Physical Review Accelerators and Beams (Feb 2018)

Use of a corrugated beam pipe as a passive deflector for bunch length measurements

  • Jimin Seok,
  • Moses Chung,
  • Heung-Sik Kang,
  • Chang-Ki Min,
  • Donghyun Na

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevAccelBeams.21.022801
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 21, no. 2
p. 022801

Abstract

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We report the experimental demonstration of bunch length measurements using a corrugated metallic beam pipe as a passive deflector. The corrugated beam pipe has been adopted for reducing longitudinal chirping after the bunch compressors in several XFEL facilities worldwide. In the meantime, there have been attempts to measure the electron bunch’s longitudinal current profile using the dipole wakefields generated in the corrugated pipe. Nevertheless, the bunch shape reconstructed from the nonlinearly deflected beam suffers from significant distortion, particularly near the head of the bunch. In this paper, we introduce an iterative process to improve the resolution of the bunch shape reconstruction. The astra and elegant simulations have been performed for pencil beam and cigar beam cases, in order to verify the effectiveness of the reconstruction process. To overcome the undesirable effects of transverse beam spreads, a measurement scheme involving both the corrugated beam pipe and the spectrometer magnet has been employed, both of which do not require a dedicated (and likely very expensive) rf system. A proof-of-principle experiment was carried out at Pohang Accelerator Laboratory (PAL) Injector Test Facility (ITF), and its results are discussed together with a comparison with the rf deflector measurement.