Zhou 1991 0008
Zhou 1991 0008
Zhou 1991 0008
*Present
Angeles,
address:
CA 90024
UCLA Dept. of Physics, 405 Hilgard Ave., Los E,(r)= V(l - e-5)
t Operated by the Universities Research Association under con-
tract with the U. S. Department of Energy where X is the beam line charge density.
0-7803-0135-8/91$01.00 @IEEE
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PAC 1991
The displacement of the ion from the beam center nor- values if the driving frequency is modulated from above
malized by the beam rms size u, i = $[z - bcos(wt)], is that frequency downward, which is the concept frequency
then described by modulation shaking based upon.
In general function G(a, zs) cannot be expressed in
2 = A(w2 -WC”) cos(w2) - w$ - x0) - w:f(Z) closed form. Results by numerical methods are shown in
Fig. 2. As x0 increases G not only drops in magnitud le but
where wb = dv qX mu is ’ t h e maximum ion bounce fre-
quency, A = b/c and xeu is the horizontal position of
the ion’s guiding center. Unlike in the case of bounce
shaking where the corresponding quantity is always zero,
ze here is in general not. For simplification we take
f(Z) = $ [l - exp (- i$,] which implies that we are only
considering ions close to the vertical center of the beam.
We look for the equilibrium solution of the form
1
Discussion
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l I 4
the same hysteresis “lock on” effect which is crucial in re- --1 LJ_l-1-1-1-1-1-L'-'-~-~~-~-~-~-~-~-~-~
ducing neutralization efFects[3]. However because of the .e - 3
very different frequencies of the cyclotron and bounce mo- f i
tion, the two ways of shaking do have different properties. .6 - 1 -2
The cyclotron frequency w,, at least in our case, is much ;
higher than the bounce frequency wb. The correspond- -1
ing frequency spread in cyclotron shaking is a factor of
W,/wb = 15 smaller than that in bounce shaking. This dif-
ference affects the frequency modulation process because -250
“““““““““‘l”L’
-200 -150 -100 -50 0
the beam response to the driving voltage depends strongly Distance (cm)
on the frequency and that has a big impact on the ion re-
sponse (see Fig. 1). Ob viously the beam response to the
driving voltage varies rapidly around betatron sidebands.
If in the process of frequency modulation the beam re- Figure 3: Dipole Field and Ion Motion
sponse changes too fast, that could cause ions to loose the
lock-on and limit the effectiveness of modulated frequency
at a non-negligible rate in the Fermilab antiproton accu-
bounce shaking. The small frequency range of cyclotron
mulator .
shaking helps in stabilizing the beam response in the whole
In short we conclude that the cyclotron shaking is less
process of frequency change. The factor of 15 in the case
susceptible to the change of beam response to external
of Fermilab accumulator reduces the range to only a small
driving voltage and therefore may be more effective in re-
fraction of revolution frequency. Note that if the cyclotron
ducing ion neutralization effects. In addition, the large
frequency falls very near a betatron side band, a beam-ion
energy associated with exciting cyclotron orbits of radii on
instability may be excited. This subject is analyzed in a
the order of the beam size may aid significantly in final
separate paper[7].
removal of the ions from the beam. Experimental study
The theory presented earlier only deals with equilib- is needed, and is presently being pursued on the Fermilab
rium responses while frequency modulation inevitably in- antiproton accumulator.
troduces time varying effects. The simulation shows that The authors would like to thank R. Alves Pires and A.
cyclotron shaking with frequency modulation has a longer Poncet for their valuable help.
lasting transient ion motion which requires a longer mod-
ulation period. The long transient in the ion motion
in the case of driving cyclotron resonant motion is eas- References
ily understood by noting that there is a lot more kinetic
energy in a cyclotron orbit than in a bounce orbit of PI J. Marriner and A. Poncet, “Neutralization Experi-
the same horizontal amplitude. For the cases where cy- ments with Proton and Antiproton Stacks - Ion Shak-
clotron shaking are effective, the cyclotron kinetic energy ing”, Pbar-note 481, Fermilab Internal Note, March
is Ek = (x,w,)2m/2 N 500 eV, and the bounce kinetic 1989.
energy is smaller by a factor of (wb/w,)‘, or 2.2 eV. When Alves Pires, “Beam Shaking for the Fermilab An-
a bounce-shaken ion has exited the end of the magnets
PI R.
tiproton Accumulator”, Proceeding of the Fermilab III
through its E x B drift motion, its removal is still predi- Instability Workshop, 1990
cated on adequate clearing voltages, which may not always
be provided. If the ion is cyclotron-shaken, however, it can PI Yuri Orlov, “The Suppression of Transverse Instabili-
by virtue of its large energy easily escape the beam poten- ties in the CERN AA by Shaking the j Beam”, CERN
tial well and clear completely. This is indeed verified by PS/89-Ol(AR), 1989.
simulation. Shown in Fig. 3 are the normalized magnetic
field and a sample of ion motion driven by frequency mod- PI R. Alves Pires and R. DilZio, “On the Theory of Shak-
ing”, to be published
ulated cyclotron shaking. Notice that the tracks shown are
actually the alias of ion’s oscillation motion. The longitu- [51 N. Krylov and N. Bogoliubov, Introduction to Nonlin-
dinal positions that locked-on ions escape the beam and ear Mechanics (Princeton University Press, Princeton,
hit the vacuum wall are concentrated in a small range. N.J., 1943)
This fact provides a potential diagnostic to directly mea-
sure the effect of the cyclotron shaking, by collecting these PI Ronald E. Mickens, Introduction to Nonlinear Oscil-
energetic ions, and measuring their energy spectra. In ad- lations (Cambridge University Press, 1981) (1989) p.
800
dition, inside the magnet, if the cyclotron-shaken ion has
an elastic collision with an ion, a neutral, or a beam parti- PI J.B. Rosenzweig, “Beam-Ion Cyclotron Resonance
cle which redirects even 5% of its energy into the vertical Instability”, Proceedings of Fermilab III Instability
plane, it will escape the beam entirely. Preliminary calcu- Workshop, July 1990
lations indicate that this beneficial phenomenon may occur
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