Physical Review Accelerators and Beams (Mar 2023)

Measurement of the longitudinal bunch-shape distribution for a high-intensity negative hydrogen ion beam in the low-energy region

  • R. Kitamura,
  • K. Futatsukawa,
  • N. Hayashi,
  • K. Hirano,
  • Y. Kondo,
  • S. Kosaka,
  • T. Miyao,
  • T. Morishita,
  • Y. Nemoto,
  • H. Oguri

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevAccelBeams.26.032802
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 26, no. 3
p. 032802

Abstract

Read online Read online

A bunch-shape monitor (BSM) is a useful device for performing longitudinal beam tuning using the pointwise longitudinal phase distribution measured at selected points in the beam transportation. To measure the longitudinal phase distribution of a low-energy negative hydrogen (H^{-}) ion beam, highly oriented pyrolytic graphite (HOPG) was adopted for the secondary-electron-emission target to mitigate the thermal damage due to the high-intensity beam loading. The HOPG target enabled the measurement of the longitudinal phase distribution at the center of a 3-MeV H^{-} ion beam with a high peak current of about 50 mA. The longitudinal bunch width was measured using HOPG-BSM at the test stand, which was consistent with the beam simulation. The correlation measurement between the beam transverse and longitudinal planes was demonstrated using HOPG-BSM. The longitudinal Twiss and emittance measurement with the longitudinal Q-scan method was conducted using HOPG-BSM. The measured longitudinal emittance is consistent with the beam simulation using the radio-frequency quadrupole design input.