The NSCL is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and Michigan State University. RIA R&D is funded in part by the U.S. Department of Energy.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
NDVCS measurement with BoNuS RTPC M. Osipenko December 2, 2009, CLAS12 Central Detector Collaboration meeting.
Advertisements

Preliminary studies for T2 primary target for the NA61 fragmentation beam run 11 th October 2010 – NA61 Collaboration Meeting M. Calviani on behalf of.
The fission of a heavy fissile nucleus ( A, Z ) is the splitting of this nucleus into 2 fragments, called primary fragments A’ 1 and A’ 2. They are excited.
Focusing monochromators/analyzers Asymmetric diffraction geometry of the monochromator Dispersive double crystal monochromator Two wavelength sandwich.
This material is based upon work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science under Cooperative Agreement DE-SC , the State of Michigan.
Topic 11.3 Diffraction.
Diffraction of Light Waves
Bunch shape monitor for Linac-4 A.V.Feschenko Institute For Nuclear Research (INR), Moscow , Russia.
Spectral Resolution and Spectrometers A Brief Guide to Understanding and Obtaining the Proper Resolution of the 785 Raman System.
Setup for large area low-fluence irradiations with quasi-monoenergetic 0.1−5 MeV light ions M. Laitinen 1, T. Sajavaara 1, M. Santala 2 and Harry J. Whitlow.
Interference and Diffraction
Limits of Stability Neutron Drip Line? Proton Drip Line? Known Nuclei Heavy Elements? Fission Limit?
1 An Introduction to Ion-Optics Series of Five Lectures JINA, University of Notre Dame Sept. 30 – Dec. 9, 2005 Georg P. Berg.
APS-DNP Fall20041 Design Studies for RIA Fragment Separators A.M. Amthor National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory, Michigan State University Department.
Possibility of bringing TRI  P to HIE-ISOLDE Dual magnetic Spectrometer Olof TENGBLAD ISCC Oct. 22nd 2013 There will be a presentation during the ISOLDE.
SUPERB Separator for Unique Products of Experiments with Radioactive Beams Matt Amthor Bucknell University ReA12 Recoil Separator Workshop – July 12, 2014.
The HiLumi LHC Design Study is included in the High Luminosity LHC project and is partly funded by the European Commission within the Framework Programme.
Chapter 36 In Chapter 35, we saw how light beams passing through different slits can interfere with each other and how a beam after passing through a single.
RIA Summer School 2006 Exotic Beam Production and Facilities II Brad Sherrill, Michigan State University Lecture I The Rare Isotope Accelerator Concept.
N=126 factory Guy Savard Scientific Director of ATLAS Argonne National Laboratory & University of Chicago ATLAS Users Meeting ANL, May 15-16, 2014.
M. Hausmann for the FRIB Fragment Separator Collaboration FRIB Separator: Open Questions.
The 2010 NFMCC Collaboration Meeting University of Mississippi, January 13-16, Update on Parametric-resonance Ionization Cooling (PIC) V.S. Morozov.
Soft collective excitations in weakly bound nuclei studied with ELI-NP A.Krasznahorkay Inst. of Nuclear Research of the Hung. Acad. of Sci. (ATOMKI)
I. Strasik et al. ● Halo Collimation of Proton and Ion Beams in FAIR Synchrotron SIS 100 ● CERN Halo Collimation of Proton and Ion Beams in.
Transfer Line -2 Optics Design For CTF3 Amalendu Sharma, Abdurrahim, A.D.Ghodke, Gurnam Singh and V.C. Sahni Raja Ramanna Centre for Advanced Technology.
Radioactive ion beam facilities How does they work ? 2012 Student Practice in JINR Fields of Research 9.oct.2012 I. Sivacekflerovlab.jinr.ru.
Chapter 36 Diffraction In Chapter 35, we saw how light beams passing through different slits can interfere with each other and how a beam after passing.
The NSCL is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and Michigan State University. Determining the Impact Parameter and Cross-Section in Heavy.
The Overview of the ILC RTML Bunch Compressor Design Sergei Seletskiy LCWS 13 November, 2012.
Matching recipe and tracking for the final focus T. Asaka †, J. Resta López ‡ and F. Zimmermann † CERN, Geneve / SPring-8, Japan ‡ CERN, Geneve / University.
Precision Measurement of R L and R T of Quasi-Elastic Electron Scattering In the Momentum Transfer Range 0.55GeV/c≤|q|≤1.0GeV/c* Yan Xinhu Department of.
1 EPIC SIMULATIONS V.S. Morozov, Y.S. Derbenev Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility A. Afanasev Hampton University R.P. Johnson Muons, Inc. Operated.
CASA Collider Design Review Retreat HERA The Only Lepton-Hadron Collider Ever Been Built Worldwide Yuhong Zhang February 24, 2010.
© 2010 Pearson Education, Inc. Lecture Outline Chapter 24 College Physics, 7 th Edition Wilson / Buffa / Lou.
