006m (LiH)
  • Could be improved
  • H2 Absorber (120A) or smaller ß?
  • ? ?? 0.0055
  • eeq ? 0.003m

Before
After LiH cooling
After H2 cooling
-0.4m
0.4m
25
RFOFO Ring Cooler performance
Transverse before and after
  • Cools longitudinally and transversely
  • Can be adjusted for more transverse cooling

E-ct before and after
26
Other cooling examples
  • Ring Cooler (inject/extract)
  • Kickers too strong?
  • Instead wrap into spiral
  • 4 turns
  • Guggenheim
  • 200MHz, 400 MHz, 800 MHz
  • If not multiturn, circle is not needed
  • Try other geometries
  • Tapered ..
  • Snake
  • Wiggler ?

27
Advanced Cooling conceptsMuons, Inc, Derbenev,
Balbekov
  • Gas-filled rf cavities
  • Helical Wiggler Cooler
  • PIC-Parametric-resonance Ionization Cooling
  • Use resonance beam dynamics to intensify focusing
  • REMEX, low-energy emittance exchange
  • Very low energy cooling

28
RF Problem cavity gradient in magnetic field is
limited?
  • Rf breakdown field decreases in magnetic fields?
  • Solenoidal focussing gives large B at cavities
  • But gas in cavity suppresses breakdown
  • Can also use open cell cavities

Vacuum Pill-Box Cavities 800 MHz results
40MV/m?13MV/m
Muons, Inc. results 50 MV/m no change with B
10 of liquid H2
29
Helical 6-D Cooler (Derbenev)
  • Magnetic field is solenoid B0 dipole quad
  • System is filled with H2 gas, includes rf
    cavities
  • Cools 6-D (large E means longer path length)

Key parameters a, k2p/?, solenoid field B0,
transverse field b(a)
30
Helical Wiggler 3-D Cooling (Pµ250MeV/c)
l1.0
l0.8
l0.6
l0.4
Cooling factor 50,000
Yonehara, et al.
31
Comments on Helical Wiggler parameters
  • 1/?T2 ? 0.67 for equal cooling at ?g2
  • Energy loss at liquid H2 density is 30MV/m
    (800atm-e gas)
  • At 15MV/m energy loss, need
  • Spiral magnet appears advantageous

Typical case
32
  • PIC-Parametric-resonance Ionization Cooling
  • ( Y. Derbenev) (also Balbekov, 1997)
  • Excite ½ integer parametric resonance (in Linac
    or ring)
  • Similar to vertical rigid pendulum or ½-integer
    extraction
  • Elliptical phase space motion becomes hyperbolic
  • Use xxconst to reduce x, increase x'
  • Use Ionization Cooling to reduce x'

?
Then
First
33
PIC/REMEX cooling (Derbenev)
  • PIC ??,eff 0.6 ? 0.1cm
  • Transverse longitudinal cooling
  • Add Reverse emittance exchange to reduce
    transverse emittance (REMEX)
  • But
  • Chromaticity a problem
  • Depth of focus a problem
  • Labsorber lt ß?,eff
  • No realistic simulations

Cools to e? 0.000002m ??
34
Low-Energy coolingemittance exchange
  • dPµ/ds varies as 1/ß3
  • 200MeV/c ? 10MeV/c
  • Cooling distance becomes very short

  • for H at Pµ10MeV/c
  • Focusing can get quite strong
  • Solenoid
  • ß?0.006m at 50T, 50MeV/c
  • But Beam is heated longitudinally
  • (e6-D is constant)
  • eN,eq 110-5 m at 50MeV/c
  • Smaller momentum (10 MeV/c)
  • for low-emittance collider

l
35
Li-lens cooling
  • Lithium Lens provides strong-focusing and low-Z
    absorber in same device
  • Liquid Li-lens may be needed for highest-field,
    high rep. rate lens
  • BINP (Silvestrov) was testing prototype liquid Li
    lens for FNAL

ß? 0.026m (200 MeV/c, 1000 T/m) ß? 0.004m (40
MeV/c, 8000 T/m)
36
?-?? Collider Cooling Scenarios Palmer et al.
  • requires energy cooling and emittance exchange
    (and anti-exchange) to obtain small ?L, ex, ey
  • Start with large beam from target, compress and
    cool, going to stronger focussing and bunching as
    the beam gets smaller
  • ?p/p 10, ?? 0.1
  • Bunching rf frequency increases
  • In final cooling stages longitudinal emittance
    increases while transverse emittance decreases

