Paper | Title | Page |
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TUPA80 | Cyborg Beamline Development Updates | 512 |
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Funding: This work was supported by the Center for Bright Beams, National Science Foundation Grant No. PHY-1549132 and DOE Contract DE-SC0020409. Xray free electron laser (XFEL) facilities in their current form are large, costly to maintain, and inaccessible due to their minimal supply and high demand. It is then advantageous to consider miniaturizing XFELs through a variety of means. We hope to increase beam brightness from the photoinjector via high gradient operation (>120 MV/m) and cryogenic temperature operation at the cathode (<77K). To this end we have designed and fabricated our new CrYogenic Brightness-Optimized Radiofrequency Gun (CYBGORG). The photogun is 0.5 cell so much less complicated than our eventual 1.6 cell photoinjector. It will serve as a prototype and test bed for cathode studies in a new cryogenic and very high gradient regime. We present here the fabricated structure, progress towards commissioning, and beamline simulations. |
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DOI • | reference for this paper ※ doi:10.18429/JACoW-NAPAC2022-TUPA80 | |
About • | Received ※ 02 August 2022 — Accepted ※ 06 August 2022 — Issue date ※ 09 October 2022 | |
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TUPA81 | Design of a High-Power RF Breakdown Test for a Cryocooled C-Band Copper Structure | 516 |
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Funding: This work was supported by the DOE Contract DE-SC0020409. High-gradient RF structures capable of maintaining gradients in excess of 250 MV/m are critical in several concepts for future electron accelerators. Concepts such as the ultra-compact free electron laser (UC-XFEL) and the Cool Copper Collider (C3) plan to obtain these gradients through the cryogenic operation (<77K) of normal conducting copper cavities. Breakdown rates, the most significant gradient limitation, are significantly reduced at these low temperatures, but the precise physics is complex and involves many interacting effects. High-power RF breakdown measurements at cryogenic temperatures are needed at the less explored C-band frequency (5.712 GHz), which is of great interest for the aforementioned concepts. On behalf of a large collaboration of UCLA, SLAC, LANL, and INFN, the first C-band cryogenic breakdown measurements will be made using a LANL RF test infrastructure. The 2-cell geometry designed for testing will be modifications of the distributed coupled reentrant design used to efficiently power the cells while staying below the limiting values of peak surface electric and magnetic fields. |
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DOI • | reference for this paper ※ doi:10.18429/JACoW-NAPAC2022-TUPA81 | |
About • | Received ※ 29 July 2022 — Accepted ※ 02 August 2022 — Issue date ※ 08 August 2022 | |
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TUPA87 | Simulations for the Space Plasma Experiments at the SAMURAI Lab | 539 |
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Funding: This work was performed with support of the US Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-SC0017648 and DESC0009914, and the DARPA GRIT Contract 20204571 Plasma wakefield acceleration using the electron linear accelerator test facility, SAMURAI, can be used to study the Jovian electron spectrum due to the high energy spread of the beam after the plasma interaction. The SAMURAI RF facility which is currently being constructed and commissioned at UCLA, is is capable of producing beams with 10 MeV energy, 2 nC charge, and 200 fsec bunch lengths with a 4 um emittance. Particle-in-cell (PIC) simulations are used to study the beam spectrum that would be generated from plasma interaction. Experimental methods and diagnostics are discussed in this paper. |
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DOI • | reference for this paper ※ doi:10.18429/JACoW-NAPAC2022-TUPA87 | |
About • | Received ※ 04 August 2022 — Revised ※ 08 August 2022 — Accepted ※ 10 August 2022 — Issue date ※ 06 September 2022 | |
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