Physical Review Special Topics. Accelerators and Beams (Jul 2005)

Adjustable, short focal length permanent-magnet quadrupole based electron beam final focus system

  • J. K. Lim,
  • P. Frigola,
  • G. Travish,
  • J. B. Rosenzweig,
  • S. G. Anderson,
  • W. J. Brown,
  • J. S. Jacob,
  • C. L. Robbins,
  • A. M. Tremaine

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.8.072401
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 8, no. 7
p. 072401

Abstract

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Advanced high-brightness beam applications such as inverse-Compton scattering (ICS) depend on achieving of ultrasmall spot sizes in high current beams. Modern injectors and compressors enable the production of high-brightness beams having needed short bunch lengths and small emittances. Along with these beam properties comes the need to produce tighter foci, using stronger, shorter focal length optics. An approach to creating such strong focusing systems using high-field, small-bore permanent-magnet quadrupoles (PMQs) is reported here. A final-focus system employing three PMQs, each composed of 16 neodymium iron boride sectors in a Halbach geometry has been installed in the PLEIADES ICS experiment. The field gradient in these PMQs is 560 T/m, the highest ever reported in a magnetic optics system. As the magnets are of a fixed field strength, the focusing system is tuned by adjusting the position of the three magnets along the beam line axis, in analogy to familiar camera optics. This paper discusses the details of the focusing system, simulation, design, fabrication, and experimental procedure in creating ultrasmall beams at PLEIADES.