Beam Diagnostic Needs and Challenges of some Future Light Sources Pavel Evtushenko, JLab This talk to a large extend based on discussion and comments:

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Sub-ps bunch length measurements at the JLab FEL with coherent transition radiation (CTR) and “Martin-Puplett” interferometer Pavel Evtushenko, JLab 
Advertisements

Diagnostics and Instrumentation for ERL  Pieces of ERL and their beam specifics  Injector diagnostics  Drive Laser diagnostics  Problems with 2-beam.
Beam Dynamics in MeRHIC Yue Hao On behalf of MeRHIC/eRHIC working group.
Halo, SLAC, 2014 Towards wire scanner measurements with Large Dynamic Range (> 10 6 ) Pavel Evtushenko, Jefferson Lab.
SPEAR3 short pulse development J. Safranek for the SSRL accelerator physics group* Outline: Timing mode fill patterns Short bunches –Low alpha Bunch length.
1 Bates XFEL Linac and Bunch Compressor Dynamics 1. Linac Layout and General Beam Parameter 2. Bunch Compressor –System Details (RF, Magnet Chicane) –Linear.
Linear Collider Bunch Compressors Andy Wolski Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory USPAS Santa Barbara, June 2003.
Chris Tennant Jefferson Laboratory March 15, 2013 “Workshop to Explore Physics Opportunities with Intense, Polarized Electron Beams up to 300 MeV”
Commissioning August & September. 2 Agenda 11:20 Coffee 11:30 Introduction Sue S 11:35 Controls (an overview) Brian M 10:55 Controls & Data Acquisition.
ILC RF phase stability requirements and how can we demonstrate them Sergei Nagaitsev Oct 24, 2007.
Hard X-ray FELs (Overview) Zhirong Huang March 6, 2012 FLS2012 Workshop, Jefferson Lab.
Bunch compressor design for eRHIC Yichao Jing and Vladimir Litvinenko FLS2012, Newport News, VA 3/8/2012.
New Electron Beam Test Facility EBTF at Daresbury Laboratory B.L. Militsyn on behalf of the ASTeC team Accelerator Science and Technology Centre Science.
FEL Beam Dynami cs FEL Beam Dynamics T. Limberg FEL driver linac operation with very short electron bunches.
Injector Setup/Mini-phase  Description of injector setup  sources of drift  Mini-phase procedure for injector  Checking the rest of the machine. Stephen.
Accelerator and Detector R&D, August Diagnostics Related to the Unwanted Beam Pavel Evtushenko, Jlab FEL.
Transverse emittance Two different techniques were used to measure the transverse emittance. The multislit mask in the injector 9 MeV Quadrupole scan for.
Longitudinal transfer function a.k.a. (M 55 ) measurements at the JLab FEL Pavel Evtushenko, JLab  Jlab IR/UV upgrade longitudinal phase space evolution.
Low Emittance RF Gun Developments for PAL-XFEL
S. De Santis “Measurement of the Beam Longitudinal Profile in a Storage Ring by Non-Linear Laser Mixing” - BIW 2004 May, 5th Measurement of the Beam Longitudinal.
Transverse Profiling of an Intense FEL X-Ray Beam Using a Probe Electron Beam Patrick Krejcik SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory.
The Future of Photon Science and Free-Electron Lasers Ingolf Lindau Lund University and Stanford University MAX-Lab and Synchrotron Light Research KTH,
A U.S. Department of Energy Office of Science Laboratory Operated by The University of Chicago Argonne National Laboratory Office of Science U.S. Department.
LCLS_II High Rep Rate Operation and Femtosecond Timing J. Frisch 7/22/15.
FLASH II. The results from FLASH II tests Sven Ackermann FEL seminar Hamburg, April 23 th, 2013.
Beam Dynamics and FEL Simulations for FLASH Igor Zagorodnov and Martin Dohlus Beam Dynamics Meeting, DESY.
16 August 2005PT for US BC Task Force1 Two Stage Bunch Compressor Proposal Snowmass WG1 “It’s the latest wave That you’ve been craving for The old ideal.
