Active Vibration Stabilization for the NLC Final Focus Quads Josef Frisch, Linda Hendrickson, Thomas Himel, Andrei Seryi,

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
One Arm Cavity M0 L1 L2 TM M0 L1 L2 TRIPLE QUAD 16m R = 20m, T=1% R = ∞, T=1%  Optimally coupled cavity (no mode matched light reflected back)  Finesse.
Advertisements

Takanori Sekiguchi Italy-Japan Workshop (19 April, 2013) Inverted Pendulum Control for KAGRA Seismic Attenuation System 1 D2, Institute for Cosmic Ray.
MONALISA: Interferometric Position Monitor at the Nanometre Scale David Urner Paul Coe Matthew Warden Armin Reichold Oxford University.
LIGO-G W Commissioning Data on Vibration Isolation & Suspensions Fred Raab 24 October 02.
Issues of stability and ground motion in ILC Andrei Seryi SLAC October 17, 2005 Selected pages from: Full talk at
NLC - The Next Linear Collider Project IR Working Group Summary Tom Markiewicz LC R&D Workshop, UCSC June 29, 2002.
NLC - The Next Linear Collider Project “Slow” Feedback Requirements: Deflections and Luminosity Linda Hendrickson IPBI Meeting, SLAC June 26, 2002.
SLC  Testbed Proposal Jeff Gronberg  working group SC Linear Collider Retreat June 26 – 29, 2002.
Benoit BOLZON Nanobeam 2005 – Kyoto Active mechanical stabilisation LAViSta Laboratories in Annecy working on Vibration Stabilisation Catherine ADLOFF.
ATF2 Status and Plan K. Kubo ATF2, Final Focus Test for LC Achievement of 37 nm beam size (Goal 1) – Demonstration of a compact final focus.
1 ATF2 project: Investigation on the honeycomb table vibrations Benoit BOLZON 33rd ATF2 meeting, 24th January 2007 Laboratories in Annecy working on Vibration.
Vibration measurements on the final doublets and the Shintake Monitor Benoît BOLZON7th ATF2 project meeting, 16/12/08.
Optical Anchor / Interferometer Status: June, 2004 Josef Frisch.
Concepts for Combining Different Sensors for CLIC Final Focus Stabilisation David Urner Armin Reichold.
Alignment and Beam Stability
Ground Motion + Vibration Transfer Function for Final QD0/SD0 Cryomodule System at ILC Glen White, SLAC ALCPG11, Eugene March 21, 2011.
Interferometer Control Matt Evans …talk mostly taken from…
Quad-to-quad correlated motion in FLASH Ramila Amirikas, Alessandro Bertolini DESY Hamburg XFEL beam dynamics meeting, February 25 st 2008.
David Urner, Oxford University, RHUL – June StaFF Stabilization of Final Focus Motion Stabilization with Nano-Meter Precision David Urner Paul Coe.
Gek 16/6/041 ITRP Comments on Question 19 GEK 9/06/04 19) For the X-band (warm) technology, detail the status of the tests of the full rf delivery system.
ATF2 optics … 1 3 rd Mini-Workshop on Nano Project at ATF ATF2 optics, tuning method and tolerances of initial alignment, magnets, power supplies etc.
CERN, BE-ABP (Accelerators and Beam Physics group) Jürgen Pfingstner Orbit feedback design for the CLIC ML and BDS Orbit feedback design for the CLIC ML.
Measurements of stray field in the NLCTA area Josef Frisch, Peter Tenenbaum, Tor Raubenhemier.
Feedback On Nano-second Timescales: An IP Feedback System for the Future Linear Collider Requirement for a fast IP beam-based feedback system Simulation.
1 Stabilization Projects at SLAC Eric Doyle, Leif Eriksson, Josef Frisch, Linda Hendrickson, Thomas Himel, Thomas Markiewicz Richard Partridge NLC Project,
An Approach to Stabilizing Large Telescopes for Stellar Interferometry It shakes like a…. [G. Vasisht, 31 March 2006] N. Di Lieto J. Sahlmann, G. Vasisht,
CLIC QD0 Stabilization J. Allibe 1, L. Brunetti 1, J.-P. Baud 1, G. Balik 1, G. Deleglise 1, A. Jeremie 1, S. Vilalte 1 B. Caron 2,C.Hernandez 2 1 : LAPP-IN2P3-CNRS,
Orbit Control For Diamond Light Source Ian Martin Joint Accelerator Workshop Rutherford Appleton Laboratory28 th -29 th April 2004.
Takanori Sekiguchi External Review Control and tuning of suspension 1 T. Sekiguchi KAGRA 4th External Review.
Stabilization of Focus at ATF2 David Urner University of Oxford.
1 Virgo Commissioning progress ILIAS, Nov 13 th 2006 Matteo Barsuglia on behalf of the Commissioning Team.
Operations, Test facilities, CF&S Tom Himel SLAC.