37
Baseline Cooling Scenario for Collider
  • Steps 1,2 Bunching, phase rotation, cooling (?
    factory)
  • ?? 10cm ? 6cm
  • 3,4 6-D cooling with 200, 400 MHz Ring Coolers
  • ?? 6cm ? 2.4cm? 1.0cm
  • 5 compress to 1 bunch
  • 6, 7 6-D 200, 400 MHz Coolers
  • ?? 3cm? 1.0cm
  • 8 800 MHz Ring Cooler
  • ?? 1.0cm? 0.3cm
  • 9 up to 50T coolers (H2, solenoids)
  • ?? 0.4cm? 0.08cm
  • Total length of system 0.8km

Guggenheim 6D cooler
38
Simulated/extrapolated performance
39
Other applications- not just muons!
  • . Stopping ? beam
  • (for ?2e conversion experiment)
  • C. Ankenbrandt et al., Muons, Inc.
  • For BCNT neutron source
  • Y. Mori - KURRI
  • For beta-beam source
  • C. Rubbia et al

40
?2e experiment MECO
µ to e
  • Mu-E COnversion Experiment
  • ?- Z ? e- Z
  • Stopped ?- beam
  • Helical energy-loss cooling channel can greatly
    increase ?- intensity
  • Muons, Inc./FNAL

41
FFAG-ERIT neutron source (Mori, KURRI)
  • Ionization cooling of protons/ ions is
    unattractive because nuclear reaction rate ?
    energy-loss cooling rate
  • But can work if the goal is beam storage to
    obtain nuclear reactions
  • Absorber is beam target, add rf
  • ERIT-P-storage ring to obtain neutron beam
    (Mori-Okabe, FFAG05)
  • 10 MeV protons (ß v/c 0.145)
  • 10Be target for neutrons
  • 5µ Be absorber, wedge (possible)
  • dEp36 keV/turn
  • Ionization cooling effects increase beam lifetime
    to 1000 turns
  • not actually cooling

42
ß-beam Scenario (Rubbia et al.)
  • ß-beam another ?e source
  • Produce accelerate, and store unstable nuclei for
    ?-decay
  • Example 8B?8Be e? or 8Li?8Be e- ?
  • Source production can use ionization cooling
  • Produce Li and inject at 25 MeV
  • nuclear interaction at gas jet target produces
    8Li or 8B
  • 6Li 3He ? 8B p
  • Multiturn storage with ionization cooling
    maximizes ion production
  • 8Li or 8B is ion source for ß-beam accelerator
  • C. Rubbia, A. Ferrari, Y. Kadi, V. Vlachoudis,
    Nucl. Inst. and Meth. A 568, 475 (2006).
  • D. Neuffer, NIM A 583, p.109 (2008)

?e
43
ß-beams example 6Li 3He ? 8B n
  • Beam 25MeV 6Li
  • PLi 529.9 MeV/c B? 0.59 T-m v/c0.094
    Jz,0-1.6
  • Absorber3He -gas jet ?
  • Z2, A3, I31eV, z3, a6
  • dE/ds 110.6 MeV/cm,
  • If gx,y,z 0.13 (Sg 0.4), ß- 0.3m at
    absorber
  • Must mix both x and y with z
  • eN,eq 0.000046 m-rad,
  • sx,rms 2 cm at ß- 1m
  • sE,eq is 0.4 MeV
  • Could use 3He as beam
  • 6Li target ( foil or liquid)

44
Ionization Cooling Experimental RD Program
  • MICE International Muon Ionization Cooling
    Experiment
  • µ-beam at RAL ISIS
  • Systems test of complete cooling system
  • MuCOOL Program
  • Rf, absorber, magnet RD-supports MICE
  • MuCOOL test area (Fermilab)
  • Muon Collider Task Force
  • MUONS, Inc. (R. Johnson, et al.)
  • High-pressure rf cavities
  • Helical cooler, Parametric resonance cooler

45
MICE beam line (ISIS, RAL)
  • MICE (International Muon Ionization Cooling
    Experiment)
  • To verify ionization cooling (for a neutrino
    factory) with a test of a
    complete cooling module in a muon beam
  • Muon beam line and test area in RAL-ISIS (Oxford)
  • Installation Jan. Oct. 1 2007
  • Experiment occurs in 2008-2010 time frame

MICE beam line and experimental area (RAL)
46
Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment (MICE)
MICE Measurement of Muon Cooling Emittance
Measurement _at_ 10-3 First Beam April 2008
47
Summary
  • Ionization Cooling can provide cooled muon beams
    for Neutrino Factory or Muon Collider
  • Components are being built tested
  • Collider cooling scenario development has had
    great progress but needs more..
  • Longitudinal cooling by large factors
  • Transverse cooling by very large factors
  • Final beam compression with emittance exchange
  • Other Ionization Cooling applications are
    appearing
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