Operated by the Southeastern Universities Research Association for the U.S. Dept. Of Energy Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility FEL Bunch length.
Optimization of Compact X-ray Free-electron Lasers Sven Reiche May 27 th 2011.
A bunch compressor design and several X-band FELs Yipeng Sun, ARD/SLAC , LCLS-II meeting.
X-RAY LIGHT SOURCE BY INVERSE COMPTON SCATTERING OF CSR FLS Mar. 6 Miho Shimada High Energy Research Accelerator Organization, KEK.
Compact X-ray & Emittance Measurement by Laser Compton Scattering Zhi Zhao Jan. 31, 2014.
Diagnostics Overview for the LCLS Presented by Josef Frisch For the LCLS ANL / LBNL / LLNL / SLAC.
R&D opportunities for photoinjectors Renkai Li 10/12/2015 FACET-II Science Opportunities Workshops October, 2015 SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory.
Beam Halo Monitoring using Optical Diagnostics Hao Zhang University of Maryland/University of Liverpool/Cockcroft Institute.
Electron Sources for ERLs – Requirements and First Ideas Andrew Burrill FLS 2012 “The workshop is intended to discuss technologies appropriate for a next.
Christopher Gerth DL/RAL Joint Workshop 28-29/4/04 Modelling of the ERLP injector system Christopher Gerth ASTeC, Daresbury Laboratory.
February 5, 2005D. Rubin - Cornell1 CESR-c Status -Operations/Luminosity -Machine studies -Simulation and modeling -4.1GeV.
The Next Generation Light Source Test Facility at Daresbury Jim Clarke ASTeC, STFC Daresbury Laboratory Ultra Bright Electron Sources Workshop, Daresbury,
Lessons Learned From the First Operation of the LCLS for Users Presented by Josef Frisch For the LCLS March 14, 2010.
Accelerator Laboratory of Tsinghua University Generation, measurement and applications of high brightness electron beam Dao Xiang Apr-17, /37.
J. Corlett. June 16, 2006 A Future Light Source for LBNL Facility Vision and R&D plan John Corlett ALS Scientific Advisory Committee Meeting June 16, 2006.
T. Atkinson*, A. Matveenko, A. Bondarenko, Y. Petenev Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin für Materialien und Energie The Femto-Science Factory: A Multi-turn ERL.
Experience with Novosibirsk FEL Getmanov Yaroslav Budker INP, Russia Dec. 2012, Berlin, Germany Unwanted Beam Workshop.
What did we learn from TTF1 FEL? P. Castro (DESY).
A single-shot method for measuring fs bunches in linac-based FELs Z. Huang, K. Bane, Y. Ding, P. Emma.
Applications of transverse deflecting cavities in x-ray free-electron lasers Yuantao Ding SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory7/18/2012.
Bunch Shaping for Future Dielectric Wakefield Accelerators W. Gai Mini-Workshop on Deflecting/Crabbing RF Cavity Research and application in Accelerators.
ESLS Workshop Nov 2015 MAX IV 3 GeV Ring Commissioning Pedro F. Tavares & Åke Andersson, on behalf of the whole MAX IV team.
Seeding in the presence of microbunching
Beam Commissioning Adam Bartnik.
LCLS_II High Rep Rate Operation and Femtosecond Timing
Multi-bunch Operation for LCLS, LCLS_II, LCLS_2025
Beam dynamics for an X-band LINAC driving a 1 keV FEL
Slice Parameter Measurements at the SwissFEL Injector Test Facility
Tunable Electron Bunch Train Generation at Tsinghua University
Longitudinal Diagnostics for start-up
WG2 Summary: Diagnostics, measurements, and commissioning
Review of Application to SASE-FELs
The Cornell High Brightness Injector
Cornell Injector Performance
Diagnostics overview and FB for the XFEL bunch compressors
Z. Huang LCLS Lehman Review May 14, 2009
MEBT1&2 design study for C-ADS
High Level Physics Applications for LCLS Commissioning
Modified Beam Parameter Range
Linac Diagnostics Patrick Krejcik, SLAC April 24, 2002
Diagnostics RF and Feedback
Linac Diagnostics Commissioning Experience
Introduction to Free Electron Lasers Zhirong Huang
Presentation transcript:

Beam Diagnostic Needs and Challenges of some Future Light Sources Pavel Evtushenko, JLab This talk to a large extend based on discussion and comments: Storage Rings and USRs:Michael Borland, Glenn Decker, Fernando Sannibale Single Pass XFELs:Henrik Loos, Joe Frisch ERLs:Bruce Dunham

Energy Recovery LINACs ERLs Outline  Essence of and ERL based LS – run high average current (~ 100 mA) of non equilibrium (Gaussian) beam with high peak brightness  Injector: - generate and maintain high peak brightness beam - monitor when going to high average current  Full current beam vs. tune-up beam  Two beams in the LINACs – position and transverse profile  Large Dynamic range – understanding beam Halo origins and evolution  Non Gaussian beams – can be really difficult, hopefully better with well built injectors

Drive Laser “ghost” pulses  For machine tune up, beam studies, intercepting diagnostics a “diagnostic beam” with very low average current but nominal bunch charge is used (all beam can be lost without damaging machine)  For example, JLab FEL: max rep. rate MHz (CW) diagnostic mode: rep. rate MHz (÷16), 250 μs / 2 Hz (÷2000) average current ~300 nA  Most of the laser pulses are “stopped” by EO cell(s), but the extinction ratio of the an EO cell is about 200 (typical), two in series ~ 4×10 4  Another example: want to reduce 1300 MHz (100 mA) to 300 nA (2 18 ) than for every bunch Q b we want we also get 6.55×Q b of “ghost” pulses (655 % !!!) we do not want  “ghost” pulses overall intensity must be kept much lower than real pulses!!! for “usual” measurements ~ 1% might be fine much bigger problem if want to study halo, let’s say effects, than “ghost” pulses should be kept at (???)

 Using a Log-amp is an easy way to diagnose presence of the “ghost” pulses  Log-amps with dynamic range 100 dB are available 631 uA (100%) 135 pC x MHz 5.7 uA (~0.9 %) MHz “ghost” pulses Drive Laser “ghost” pulses

Injector emittance trans. phase space  Mask or a slit is used to cut out small emittance dominated beamlet(s)  Beamlet profile measurements - Intensity (A) - width (w) - displacement (d)  Dynamic range ~ 500 if gain is fixed  Works for space charge dominated beams  Measures emittance and the Twiss parameters in a single shot  Destructive to the beam - works with diagnostics tune-up mode only (low duty cycle or average current)  How to monitor emittance or just beam size, when going to high current???

Injector emittance trans. phase space  Two fixed slits and beam scanning across them  Faraday cup for current measurements  Beam at several kHz - good measurements in a few seconds  Turns injector into an analog computer for optimizations Slide courtesy of B. Dunham, ERL 2011 I. Bazarov,et al PRSTAB 11, (2008)

Injector: Drive Laser and Cathode Diagnostics  Drive Laser transverse profile - quite easy with the dynamic range ~ 500, probably, need much higher for high current systems.  For longitudinal auto- and cross-correlation are used  DR of this is limited to ~ 10 4 (scattered light)  Time Correlated Single Photon Counting (TCSPC) can have a ps resolution and very large DR, well suited for high rep. rate sources, but takes time to measure  If/When longitudinal pulse shaping is used – must know that it is stable under high average power.  In a real machine for understanding of the dynamics i.e. to see what it is and comparison with a model measured laser distributions (transverse and longitudinal) needs to be used.  The same is true for the cathode Q.E. distribution of the cathode since the emission profile is the product of this and the laser distribution.