July 5, 2007 C. HAUVILLER CLIC stabilization Beam line and final focus.
Taming the Electromagnetic Solenoid: Building a System That Achieves a Soft Landing Gary Bergstrom Magnesense.
Behavior of an inverted pendulum in the Kamioka mine R. Takahashi (NAOJ), A. Takamori (ERI), E. Majorana (INFN) GWADW 2010 We are investigating behavior.
Global Design Effort ILC Crab Cavity Overview and requirements Andrei Seryi SLAC on behalf of ILC Beam Delivery and Crab-Cavity design teams Joint BNL/US-LARP/CARE-HHH.
CARE / ELAN / EUROTeV Feedback Loop on a large scale quadrupole prototype Laurent Brunetti* Jacques Lottin**
The stabilisation of the final focus (StaFF) system Sun 12 th March 2006 MDI – LCWS06 at I I Sc Bangalore David Urner, Paul Coe, Armin Reichold.
Hard or Soft ? C. Collette, K. Artoos, S. Janssens, P. Fernandez-Carmona, A. Kuzmin, M. Guinchard, A. Slaathaug, C. Hauviller The research leading to these.
NLC - The Next Linear Collider Project Mike Woods May 1999 Vibrations and the NLC IR Welcome to the NanoWorld !
B. Caron, G. Balik, L. Brunetti LAViSta Team LAPP-IN2P3-CNRS, Université de Savoie, Annecy, France & SYMME-POLYTECH Annecy-Chambéry, Université de Savoie,
The control of the Virgo Superattenuator: present and future Giovanni Losurdo - INFN Firenze/Urbino on behalf of the Virgo Collaboration.
Paolo La Penna ILIAS N5-WP1 meeting Commissioning Progress Hannover, July 2004 VIRGO commissioning progress report.
Main beam Quad Stabilisation: Status of the stabilisation test program at CERN CLIC-stabilization day S. Janssens Contribution to slides by:
Mechanical Mode Damping for Parametric Instability Control
STABILISATION AND PRECISION POINTING QUADRUPOLE MAGNETS IN THE COMPACT LINEAR COLLIDER S. Janssens, P. Fernandez Carmona, K. Artoos, C. Collette, M. Guinchard.
Vibrations studies for the nominal optics and the ultra-low beta optics Benoît BOLZON 1 B. Bolzon, A. Jeremie (LAPP) P. Bambade, Y. Renier (LAL) A. Seryi.
CERN, 27-Mar EuCARD NCLinac Task /3/2009.
Electron beams in order to sense nm-size mechanical vibrations? CERN: Marek Gasior: BBQ electronics (Andrea Boccardi: VME electronics) Juergen Pfingstner:
FP7: EuCARD after a year of preparation… A.Jeremie.
ATF2: final doublet support Andrea JEREMIE B.Bolzon, N.Geffroy, G.Gaillard, J.P.Baud, F.Peltier With constant interaction with colleagues from KEK, SLAC.
NLC - The Next Linear Collider Project Keeping Nanometer Beams Colliding Vibration Stabilization of the Final Doublet Tom Himel SLAC NLC MAC review October.
G.R.White: F.O.N. T. From Ground Motion studies by A.Seryi et al. (SLAC) ‘Fast’ motion (> few Hz) dominated by cultural noise Concern for structures.
IoP HEPP/APP annual meeting 2010 Feedback on Nanosecond Timescales: maintaining luminosity at future linear colliders Ben Constance John Adams Institute,
Test plan for CLIC MB linac quad LAPP option A.Jeremie.
QD0 stabilisation in CLIC CDR A.Jeremie with LAViSta team.
10-meter Interferometer Results M. Woods (special thanks to Steve Myers and Tim Slaton) Jan. 31, 2000 Commissioning Setup System Noise Monte Carlo simulation.
NLC - The Next Linear Collider Project Intra-Pulse Feedback at the NLC Interaction Point Steve Smith SLAC Snowmass 2001.
The Proposed Holographic Noise Experiment Rainer Weiss, MIT On behalf of the proposing group Fermi Lab Proposal Review November 3, 2009.
1 Updated comparison of feedback implementation for e + e - and e - e - modes of operation with realistic errors in the BDS M. Alabau Pons, P. Bambade,
Alignment and stability session
Dither Luminosity feedback versus Fast IP feedback
The Proposed Holographic Noise Experiment
For Discussion Possible Beam Dynamics Issues in ILC downstream of Damping Ring LCWS2015 K. Kubo.
Beam Dynamics in Curved ILC Main Linac (following earth curvature)
ILC Phase Reference Distribution R&D
Laboratories in Annecy working on Vibration Stabilization
SuperB Injection, RF stations, Vibration and Operations
Operational Experience with LCLS RF systems
Seismometer Development for the 1TeV Linear Collider
Presentation transcript:

