Abstract

The computation of tunes and matched beam distributions are essential steps in the analysis of circular accelerators. If certain symmetries - like midplane symmetrie - are present, then it is possible to treat the betatron motion in the horizontal, the vertical plane and (under certain circumstances) the longitudinal motion separately using the well-known Courant-Snyder theory, or to apply transformations that have been described previously as for instance the method of Teng and Edwards. In a preceeding paper it has been shown that this method requires a modification for the treatment of isochronous cyclotrons with non-negligible space charge forces. Unfortunately the modification was numerically not as stable as desired and it was still unclear, if the extension would work for all thinkable cases. Hence a systematic derivation of a more general treatment seemed advisable. In a second paper the author suggested the use of real Dirac matrices as basic tools to coupled linear optics and gave a straightforward recipe to decouple positive definite Hamiltonians with imaginary eigenvalues. In this article this method is generalized and simplified in order to formulate a straightforward method to decouple Hamiltonian matrices with eigenvalues on the real and the imaginary axis. It is shown that this algebraic decoupling is closely related to a geometric "decoupling" by the orthogonalization of the vectors $\vec E$, $\vec B$ and $\vec P$, that were introduced with the so-called "electromechanical equivalence". We present a structure-preserving block-diagonalization of symplectic or Hamiltonian matrices, respectively. When used iteratively, the decoupling algorithm can also be applied to n-dimensional systems and requires ${\cal O}(n^2)$ iterations to converge to a given precision.

Highlights

  • The significance of the symplectic groups in Hamiltonian dynamics has been emphasized for instance by Dragt [1], and it has long been known [2] that the Dirac matrices are generators of the symplectic group Spð4; RÞ

  • In Ref. [3] the author presented a toolbox for the treatment of two coupled harmonic oscillators that is based on the use of the real Dirac matrices (RDMs) as generators of the symplectic group Spð4; RÞ and a systematic survey of symplectic transformations in two dimensions

  • This toolbox enabled the development of a straightforward recipe for the decoupling of positive definite two-dimensional harmonic oscillators

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Summary

INTRODUCTION

The significance of the symplectic groups in Hamiltonian dynamics has been emphasized for instance by Dragt [1], and it has long been known [2] that the Dirac matrices are generators of the symplectic group Spð; RÞ. [3] the author presented a toolbox for the treatment of two coupled harmonic oscillators that is based on the use of the real Dirac matrices (RDMs) as generators of the symplectic group Spð; RÞ and a systematic survey of symplectic transformations in two dimensions. This toolbox enabled the development of a straightforward recipe for the decoupling of positive definite two-dimensional harmonic oscillators. We do not make specific assumptions about the Hamiltonian other than that it is a symmetric quadratic form and we present a geometric interpretation via the EMEQ, which provides a physical notation of otherwise complicated and nondescriptive algebraic expressions. we believe that the use of the EMEQ is an interesting example of how elements of

BAUMGARTEN
COUPLED LINEAR OPTICS
Dirac matrices
BLOCK DIAGONALIZATION AND EIGENVALUES
The S matrix
THE ELECTROMECHANICAL EQUIVALENCE
The geometrical approach
Complex eigenvalues
The low energy case
The intermediate energy case
Decoupling n-dimensional symplices
Diagonalization
Example
SUMMARY AND OUTLOOK
Full Text
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