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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 1 Stochastic Cooling in the Fermilab AntiProton Source Paul Derwent Beams Division/Pbar/CDF Sunday, October 18, 2015
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 2 Stochastic Cooling Main Entry: sto·chas·tic Pronunciation: st&-'kas-tik, stO- Function: adjective Etymology: Greek stochastikos skillful in aiming, from stochazesthai to aim at, guess at, from stochos target, aim, guess -- more at STING Date: 1923 1 : RANDOM; specifically : involving a random variable 2 : involving chance or probability : PROBABILISTIC <a stochastic model of radiation-induced mutation> - sto·chas·ti·cal·ly /-ti-k(&-)lE/ adverb Main Entry: 2 cool Date: before 12th century intransitive senses 1 : to become cool : lose heat or warmth <placed the pie in the window to cool> -- sometimes used with off or down 2 : to lose ardor or passion transitive senses 1 : to make cool : impart a feeling of coolness to -- often used with off or down 2 a : to moderate the heat, excitement, or force of : CALM b : to slow or lessen the growth or activity of -- usually used with off or down <wants to cool off the economy without freezing it -- Newsweek> - cool it : to calm down : go easy <the word went out to the young to cool it -- W. M. Young> - cool one's heels : to wait or be kept waiting for a long time especially from or as if from disdain or discourtesy From Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 3 Why an Antiproton source? o p pbar physics with one ring Dense, intense beams for high luminosity
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 4 Luminosity History Collider Run I It’s all in the pbars!
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 5 Making Anti-protons o 120 GeV protons off metal target o Collect some fraction of anti-protons which are created Within collection lens aperture Momentum ~8 GeV (±2%)
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 6 Why an Anti-proton source? ~11,000 cycles Store and cool in the process! o Collect ~2 x 10 -5 pbars/proton on target ~5e12 protons on target ~1e8 pbars per cycle 0.67 Hz Large Energy Spread & Emittance o Run II Goals 36 bunches of 3 x 10 10 pbars Small energy spread Small transverse dimensions
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 7 Pbar Longitudinal Distribution
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 8 Overview Information o Frequency Spectrum Time Domain: (t+nT 0 ) at pickup Frequency Domain: harmonics of revolution frequency f 0 = 1/T 0 Accumulator: T 0 ~1.6 sec (1e10 pbar = 1 mA) f 0 (core) 628890 Hz 127th Harmonic ~79 MHz
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 9 Idea Behind Stochastic Cooling o Phase Space Compression: Dynamic Aperture: Area where particles can orbit Liouville’s Theorem * : Local Phase Space Density for conservative system is conserved *J. Liouville, “Sur la Théorie de la Variation des Constantes arbitraires”, Journal de Mathematiques Pures et Appliquées”, p. 342, 3 (1838) WANT TO INCREASE PHASE SPACE DENSITY! x x’ x
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 10 Idea Behind Stochastic Cooling o Principle of Stochastic cooling Applied to horizontal tron oscillation o A little more difficult in practice. o Used in Debuncher and Accumulator to cool horizontal, vertical, and momentum distributions COOLING? Temperature ~ minimize transverse KE minimize E longitudinally Kicker Particle Trajectory
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 11 Why more difficult in practice? o Standard Debuncher Operation: 10 8 particles, ~uniformly distributed Central revolution frequency 590035 Hz »Resolve 10 -14 seconds to see individual particles! »100 THz antennas = 3 µm! pickups, kickers, electronics in this frequency range ? Sample N s particles -> Stochastic process »N s = N / 2TW where T is revolution time and W bandwidth »Measure deviations for N s particles Higher bandwidth the better the cooling
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 12 Simple Betatron Cooling With correction ~ g, where g is related to gain of system New position: x - g o Emittance Reduction: RMS of kth particle
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 13 Stochastic Nature? o Result depends upon independence of the measured centroid in each sample In case where have no frequency spread in beam, cannot cool with this technique! Some number of turns M to completely generate independent sample o But… Where is randomization occurring? »WANT: kicker to pickup GOOD MIXING »ALSO HAVE: pickup to kicker BAD MIXING
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 14 Cooling Time o Electronic Noise: Random correction applied to each sample More likely to heat than cool Noise/Signal Ratio U High Bandwidth Low Noise Optimum Gain (in correction g) goes down as N goes up!
