Beam Control and Steering in the University of Maryland Electron Ring (UMER)
AIP Conf. Proc. -- November 27, 2006 -- Volume 877, pp. 701-706
ADVANCED ACCELERATOR CONCEPTS: 12th Advanced Accelerator Concepts Workshop;
doi:10.1063/1.2409204
Issue Date: 27 November 2006
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The University of Maryland Electron Ring (UMER) is a low energy, high current recirculator for beam physics research. Ring construction has been completed for multi-turn operation of beams over a broad range of intensities and initial conditions. The electron beam current is adjustable up to 100 mA and pulse length as long as 100 ns. UMER is addressing issues in beam physics relevant to many applications that require intense beams of high quality, such as advanced concept accelerators, free electron lasers, spallalion neutron sources, and future heavy-ion drivers for inertial fusion. The primary focus of this presentation is experimental results in the area of beam steering and control within the injection line and ring. Unique beam steering algorithms now include measurement of the beam response matrix at each quadrupole and matrix inversion by singular value decomposition (SVD). With these advanced steering methods, transport of an intense beam over 50 turns (3600 full lattice periods) of the ring has been achieved. ©2006 American Institute of Physics
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KEYWORDS and PACS
PUBLICATION DATA
0094-243X (print)
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