Physical Review Special Topics. Accelerators and Beams (Jan 2008)

Electron cloud generation and trapping in a quadrupole magnet at the Los Alamos proton storage ring

  • Robert J. Macek,
  • Andrew A. Browman,
  • John E. Ledford,
  • Michael J. Borden,
  • James F. O’Hara,
  • Rodney C. McCrady,
  • Lawrence J. Rybarcyk,
  • Thomas Spickermann,
  • Thomas J. Zaugg,
  • Mauro T. F. Pivi

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.11.010101
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 11, no. 1
p. 010101

Abstract

Read online Read online

Recent beam physics studies on the two-stream e-p instability at the LANL proton storage ring (PSR) have focused on the role of the electron cloud generated in quadrupole magnets where primary electrons, which seed beam-induced multipacting, are expected to be largest due to grazing angle losses from the beam halo. A new diagnostic to measure electron cloud formation and trapping in a quadrupole magnet has been developed, installed, and successfully tested at PSR. Beam studies using this diagnostic show that the “prompt” electron flux striking the wall in a quadrupole is comparable to the prompt signal in the adjacent drift space. In addition, the “swept” electron signal, obtained using the sweeping feature of the diagnostic after the beam was extracted from the ring, was larger than expected and decayed slowly with an exponential time constant of 50 to 100 μs. Other measurements include the cumulative energy spectra of prompt electrons and the variation of both prompt and swept electron signals with beam intensity. Experimental results were also obtained which suggest that a good fraction of the electrons observed in the adjacent drift space for the typical beam conditions in the 2006 run cycle were seeded by electrons ejected from the quadrupole.