V. Bharadwaj, J. Clendenin, P. Emma, J. Frisch, R. Jobe, T. Kotseroglou, P. Krejcik, A. Kulikov, Z. Li, T. Maruyama, K. Millage, B. McKee, G. Mulhollan, M. Munro, C. Rago, T. Raubenheimer, M. Ross, N. Phinney, D. Schultz, J. Sheppard, C. Spencer, A. Vlieks, M. Woodley, K. Van Bibber, S. Takeda
{"title":"The NLC injector system","authors":"V. Bharadwaj, J. Clendenin, P. Emma, J. Frisch, R. Jobe, T. Kotseroglou, P. Krejcik, A. Kulikov, Z. Li, T. Maruyama, K. Millage, B. McKee, G. Mulhollan, M. Munro, C. Rago, T. Raubenheimer, M. Ross, N. Phinney, D. Schultz, J. Sheppard, C. Spencer, A. Vlieks, M. Woodley, K. Van Bibber, S. Takeda","doi":"10.1109/PAC.1999.792332","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"The Next Linear Collider (NLC) injector system is designed to produce low emittance, 10 GeV electron and positron beams at 120 hertz for injection into the NLC main linacs. Each beam consists of a train of 95 bunches spaced by 2.8 ns; each bunch has a population of 1.15/spl times/10/sup 10/ particles. At injection into the main linacs, the horizontal and vertical emittances are specified to be /spl gamma//spl isin//sub x/=3/spl times/10/sup 16/ m-rad and /spl gamma//spl isin//sub y/=3/spl times/10/sup -8/ m-rad and the bunch length is 100 /spl mu/m. Electron polarization of greater than 80% is required. Electron and positron beams are generated in separate accelerator complexes each of which contain the source, damping ring systems, L-band, S-band, and X-band linacs, bunch length compressors, and collimation regions. The need for low technical risk, reliable injector subsystems is a major consideration in the design effort. This paper presents an overview of the NLC injector systems.","PeriodicalId":20453,"journal":{"name":"Proceedings of the 1999 Particle Accelerator Conference (Cat. No.99CH36366)","volume":"32 1","pages":"3447-3449 vol.5"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"1999-11-05","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"5","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Proceedings of the 1999 Particle Accelerator Conference (Cat. No.99CH36366)","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1109/PAC.1999.792332","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 5
Abstract
The Next Linear Collider (NLC) injector system is designed to produce low emittance, 10 GeV electron and positron beams at 120 hertz for injection into the NLC main linacs. Each beam consists of a train of 95 bunches spaced by 2.8 ns; each bunch has a population of 1.15/spl times/10/sup 10/ particles. At injection into the main linacs, the horizontal and vertical emittances are specified to be /spl gamma//spl isin//sub x/=3/spl times/10/sup 16/ m-rad and /spl gamma//spl isin//sub y/=3/spl times/10/sup -8/ m-rad and the bunch length is 100 /spl mu/m. Electron polarization of greater than 80% is required. Electron and positron beams are generated in separate accelerator complexes each of which contain the source, damping ring systems, L-band, S-band, and X-band linacs, bunch length compressors, and collimation regions. The need for low technical risk, reliable injector subsystems is a major consideration in the design effort. This paper presents an overview of the NLC injector systems.