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Bukh, Boris; Lund, Steven M.
Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA (United States). Funding organisation: USDOE Director, Office of Science. Fusion Energy Sciences (United States)2003
Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA (United States). Funding organisation: USDOE Director, Office of Science. Fusion Energy Sciences (United States)2003
AbstractAbstract
[en] We present an analysis of envelope perturbations evolving in the limit of a fully space-charge depressed (zero emittance) beam in periodic, thin-lens focusing channels. Both periodic solenoidal and FODO quadrupole focusing channels are analyzed. The phase advance and growth rate of normal mode perturbations are analytically calculated as a function of the undepressed particle phase advance to characterize the evolution of envelope perturbations
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1 May 2003; 3 p; 2003 Particle Accelerator Conference (PAC 2003); Portland, OR (United States); 12-16 May 2003; HIFAN--1261; AC03-76SF00098; Also available from OSTI as DE00815527; PURL: https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/815527-61iYNT/native/
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Bazouin, Guillaume; Lund, Steven M.
Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA (United States). Funding organisation: Accelerator and Fusion Research Division (United States)2011
Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA (United States). Funding organisation: Accelerator and Fusion Research Division (United States)2011
AbstractAbstract
[en] In a recent paper, S. M. Lund, A. Friedman, and G. Bazouin, Sheet beam model for intense space-charge: with application to Debye screening and the distribution of particle oscillation frequencies in a thermal equilibrium beam, in press, Phys. Rev. Special Topics - Accel. and Beams (2011), a 1D sheet beam model was extensively analyzed. In this complementary paper, we present details of a numerical procedure developed to construct the self-consistent electrostatic potential and density profile of a thermal equilibrium sheet beam distribution. This procedure effectively circumvents pathologies which can prevent use of standard numerical integration techniques when space-charge intensity is high. The procedure employs transformations and is straightforward to implement with standard numerical methods and produces accurate solutions which can be applied to thermal equilibria with arbitrarily strong space-charge intensity up to the applied focusing limit.
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1 Apr 2011; 5 p; PAC'11: Particle Accelerator Conference; New York, NY (United States); 28 Mar - 1 Apr 2011; AC02-05CH11231; Also available from OSTI as DE01015569; PURL: https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/1015569-JQiScC/
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Lund, Steven M.; Friedman, Alex; Bazouin, Guillaume
Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA (United States). Funding organisation: Accelerator and Fusion Research Division (United States)2011
Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA (United States). Funding organisation: Accelerator and Fusion Research Division (United States)2011
AbstractAbstract
[en] A one-dimensional Vlasov-Poisson model for sheet beams is reviewed and extended to provide a simple framework for analysis of space-charge effects. Centroid and rms envelope equations including image charge effects are derived and reasonable parameter equivalences with commonly employed 2D transverse models of unbunched beams are established. This sheet beam model is then applied to analyze several problems of fundamental interest. A sheet beam thermal equilibrium distribution in a continuous focusing channel is constructed and shown to have analogous properties to two- d three-dimensional thermal equilibrium models in terms of the equilibrium structure and Deybe screening properties. The simpler formulation for sheet beams is exploited to explicitly calculate the distribution of particle oscillation frequencies within a thermal equilibrium beam. It is shown that as space-charge intensity increases, the frequency distribution becomes broad, suggesting that beams with strong space-charge can have improved stability.
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LBNL--4508E; AC02-05CH11231; Available from OSTI as DE01015568; PURL: https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/1015568-l3QQvr/
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Physical Review Special Topics. Accelerators and Beams; ISSN 1098-4402; ; (Issue Jan 2011); p. 31
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Lund, Steven M.; Kikuchi, Takashi; Davidson, Ronald C.
Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA (United States). Funding organisation: Accelerator and Fusion Research Division (United States)2007
Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA (United States). Funding organisation: Accelerator and Fusion Research Division (United States)2007
AbstractAbstract
[en] Self-consistent Vlasov-Poisson simulations of beams with high space-charge intensity often require specification of initial phase-space distributions that reflect properties of a beam that is well adapted to the transport channel--both in terms of low-order rms (envelope) properties as well as the higher-order phase-space structure. Here, we first review broad classes of kinetic distributions commonly in use as initial Vlasov distributions in simulations of unbunched or weakly bunched beams with intense space-charge fields including: the Kapchinskij-Vladimirskij (KV) equilibrium, continuous-focusing equilibria with specific detailed examples, and various non-equilibrium distributions, such as the semi-Gaussian distribution and distributions formed from specified functions of linear-field Courant-Snyder invariants. Important practical details necessary to specify these distributions in terms of usual accelerator inputs are presented in a unified format. Building on this presentation, a new class of approximate initial kinetic distributions are constructed using transformations that preserve linear-focusing single-particle Courant-Snyder invariants to map initial continuous-focusing equilibrium distributions to a form more appropriate for non-continuous focusing channels. Self-consistent particle-in-cell simulations are employed to show that the approximate initial distributions generated in this manner are better adapted to the focusing channels for beams with high space-charge intensity. This improved capability enables simulation applications that more precisely probe intrinsic stability properties and machine performance
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3 Apr 2007; vp; AC02-05CH11231; Available from OSTI as DE00949038; PURL: https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/949038-ILHiw6/; Also in: Physical Review Special Topics -- Accelerator and Beams, ISSN 1098-4402, doi 10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.10.064203
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Davidson, Ronald C.; Hong Qin; Lund, Steven M.
Princeton Plasma Physics Lab., NJ (United States). Funding organisation: USDOE Office of Science (Seychelles) (US)2003
Princeton Plasma Physics Lab., NJ (United States). Funding organisation: USDOE Office of Science (Seychelles) (US)2003
AbstractAbstract
[en] An intense charged-particle beam with directed kinetic energy (λb-1)mbc2 propagates in the z-direction through an applied focusing field with transverse focusing force modeled by Ffoc = -λbmbωbeta2 (perpendicular) x (perpendicular) in the smooth focusing approximation. This paper examines properties of the axisymmetric, truncated thermal equilibrium distribution F(sub)b(r,p perpendicular) = A exp (-H Perpendicular/T perpendicular (sub)b) = (H perpendicular-E(sub)b), where A, T perpendicular (sub)b, and E (sub)b are positive constants, and H perpendicular is the Hamiltonian for transverse particle motion. The equilibrium profiles for beam number density, n(sub)b(r) = * d2pF(sub)b(r,p perpendicular), and transverse temperature, T perpendicular (sub)b(r) = * d2p(p2 perpendicular/2 lambda (sbu)bm (sub)b)F(sub)b(r,p perpendicular), are calculated self-consistently including space-charge effects. Several properties of the equilibrium profiles are noteworthy. For example, the beam has a sharp outer edge radius r(sub)b with n(sub)b(r greater than or equal to rb) = 0, where r(sub)b depends on the value of E(sub)b/T (sub)perpendicular(sub)b. In addition, unlike the choice of a semi-Gaussian distribution, FSG(sub)b = A exp (-p2(sub)perpendicular/2lambda(sub)bm(sub)bTperpendicular(sub)b) = (r-r(sub)b), the truncated thermal equilibrium distribution F(sub)b(r,p) depends on (r,p) only through the single-particle constant of the motion Hperpendiuclar and is therefore a true steady-state solution (*/*t = 0) of the nonlinear Vlasov-Maxwell equations
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26 Feb 2003; 20 p; AC--02-76CH03073; Also available from OSTI as DE00812055; PURL: https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/812055-kTn5nk/native/
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Lund, Steven M.; Barnard, John J.; Lee, Edward P.
Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA (United States). Funding organisation: USDOE Director, Office of Science (United States)2001
Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA (United States). Funding organisation: USDOE Director, Office of Science (United States)2001
AbstractAbstract
[en] Beams injected into a linear focusing channel typically have some degree of space-charge nonuniformity. In general, injected particle distributions with systematic charge nonuniformities are not equilibria of the focusing channel and launch a broad spectrum of collective modes. These modes can phase-mix and have nonlinear wave-wave interactions which, at high space-charge intensities, results in a relaxation to a more thermal-like distribution characterized by a uniform density profile. This thermalization can transfer self-field energy from the initial space-charge nonuniformity to the local particle temperature, thereby increasing beam phase space area (emittance growth). In this paper, we employ a simple kinetic model of a continuous focusing channel and build on previous work that applied system energy and charge conservation to quantify emittance growth associated with the collective thermalization of an initial azimuthally symmetric, rms matched beam with a radial density profile that is hollowed or peaked. This emittance growth is shown to be surprisingly modest even for high beam intensities with significant radial structure in the initial density profile
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1 Mar 2001; [vp.]; HIFAN--1081; AC03-76SF00098; Available from OSTI as DE00799550; www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/799550-18n8sz/native/
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Lund, Steven M.; Wootton, Christopher J.; Lee, Edward P.
Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA (United States). Funding organisation: Fusion Research Division (United States)2008
Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA (United States). Funding organisation: Fusion Research Division (United States)2008
AbstractAbstract
[en] Linear equations of motion are derived that describe small-amplitude centroid oscillations induced by displacement and rotational misalignments of the focusing solenoids in the transport lattice, dipole steering elements, and initial centroid offset errors. These equations are analyzed in a local rotating Larmor frame to derive complex-variable 'alignment functions' and 'bending functions' that efficiently describe the characteristics of the centroid oscillations induced by mechanical misalignments of the solenoids and dipole steering elements. The alignment and bending functions depend only on properties of the ideal lattice in the absence of errors and steering and have associated expansion amplitudes set by the misalignments and steering fields. Applications of this formulation are presented for statistical analysis of centroid deviations, calculation of actual lattice misalignments from centroid measurements, and optimal beam steering
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1 Aug 2008; 20 p; Heavy Ion Fusion Symposium 2008; Tokyo (Japan); 2-9 Aug 2008; AC02-05CH11231; Also available from OSTI as DE00941174; PURL: https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/941174-9ouS3W/
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Davidson, Ronald C.; Dorf, Mikhail A.; Kaganovich, Igor D.; Qin, Hong; Startsev, Edward A.; Rose, David V.; Lund, Steven M.; Welch, Dale R.; Sefkow, Adam
Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA (United States). Funding organisation: Accelerator and Fusion Research Division (United States)2008
Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, Berkeley, CA (United States). Funding organisation: Accelerator and Fusion Research Division (United States)2008
AbstractAbstract
[en] This paper presents a survey of the present theoretical understanding based on advanced analytical and numerical studies of collective processes and beam-plasma interactions in intense heavy ion beams for applications to ion-beam-driven high energy density physics and heavy ion fusion. The topics include: discussion of the conditions for quiescent beam propagation over long distances; and the electrostatic Harris instability and the transverse electromagnetic Weibel instability in highly anisotropic, intense one-component ion beams. In the longitudinal drift compression and transverse compression regions, collective processes associated with the interaction of the intense ion beam with a charge-neutralizing background plasma are described, including the electrostatic electron-ion two-stream instability, the multispecies electromagnetic Weibel instability, and collective excitations in the presence of a solenoidal magnetic field. The effects of a velocity tilt on reducing two-stream instability growth rates are also discussed. Operating regimes are identified where the possible deleterious effects of collective processes on beam quality are minimized
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19 Jun 2008; 33 p; HIF08: Heavy Ion Fusion Symposium 2008; Tokyo (Japan); 2-9 Aug 2008; AC02-05CH11231; Also available from OSTI as DE00946737; PURL: https://www.osti.gov/servlets/purl/946737-vUv5OH/
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AbstractAbstract
[en] Simple, two-dimensional Vlasov-Poisson descriptions of thermal equilibrium have been applied to both an unbunched ion beam propagating in a continuous linear focusing channel and an unneutralized, single-species plasma confined in a Penning-Malmberg trap geometry. In scaled variables, these two thermal equilibrium systems result in an identical nonlinear equation that must be solved to describe the radial density and/or potential of the equilibrium. Numerous publications have been based on numerical solutions of the highly nonlinear equilibrium equation. Following a brief review of the thermal equilibrium model, we construct approximate, closed-form analytical solutions to the equilibrium equation that are accurate over a wide range of system parameters
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(c) 2008 American Institute of Physics; Country of input: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
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AbstractAbstract
[en] We review the derivation of moment equations which include the effects of space charge and dispersion in bends first presented elsewhere. These equations generalize the familiar envelope equations to include the dispersive effects of bends. We review the application of these equations to the calculation of the change in emittance resulting from a sharp transition from a straight section to a bend section, using an energy conservation constraint. Comparisons of detailed 2D and 3D simulations of intense beams in rings using the WARP code are made with results obtained from the moment equations. We also compare the analysis carried out to more recent analyses. We further examine self-consistent distributions of beams in bends and discuss the relevance of these distributions to the moment equation formulation
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Workshop on space charge physics in high intensity hadron rings; Shelter Island, NY (United States); 4-7 May 1998; CONTRACT W-7405-ENG-48; (c) 1998 American Institute of Physics.; Country of input: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA)
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