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A Cost-Effective Rapid-Cycling Synchrotron

Authors :
Valeri Lebedev
Sergei Nagaitsev
Source :
Reviews of Accelerator Science and Technology. 10:245-266
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
World Scientific Pub Co Pte Lt, 2019.

Abstract

The present Fermilab proton Booster is an early example of a rapid-cycling synchrotron (RCS). Built in 1960s, it features a design in which the combined-function dipole magnets serve as vacuum chambers. Such a design is quite cost-effective, and it does not have the limitations associated with the eddy currents in a metallic vacuum chamber. However, an important drawback of that design is a high impedance, as seen by a beam, because of the magnet laminations. More recent RCS designs (e.g. J-PARC) employ large and complex ceramic vacuum chambers in order to mitigate the eddy-current effects and to shield the beam from the magnet laminations. Such a design, albeit very successful, is quite costly because it requires large-bore magnets and large-bore RF cavities. In this paper, we consider an RCS concept with a thin-wall metallic vacuum chamber as a compromise between the chamber-less Fermilab Booster design and the large-bore design with ceramic chambers.

Details

ISSN :
17938058 and 17936268
Volume :
10
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Reviews of Accelerator Science and Technology
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........6f0fb9e490302f573be7c9c0306d7f8e
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1142/s1793626819300135