Active Vibration Stabilization for the NLC Final Focus Quads Josef Frisch, Linda Hendrickson, Thomas Himel, Andrei Seryi,

Vibration Requirements Linear Colliders operate with nanometer scale beam sizes at the IP, and require nanometer beam position stabilities. This translates to nanometer stability requirements on the final quads, and 10s of nanometer stability on the linac and beam delivery quads. This sounds hard: Nanometers are small!!

Nanometers: Why isn’t this crazy Only the differential positions of the magnets are important (the earth’s motion around the sun is not a problem). We are only concerned with variations over short spatial periods. The beam-beam deflection provides a measurement of the relative beam positions at 120Hz (for NLC). Feedback can (and must) be used. We are only concerned with high vibration frequencies.

Requirements At quiet sites, with magnets rigidly mounted to the ground, the natural vibration spectrum (spatial and temporal) is within tolerance. Accelerator sites are noisy: cultural noise may be too large. The final focus magnets must be suspended within the physics detector – difficult to avoid amplification of the ground motion. Would like to use magnet stabilization technology.

Stabilization Technologies Optical Anchor Use a laser interferometer to measure the relative positions of the magnets. (Early work at SLAC now ongoing at UBC). Nanometer measurement noise over meters demonstrated. Acts as an “infinitely rigid” connection to the ground. –Good: causes final quads to move correlated to the rest of the machine –Bad: Difficult to find a good reference point.

Stabilization Technologies Feed Forward Measure the position of the ground or magnet with an accelerometer (or possibly interferometer) Steer the beam to correct for the predicted effect of the motion Eliminates the need to put fast actuators on the magnet The accelerometer may not be a good indication of the motion of the magnetic center –Axis coupling –Structure resonances.

Stabilization Technologies Intra-train Feedback Use the beam beam deflection to measure the beam offset and correct within a train Difficult for NLC due to short train length – but simulations indicate considerable improvement. Timescale easy for Tesla Uncertainties about the “banana effect”.

Stabilization Technologies Inertial Feedback Use accelerometers to measure the magnet position Apply force to the magnet to prevent it from moving. Avoids feedforward problem of needing to know the exact gain. Requires mechanical pushers, and may have stability problems if there are phase delays. Subject of the remainder of this talk

Optical Anchor vs. Inertial Feedback loop easy (reads down to DC) Locks quads to ground – correlated with remainder of machine Locks quads to “fixed stars” Does not rely on ground motion correlations No interference with detector May be used in combination

PM vs Super Quads No additional vibration Compact (high first resonant frequency design) Tunability: either awkward mechanical, or magnet replacement Energy Tunability Complex, flexible design. Flowing helium possible source of additional vibration

