A method for using betatron coupling to suppress partial snake driven resonances in a synchrotron is described. While the partial snakes permit avoidance of the strong resonances associated with the vertical betatron motion of the particles, they also excite numerous weak resonances associated with the horizontal betatron motion. These resonances occur whenever the fractional spin tune equals the fractional horizontal betatron tune. Since these are the same frequencies at which depolarizing resonances from betatron coupling occur, coupling resonances can be intentionally driven to exactly cancel the resonance driving terms of the partial snakes, thereby avoiding polarization loss due to these resonance crossings. Presented here is an explicit derivation of the partial snake driven resonances as betatron sidebands of strong imperfection resonances and a description of a practical scheme for their correction using the Brookhaven AGS as an example. Tracking results that verify the suppression via coupling are presented.
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