2-pass viewers  There are two beams in the LINAC  When trying to measure decelerated beam with a viewer the accelerated one gets also intercepted  Ultimately need non intercepting technique  JLab FEL uses OTR viewers with 5 mm hole (first beam goes in to the hole)  Difficult to make very thin and flat viewer with the hole  44% transparent mesh 5 micron thin  SRF cavities see the radiation due to the intercepted beam (and “does not like it”) JLab FEL LINAC OTR viewer  With the ultra bright beam OTR might be useless (OTR becomes COTR)  Wire scanners is a solution (no 2D distribution measured) difficult near LINAC  If the scanner measures radiation created by the wire, must take care of the background.  Need cheap Laser Wire scanner (take advantage of the high rep. rate i.e. )

2-pass BPM  There are a few ideas in work now; Both time domain and frequency domain  Solution can be very different for different machines - long recirculation time vs. short; - every bucket filled vs. not  The phase difference is not always 180 deg, especially when tuning machine this is some what a problem for both time domain and frequency domain  Time domain approach requires very-very-very carefully built pickups (no ringing) Motivation:  For differential orbit measurements with both beams in the LINAC  The decelerating beam gets adiabatically “anti-dumped” – small errors corrections in the beginning leads to big orbit change at the end  Orbit stabilization and feedback Stripline BPM signal

On LINAC non Gaussian beams Measured at JLab FEL  Obtained in a specially setup measurements to show how much beam is non Gaussian  It in not how we have it during standard operation  There is no Halo shown in this measurements in sense that all of it participates in FEL interaction (we think) and it is only Dynamic Range of ~ 500.  The techniques we can borrow from rings assume Gaussian beam and therefore are concentrating on beam size (RMS) measurements

Large dynamic range measurements Measured in JLab FEL injector, local intensity difference of the core and halo is about 300. (500 would measure as well) 10-bit frame grabber & a CCD with 57 dB dynamic range PARMELA simulations of the same setup with 3e5 particles: X and Y phase spaces, beam profile and its projection show the halo around the core of about 3e-3. Even in idealized system (simulation) beam dynamics can lead to formation of halo.

Single Pass FELs LCLS, FLASH, SACLA alike – extreme peak beam brightness  Transverse diagnostics – COTR (big setback), wire scanners (need faster)  Eventually very small transverse beams (diffraction limited resolution)  Longitudinal diagnostics – TCAV (great, but complex and expansive)  Timing – good for RF, main things is to sync the FEL to the user lasers  Orbit stability – (“not too bad”, RF cavity BPMs are very good!)  LINAC’s non Gaussian beam - does not seem to be a big problem (very well made injector/beam, but also low rep. rate)  For seeded systems the overlap between the seed and the beam (phase/time measurements of the beam and seed laser)

 The Optical Transition Radiation has been a true working horse for the transverse beam profile measurements, from 10 keV to many GeV with resolution down to few microns  Main advantage - simplicity, resolution - diffraction limited (energy independent), enough yield for single bunch measurements  COTR first observed at LCLS with gain ~ 10, then at other facilities too  Now gain up to ~10 5 at LCLS at the optical wavelength an old working horse that tells you – “you will have a different transportation in the future” OTR turns COTR  Attributed to micro bunching instability that has gain at the optical λ – key parameter is the small slice energy spread (longitudinally bright beams)  The are several mitigation scheme proposed but … 10 5 gain !!!  The replacement with best results so far – YAG:Ce plus gaited CCD – this is expansive and eventually scintillators get to saturation  Catastrophe equals opportunity

COTR Also good overview by S. Wesch, DIPAC 2011

From SLAC-PUB-9280, courtesy of M. Ross Another problem with OTR  OTR image of a beam ~ 10  m  10  m before (up) and after (down)  the OTR radiator was exposed to 5  e - /train; rep. rate of the bunch trains 1.5 Hz for 5 minutes  OTR radiator (initially) optically polished 500  m Be  With ~ 10 time less charge per train for 30 min no degradation  Suggested explanation – radiator deformation beyond elastic limit 5  e –  100  77 pC bunches  Radiators with small thermal expansion and large elasticity modulus might be the solution. Si is a good candidate, already used as OTR radiators – canbe optically polished.  Optics for such beams is essentially a microscope (must collect light in a very large angle)