Soft vs Stiff Support Low forces coupled to the magnet High frequency vibrations attenuated by suspension Low frequencies fixed by feedback Used by LIGO Motion amplitude small. May not need to use feedback. Resists magnet forces

Inertial Feedback System Sensors Cannot sense absolute position or velocity –At low frequencies has “acceleration noise” –Position noise goes as 1/  2 Piezoelectric accelerometers typically operate below resonance –Poor sensitivity at low frequencies –Certain manufactures lie about performance Standard geophones have very good low frequency noise (<1 nm at <1 Hz) but are sensitive to magnetic fields. Are developing our own sensor

Feedback Actuators Coils can provide large forces, but will not work in magnetic fields Piezoelectric actuators are standard – but have high stiffness. Cannot be used with soft suspensions Electrostatic actuators can provide small forces with low stiffness, and fast response times.

Stabilization R+D Concept Exact ground motion not known –Site not selected –Unknown conventional facilities impact Final magnet and detector design not yet done. Investigate / develop technology, not try to meet specific specification For now, focus on (difficult) final doublet problem.

Stabilization R+D Program Construct simple block on springs. –Measure and control all 6 solid body modes with accelerometer sensors –Replace accelerometers with compact geophones –Design electrostatic accelerometers to replace geophones. Construct pair of blocks –Investigate differential motion –Test dual rate (accelerometer / beam) feedback Construct extended object with similar mode frequencies to a FF quad. Construct a realistic simulation of a FF quad.

Test System Design

Test System Hardware Sensors: Start with accelerometers –High Noise –Simple Frequency Response –Will replace with compact geophones (now) Actuators: electrostatic –1kV across ~1mm gap, 5x5cm –Provide sufficient force –Note: force is proportional to v 2

Test System DAQ System constructed in VME format –Allows future compatibility with EPICS at SLAC Use TMS320C40 (~40 MFLOPs) –Old, but we know how to program it Use “over specified” ADC, DAC –Both 250KHz, 16 bit –Communication through DSP using private ‘C40 ports –VME backplane not used for real time

Test System Software DSP runs real time data acquisition, feedback, and “first level” processing. Data can be transmitted to Matlab for complex processing. –DSP talks to the VME controller through dual port memory –VME controller talks to Unix (Matlab) through ethernet (NFS)

Algorithm

Orthogonalization Measure 6 mode frequencies by driving actuators with broadband noise –Easy due to high Q Drive actuators near resonance –Measure exact frequencies –Measure actuator to mode couplings –Measure mode to sensor couplings Test orthogonalization –Drive actuator vector for mode N at frequency of mode M  N –Measure amplitude of mode M.

Orthogonalization result for mode 1

1-D simulation results

Test Conditions (excuses) Noisy Laboratory –Integrated noise from 2 Hz to  > 100nm –Nominal for SLAC “quiet” conditions ~1nm. Noisy Sensors –Accelerometers 30X specified noise –Significant limit below ~10Hz. –Better sensors installed – not yet operated Geophone used for evaluating performance

How to Interpret Data Data below ~2Hz not reliable Integrated motion is infinite! –Earth’s orbital motion around sun is large! Apply conservative beam / beam feedback model Apply aggressive beam / beam feedback model –Assumes low incoming beam jitter at 5-20Hz Apply (VERY POOR) estimate of reduction in motion due to differential motion.

Comments on Results Beam noise at high (5-20) Hz frequencies has a strong impact on performance at low (1-5) Hz noise. High frequency cultural noise strongly attenuated Overall noise still ~10X too big –Need quieter sensors –Need quieter Lab

Sensor Improvements Compact Geophones (4.5Hz resonance) installed. –Resonance “in band” requires modification to feedback – believed to be straight forward. Electrostatic (non-magnetic) geophone development: –Sensor electronic noise of 0.01nm/sqrt(Hz) demonstrated. –Mechanical design starting – expect prototype by end of 2001.

Overall NLC FF Vibration Strategy 1.At a quiet site, with good supports, beam / beam feedback is sufficient. 2.If site is not quiet, add inertial and / or optical anchor to reduce vibration 3.Add feedforward to correct residual motion 4.Intra-train feedback fixes whatever is left