Abstract
In this paper we discuss representations of charge particle densities in particle-in-cell simulations, analyze the sources and profiles of the intrinsic numerical noise, and present efficient methods for their removal. We devise two alternative estimation methods for charged particle distribution which represent significant improvement over the Monte Carlo cosine expansion used in the 2D code of Bassi et al. [G. Bassi, J. A. Ellison, K. Heinemann, and R. Warnock, Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams 12, 080704 (2009); G. Bassi and B. Terzi\ifmmode \acute{c}\else \'{c}\fi{}, in Proceedings of the 23rd Particle Accelerator Conference, Vancouver, Canada, 2009 (IEEE, Piscataway, NJ, 2009), TH5PFP043], designed to simulate coherent synchrotron radiation (CSR) in charged particle beams. The improvement is achieved by employing an alternative beam density estimation to the Monte Carlo cosine expansion. The representation is first binned onto a finite grid, after which two grid-based methods are employed to approximate particle distributions: (i) truncated fast cosine transform; and (ii) thresholded wavelet transform (TWT). We demonstrate that these alternative methods represent a staggering upgrade over the original Monte Carlo cosine expansion in terms of efficiency, while the TWT approximation also provides an appreciable improvement in accuracy. The improvement in accuracy comes from a judicious removal of the numerical noise enabled by the wavelet formulation. The TWT method is then integrated into the CSR code [G. Bassi, J. A. Ellison, K. Heinemann, and R. Warnock, Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams 12, 080704 (2009)], and benchmarked against the original version. We show that the new density estimation method provides a superior performance in terms of efficiency and spatial resolution, thus enabling high-fidelity simulations of CSR effects, including microbunching instability.
Highlights
When a charged particle beam travels along a curved trajectory, it emits synchrotron radiation
Short beam bunch lengths are desirable in many different contexts—free electron lasers (FELs), energy recovering linacs, B-factories—and their importance is only expected to grow in the future
Despite the good agreement found between measurements and simulations, more studies are needed to validate numerical codes, especially in the study of the microbunching instability, where coherent synchrotron radiation (CSR) can be emitted at wavelength shorter than the bunch length if the beam has high-frequency density modulations caused by instability itself
Summary
When a charged particle beam travels along a curved trajectory (e.g., bending magnet), it emits synchrotron radiation. Short beam bunch lengths are desirable in many different contexts—free electron lasers (FELs), energy recovering linacs, B-factories—and their importance is only expected to grow in the future This necessitates a development of a trustworthy code which is capable of properly simulating CSR and its effects, such as an appreciable degradation of the beam’s emittance and its fragmentation. Despite the good agreement found between measurements and simulations, more studies are needed to validate numerical codes, especially in the study of the microbunching instability, where CSR can be emitted at wavelength shorter than the bunch length if the beam has high-frequency density modulations caused by instability itself. VI we discuss the significance and use of the new approach and outline its future applications
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