Abstract

A hollow electron beam has been proposed as an active control tool to remove the beam halo from high-energy, high-current hadron or ion machines (such as the High-Luminosity Large Hadron Collider). To study the halo removal rate and assess the effect on the ion beam core, one of the two electron lenses in the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider was changed from a Gaussian beam profile to a hollow profile. We describe the design and verification of the hollow electron beam parameters as well as the methods to minimize the hollow beam profile distortions, which can result in an ion beam emittance increase. The hollow beam alignment with the ion beam by using a backscattered electron detector has been demonstrated. Furthermore, experiments were carried out to explore the efficiency of the halo removal by scanning the current and inner radius of the hollow electron beam, which is pulsed either every turn or every nth turn. The effects of the hollow electron beam on the ion beam emittance and luminosity were also assessed experimentally by scanning the inner radius of the electron beam.

Highlights

  • Hollow electron beams have been studied for about 70 years for different applications

  • The above studies, as well as the existing electron-lens experience from Tevatron and Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) [29,30,31,32,33,34], provide information for the design of a hollow electron-lens system that meets the halo removal requirements for the High-Luminosity Large Hadron Collider (HL-LHC), as well as the future applications of beam collimation in the FCC-hh [35] at CERN or Super Proton-Proton Collider (SPPC) [36] in China

  • In the presence of a hollow beam profile distortions, in the central region overlapped to the beam core, the force is nonzero and could possibly cause ion beam emittance growth

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Summary

Stancari

Batavia, Illinois 60510, USA (Received 22 November 2019; accepted 10 February 2020; published 9 March 2020). A hollow electron beam has been proposed as an active control tool to remove the beam halo from highenergy, high-current hadron or ion machines (such as the High-Luminosity Large Hadron Collider). To study the halo removal rate and assess the effect on the ion beam core, one of the two electron lenses in the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider was changed from a Gaussian beam profile to a hollow profile. Experiments were carried out to explore the efficiency of the halo removal by scanning the current and inner radius of the hollow electron beam, which is pulsed either every turn or every nth turn. The effects of the hollow electron beam on the ion beam emittance and luminosity were assessed experimentally by scanning the inner radius of the electron beam

INTRODUCTION
RHIC ELECTRON-LENS SYSTEM
Hollow cathode design
Beam current and Pierce instability
Theoretical studies
Experimental studies
TRANSVERSE ALIGNMENT
Experiment setup
Ion beam loss and e-beam parameters
Findings
SUMMARY AND DISCUSSTION
Full Text
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