Bunch Length Measurements  Now at LCLS bunch is so short – the measurements are resolution limited  Transverse deflecting cavity – “gold standard”; direct, time domain, self calibrating measurements.  Going to X-band  1 fs resolution.  But expansive and complex. Not every facility can afford it.  However, provide absolute measurements which can be used to calibrate spectral (frequency) domain diagnostics Frequency domain techniques:  Compact and affordable, Used with CTR and CSR in THz range, few ps to ~50 fs as is  Going to the shorter buncher is shifting the CTR to visible and UV diapason (already now)  Simplest – Martin-Puplett interferometer, multiple shots  Single shot spectrometers – DESY demonstrated, LCLS another under development  Main issue – phase information is lost

JLab FEL bunch compression diagnostics Sextupoles (B’dL) G Sextupoles (B’dL) G Sextupoles (B’dL) 8730 G Trim quads (B’dL) 700 G Trim quads (B’dL) 740 G Trim quads (B’dL) 660 G  JLab IR/UV Upgrade FEL operates with bunch compression ration of (cathode to wiggler); (LINAC entrance to wiggler).  To achieve this compression ratio nonlinear compression is used – compensating for LINAC RF curvature (up to 2 nd order).  The RF curvature compensation is made with multipoles installed in dispersive locations of 180° Bates bend with separate function magnets - D. Douglas design (no harmonic RF)  Operationally longitudinal match relies on: a. Bunch length measurements at full compression (Martin-Puplett Interferometer) b. Longitudinal transfer function measurements R 55, T 555, U 5555 c. Energy spread measurements in injector and exit of the LINAC Martin-Puplett Interferometer data in frequency domain – give upper limit on the RMS bunch length

Storage Rings Ultimate storage rings – full transverse coherence  Small transverse beam size (is the point of the USRs)  Small source size requires corresponding transverse stability  X-ray BPM  Sort Pulse X-rays (SPX system) For a proper overview of the SR diagnostics status see: G. Decker at FLS2010 workshop C. Steier at the ERL09 workshop

Transverse Beam Stability  USRs and high-energy ERLs will converge toward requirements that are similar to those that "leading" present-day storage rings must meet in the vertical plane.  Emittance sets the scale for beam stability requirements.  The best present vertical-plane emittance in third generation rings (5~10 pm) is similar to what's projected in the both planes for ERLs and USRs.  Also, as the beam gets smaller going below the diffraction limit e - beam will be some what smaller than the “optical mode” size of the x-ray beam and, thus the latter one will care less about variations of the former one.  The difference at ERLs will be the sources of the beam instability. Starting from the Cathode Drive Laser, Gun, Injector. So, one will have to have additional feedback/forward for the new sources of the instabilities. Pointed out by C. Steier at ERL2009 and M. Borland now again.

Transverse Beam Size  When SR is used to measure the transverse beam size – the resolution is diffraction limited  Therefore one went now to x-ray wavelength for the measurements  However, if below diffraction limit of λ xray – beam is smaller than what can be measured with the help of λ xray (if doing imaging) i.e. if this diagnostics works the USR is not succeeding  The way around the diffraction limit was found by astronomers when measuring size of the stars – two slit interferometer.  It also has been adopted by T. Mitsuhashi for beam size measurements at optical λ. T. Mitsuhashi, PAC97, 766, (1997); Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams 9, (2006) Point source Extended source  = 1 0 <  < 1  By measuring the visibility and first minimum position (phase) vs. the distance between the two slits the full beam distribution projection can be reconstructed.  If the beam distribution is symmetric, the phase measurement is not required. Courtesy of F. Sannibale