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 15 Momentum Cooling Time evolution of the particle density function, (E) = ∂N / ∂E Fokker-Planck Equation -- c. 1914 first used to describe Brownian motion o Two Pieces: Coherent self force through pickup, amplifier, kicker »Directed motion of the particle Random kicks from other particles and electronic noise »Diffusive flux from high density to low density
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 16 Simple Example o Linear Restoring Force with Constant Diffusive Term (Electronic noise) Gaussian Distribution o Inject at E> E 0 Coherent force dominates --- collected into core! E0E0 ‘Stacked’ F(E) D(E) Simulation!
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 17 Types of Momentum Cooling o Filter Cooling: Use Momentum - Frequency map Notch Filters for Gain Shaping »Debuncher »Recycler »Stack tail (as correction) Splitter Combiner Adjustable Delay Notch Filter
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 18 Types of Momentum Cooling o Palmer Cooling Use Momentum - Position Map in regions of Dispersion Pickup Response vs Position to do Gain Shaping »Accumulator Core: Signal(A) - Signal(B) »Accumulator Stacktail (described in coming slides) AB Beam Distribution Top View
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 19 Momentum Stacking Van der Meer’s solution: desire constant flux past energy point static solution !
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 20 Van der Meer’s Solution To build constant flux, build voltage profile which is exponential in shape and results in density distribution which is exponential in shape!
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 21 Exponential Density Distribution generated by Exponential Gain Distribution Max Flux = (W 2 | |E d )/(f 0 p ln(2)) Gain Energy Density Energy Stacktail Core Stacktail Core Using log scales on vertical axis
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 22 Implementation in Accumulator o How do we build an exponential gain distribution? o Beam Pickups: Charged Particles: E & B fields generate image currents in beam pipe Pickup disrupts image currents, inducing a voltage signal Octave Bandwidth (1-2, 2-4,4-8 GHz) Output is combined using binary combiner boards to make a phased antenna array
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 23 Beam Pickups o At A: Current induced by voltage across junction splits in two, 1/2 goes out, 1/2 travels with image current A I
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 24 Beam Pickups o At B: Current splits in two paths, now with OPPOSITE sign Into load resistor ~ 0 current Two current pulses out signal line B I T = L/ c
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 25 Current Intercepted by Pickup In areas of momentum dispersion D Placement of pickups to give proper gain distribution +w/2-w/2 y x xx d Current Distribution Use Method of Images
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 26 Accumulator Pickups Placement number of pickups amplification used to build gain shape Also use Notch filters to zero signal at core Stacktail Core = A - B Energy Gain Energy Stacktail Core
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 27 Accumulator Stacktail o Not quite as simple: -Real part of gain cools beam frequency depends on momentum f/f = - p/p (higher f at lower p) Position depends on momentum x = D p/p Particles at different positions have different flight times Cooling system delay constant »OUT OF PHASE WITH COOLING SYSTEM AS MOMENTUM CHANGES
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 28 Accumulator Stacktail Use two sets of pickups at different Energies to create exponential Distribution with desired phase Characteristics Stacktail Design Goal For Run II E d ~ 7 MeV Flux ~ 35 mA/hour Show simulation!
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 29 Performance Measurements o Fit to exponential in region of stacktail (845-875 in these units) o Calculate Maximum Flux for fitted gain shape o Different beam currents o Independent of Stack Size o Max Flux ~30 mA/hour
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 30 Performance Measurements EngineeringRun IiaBest Achieved Run Goal Protons on Target3.8e125e125e12 Cycle Time (sec)3.21.52.2 Production Efficiency102015 (pbars/10 6 protons) Stacking Rate 41810.3 (1e10 per hour) Stacking rate limited by input flux and cycle time »Which we limit because of core-stacktail coupling problems
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 31 Performance Measurements o Best Performance: 39.9 mA in 4 hours o Restricted by core- stacktail couplings
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 32 Stacktail - Core Coupling o Coupling in regions where frequency bands overlap 2-4 GHz ! much larger than previous overlap o Two phenomena Coherent beam feedback »Stacktail kicks beam and coherent motion is seen at core Misalignment gives transverse - longitudinal coupling »Try to correct with kickers Pickup Kicker Beam Since beam does not decohere, Carry information back to pickup Feedback! Schottky Pickup Stacktail Core
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 33 Stacktail Schottky Signals Core Freshly injected beam Later in cycle Stacktail Leg1
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 34 Core 2-4 Schottky Signals Core Freshly injected beam Later in cycle Stacktail Leg1
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 35 Pbar Longitudinal Distribution
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Paul Derwent 18-Oct-15 36 Antiprotons & the Collider o From the H - source, Linac, booster, Main Injector 120 GeV protons on the target o From the target: 8 GeV antiprotons through the Debuncher & Accumulator o Send them off to the Tevatron & D0 & CDF
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