Abstract

An electron-ion collider (EIC) at Brookhaven National Laboratory is being proposed as a new discovery machine for the nuclear physics and quantum chromodynamics. The hadron beam cooling plays an important role in the EIC machine to achieve its physics goals. The most challenging is cooling of protons at the highest energy in the EIC. In this paper, we present a possible design of a ring-based electron cooler for the high energy hadron beam cooling. In the proposed approach, the electrons will cool the hadrons while being cooled themselves by radiation damping in the storage ring. For the design of the cooler using the storage ring approach several aspects become very important, including electron ring optics design, chromaticity correction, calculating the dynamic aperture, radiation damping, quantum excitation, and intrabeam scattering. In addition, such effects as beam-beam scattering due to interaction of electrons with hadrons becomes of special concern, and we develop a generalized approach to it. In this paper, we take all of the above effects into the design, and discuss the beam lifetime and instabilities in the ring. A special feature of our design is an effective use of dispersion in the cooling section, both for the ions and electrons, to redistribute the cooling rate between the longitudinal and horizontal planes. Finally, the cooling performance is simulated for proton beam at the top energy of the EIC. Our conclusion is that such ring-based cooler could be a feasible approach to provide required parameters of hadron beam at the top energy of 275 GeV for the EIC.

Highlights

  • Electron cooling is a powerful method to shrink the size and momentum spread of the stored ion beams for accumulation and high-precision experiments

  • It is known that the radiation damping rate λdamp and the factor of quantum excitation Cq only depend on the ring lattice, while the heating rates from intrabeam scattering (IBS) λIBS and beam-beam scattering (BBS) λBBS depend on beam parameters dynamically

  • The hadron beam cooling at high energy is an important part of the electron-ion collider (EIC)

Read more

Summary

INTRODUCTION

Electron cooling is a powerful method to shrink the size and momentum spread of the stored ion beams for accumulation and high-precision experiments. We present a design of the electron storage ring cooler with bunched electron beam for the EIC. For a good cooling performance, the electron beam with low temperature and high intensity is needed, which requires a strong damping effect in the electron storage ring. This concept strongly depends on electron ring. Based on the simulation results, we conclude that such ring-based cooler with bunched electron beam could be a feasible approach to provide required parameters of proton beam at the top energy of 275 GeV for the EIC.

COOLING REQUIREMENT
ELECTRON RING LATTICE OVERVIEW
Emittance and momentum spread
Dynamic aperture
Beam lifetime
Impedance and instabilities
COOLING SIMULATION
Findings
SUMMARY
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call