Diffraction Introduction to Diffraction Patterns
Fundamental Physics II PETROVIETNAM UNIVERSITY FACULTY OF FUNDAMENTAL SCIENCES Vungtau, 2013 Pham Hong Quang
ICIS2015 in NY Y.HIGURASHI Y. Higurashi (RIKEN Nishina center) 1.Introduction RIKEN RIBF and RIKEN 28GHz SC-ECRIS 2.Emittance measurements 1.4D.
Chapter 38 Diffraction Patterns and Polarization.
AGATA Physics Workshop Istanbul, Turkey May 4-7, 2010 G. Duchêne Deformation in N=40 nuclei G. Duchêne, R. Lozeva, C. Beck, D. Curien, F. Didierjean, Ch.
Lecture 9: Inelastic Scattering and Excited States 2/10/2003 Inelastic scattering refers to the process in which energy is transferred to the target,
RITU and the new separator at Jyväskylä J. Uusitalo, J. Sarén, M. Leino RITU and γ-groups University of Jyväskylä, Department of Physics.
An Electrostatic Storage Ring for Low Energy Electron Collisions T J Reddish †, D R Tessier †, P Hammond *, A J Alderman *, M R Sullivan †, P A Thorn †
The law of reflection: The law of refraction: Image formation
1 Possibility to obtain a polarized hydrogen molecular target Dmitriy Toporkov Budker Institute of Nuclear Physics Novosibirsk, Russia XIV International.
Implantation rates at the focal plane of Super-FRS Some Simulations for AIDA Detectors.
Energy recovery linacs for commercial radioisotope production A. Sy, G. Krafft, V. S. Morozov, R. P. Johnson, T. Roberts, C. Boulware, J. Hollister May.
Electron Spectrometer: Status July 14 Simon Jolly, Lawrence Deacon 1 st July 2014.
MEIC Detector and IR Integration Vasiliy Morozov, Charles Hyde, Pawel Nadel-Turonski MEIC Detector and IR Design Mini-Workshop, October 31, 2011.
Detector / Interaction Region Integration Vasiliy Morozov, Charles Hyde, Pawel Nadel-Turonski Joint CASA/Accelerator and Nuclear Physics MEIC/ELIC Meeting.
Present MEIC IR Design Status Vasiliy Morozov, Yaroslav Derbenev MEIC Detector and IR Design Mini-Workshop, October 31, 2011.
Lecture 4 Longitudinal Dynamics I Professor Emmanuel Tsesmelis Directorate Office, CERN Department of Physics, University of Oxford ACAS School for Accelerator.
Search for direct evidence of tensor interaction in nuclei = high momentum component in nuclei = TERASHIMA Satoru 寺嶋 知 Depart. of Nuclear Science and Technology,
FFAG 4-Bend Injection Line into EMMA C. Johnstone, Fermilab EMMA phone conference July 24, 2007.
April 17, Dejan TrbojevicFFAG07 -Non-Scaling FFAG gantries1 Non-Scaling FFAG Gantries Introduction: Motives: The most challenging problem in the carbon/proton.
Stopped K beam at J-PARC Designed by J.Doornbos 1)Optics design of a K0.8 branch 2)Performance 3)Pion contamination 4)Comments on K1.1 Nov. 4, 2005 Korea.
Ultra-low Emittance Coupling, method and results from the Australian Synchrotron Light Source Rohan Dowd Accelerator Physicist Australian Synchrotron.
STATUS REPORT ON THE “MASHA” SET-UP A.M.Rodin, A.V.Belozerov, S.N.Dmitriev, Yu.Ts.Oganessian, R.N.Sagaidak, V.S.Salamatin, S.V.Stepantsov, D.V.Vanin PAC.
Diagnostic Radiology II X-ray Tubes. Anode angle Anode angle defined as the angle of the target surface with respect to the central ray in the x-ray field.
J-PARC main ring lattice An overview
Collimation Concept for Beam Halo Losses in SIS 100
▪ Issues after KOBRA review meeting
IF Separator Design of RAON
Large Booster and Collider Ring
On the ARIEL Pre-separator
Single trigger, no target
Light Through a Single Slit
Beam dynamics of Super-FRS and MM requirements
Chapter 36 In Chapter 35, we saw how light beams passing through different slits can interfere with each other and how a beam after passing through a single.
