Measurement and Simulation of Source-Generated Halos in the University of Maryland Electron Ring (UMER)

POSTER

Abstract

An area of nonlinear beam physics that is important in a number of beam systems, and is inadequately understood, is the generation and evolution of beam halos. Study of beam halos therefore has served as one rationale for recent research on UMER. While it was expected that halo formation would primarily result from nonlinear dynamics during beam propagation, recent experiments and simulations have instead identified imperfections in the source geometry, particularly in the region near the emitter edge, as a potentially significant source of halo particles. The edge-generated halo particles, both in the experiments and the simulations are found to pass through the center of the beam a short distance downstream of the anode plane. Understanding the detailed evolution of these particle orbits is therefore important to designing any aperture to remove the beam halo. Both experimental data and simulations will be presented to illustrate the details of this process, as well as proposed means of mitigation.

*Work supported by the US DOE under contract Nos. DE-FG02-02ER54672 and DE-FG02-94ER40855 (UMD), and DE-AC02-05CH11231 (LBNL) and W-7405-ENG-48 (LLNL)

Authors

  • Irving Haber

    • University of Maryland
    • Institute for Research in Electronics and Applied Physics
  • S. Bernal

    • University of Maryland
  • R.B. Feldman

    • University of Maryland
  • Rami Kishek

    • University of Maryland, College Park
    • University of Maryland
    • Institute for Research in Electronics and Applied Physics
  • Patrick O'Shea

    • University of Maryland
    • Institute for Research in Electronics and Applied Physics
  • Christos Papadopoulos

    • University of Maryland
    • University of Maryland, College Park
  • M. Reiser

    • University of Maryland
  • Diktys Stratakis

    • University of Maryland
    • Institute for Research in Electronics and Applied Physics
  • Mark Walter

    • University of Maryland
    • Institute for Research in Electronics and Applied Physics
  • A. Friedman

    • LLNL
  • D.P. Grote

    • LLNL
  • J.-L. Vay

    • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
    • LBNL