Publikationsansicht

Beam Test of a Superconducting Cavity for the CESR Luminosity Upgrade* (2008)

Abstract
The prototype superconducting cavity system for CESR-Phase III was tested in CESR in August 1994. The performance of the system was very gratifying. The cavity operated gradients of 4.5-6 MV/m and accelerated beam currents up to 220 mA. This current is a factor of 3 above the world record 67 mA for SRF[1]. The high circulating beam current did not increase the heat load or present any danger to the cavity. No instability attributable to the SRF cavity was encountered. A maximum of 155 kW of rf power was transferred to a 120 mA beam. The window was subjected to 125 kW reflected power and processed easily. In the travelling wave mode, vacuum bursts and arc trips prevented us from going above 165 kW. The maximum HOM power extracted was 2 kW. Beam stability studies were conducted for a variety of bunch configurations. In other tests a 120 mA beam was bumped horizontally and vertically by ±10 mm. While supporting a 100 mA beam, the cavity was axially deformed with the tuner by 0.4 mm to sweep the HOM frequencies across dangerous revolution harmonics. In all such tests, no resonant excitation of HOMs or beam instabilities were observed, which confirms that the potentially dangerous modes were damped strongly enough to be rendered harmless.

Details der Publikation
Download http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.70.1048
Quelle http://www.lns.cornell.edu/~jtr/publications/srftest95.pdf
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Sprache Englisch