Collider Ring Optics & Related Issues
Vertical Dogleg Options for the Ion Collider Ring
Presentation transcript:

The NSCL is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and Michigan State University. RIA R&D is funded in part by the U.S. Department of Energy and Michigan State University. Design Studies for the RIA Fragment Separators A.M. Amthor 1,2, D.J. Morrissey 1,3, A. Nettleton 1,2, B.M. Sherrill 1,2, A. Stolz 1, O. Tarasov 1 1 National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory, 2 Department of Physics and Astronomy, Michigan State University, 3 Department of Chemistry, Michigan State University Motivation Fragment separators focus and purify the multi-constituent beams which result from a primary beam striking a production target. The effectiveness of the system is determined by: Angular acceptance limits ions passed according to lab-frame trajectories from the target. Momentum acceptance limits ions passed according to deviation from central magnetic rigidity (Bρ = p/q). Dispersion (d  [x|δ]) defines spatial separation according to momentum deviation. Resolving power (R = d/Mx o ) quantifies the system’s ability to separate fragments—given an initial beam spot size of x o —and depends on the dispersion and the magnification (M  [x|x], the dependence of the final beam spot size on the initial spot size). Bending strength limits the magnetic rigidity of ions that can be sent down the system’s optic axis. RIA Momentum Compensator RIA Preseparator The high intensity of beams produced by the RIA linac combined with broad momentum distributions emerging from thick production targets make the design of the fragment separators challenging. Challenges: Large angular and momentum acceptances, significant higher order aberrations (5 th order or higher) Power on beam dump, up to 200kW to be collected Primary beam proximity to desired fragments, very often within momentum acceptance and sometimes with |δ Bρ |< 1% Higher energy and greater neutron excess of fragment beams, requires bending strength of 10Tm Range compressed fragments to be stopped in 0.5 atm-m gas cell, requires aberrations < 2mm Preseparator o 100 mr in horizontal and vertical o 12% momentum acceptance o low optical aberrations (< 2 mm) The large momentum acceptance of the preseparator produces a beam of the desired fragment with up to a 12% spread in momentum. This corresponds to a similarly large range distribution in He gas, roughly 50 atm-m FWHM. To maximize collection efficiency, the width of the range distribution must be minimized. The momentum compensator performs this function, known as range compression, by dispersing the beam then passing the particles through a monochromatic wedge degrader. The width of the range distribution is thereby reduced to a minimum primarily determined by the range straggling of the ions in the degrader material. The first order symmetry of the preseparator gives angular magnification equal to one, and any degrader materials present will be profiled to preserve achromaticity. Therefore, the angular and momentum acceptances must be identical to those of the preseparator itself. Aberrations in the preseparator will increase the initial spot size for the momentum compensator, but with d/M  2.5m (satisfied by current designs in first order), a spot size of 2.5mm will give R = 1000, at which point the limited optical resolution contributes little to the final range distribution. Specifications: Full angular and momentum acceptance from preseparator Momentum resolving power R>1000 d/M = 2.5m High-Resolution Separator Large-Acceptance Separator The RIA baseline concept above makes use of two fragment separators. High-Resolution Separator o 80 mr in horizontal and vertical o 6% momentum acceptance o d/M  2.5m RIA Fragment Separation - e.g. the A1900 at the NSCL Range Compression Maximum stopping efficiency in the 0.5 atm-m He gas cell is achieved using a monochromatic wedge degrader followed by an adjustable thickness homogeneous degrader set so as to leave the peak of the compressed range distribution in the gas cell. In the MOCADI simulation at left a 32.4 atm-m FWHM range distribution of 130 Cd is brought to a range distribution with FWHM of 0.93 atm-m, leaving over 40% of fragments within the central 0.5 atm-m of the distribution. The goal at RIA is to provide very intense secondary beams of a wide variety of isotopes, many previously unavailable for use in experiments. At the RIA primary beam energies, secondary reactions in the target contribute to the overall production rate; hence it is desirable to use thick targets. This results in wide momentum distributions of the fragments. Figure 1 shows a representative example of the increased gain in yield from large separator momentum acceptances with the higher primary beam energies and thick targets to be used at RIA. Also, efficient collection of fission fragments requires larger angular acceptance, because of the energy released in the process. Figure 1: Fragment yield vs. momentum acceptance by primary beam energy for 78 Ni produced from 86 Kr. At the RIA energy of 400Mev/u the acceptance should be greater than 10%. N Z N Z N Z Fragments after target Fragments at wedge Fragments after FP Slits H. Weick et al., NIM B (2000) 168 Specifications Bρ max = 6Tm Δp = 5% Δθ = ±40mr Δφ = ±50mr Compensated to 3 rd order Largest acceptance of current facilities Note: Isotope yield diagrams are from 86 Kr  78 Ni simulation with primary beam of 140MeV/u References: H. Geissel et al., Nucl. Inst. and Meth. A 282 (1989) 247 C. Scheidenberger et al., Nucl. Inst. and Meth. B 204 (2003) 119 L. Weissman et al., Nucl. Inst. and Meth. A 522 (2004) 212 B. M. Sherrill, Nucl. Inst. and Meth. B 204 (2003) 765 K. Shepard et al, in: B. Rusnak (Ed.), Proc. of 9 th Intl. Conf. on RF Superconductivity, Sante Fe, 1999, LANL, Los Alamos, 2000, p.345 P.N. Ostroumov, Phys. Rev. ST Acc. Beams 5 (2002) D.J. Morrissey et al., Nucl. Inst. and Meth. B 204 (2003) 90 Target BeamFragment SeparatorAll Experiments A1900: single separator (up to 5 kW) BeamPreseparator High-Resolution Separator High-Energy Area Beam Preseparator Momentum Compensator Gas-Stopping Cell RIA: two distinct separators (up to 400 kW) Beam Target Wedge Isotope Slits Beam Dump The compensated third order system passes approximately 73% of fragments uniformly distributed in a 6-D phase space ellipse with a and b from ±50mr and with δ distributed over a full width of 12%.