1 / 27

Outline

zion
Download Presentation

Outline

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Statistical Description of Charged ParticleBeams and Emittance MeasurementsJürgen Struckmeierj.struckmeier@gsi.dewww.gsi.de/~struckHICforFAIR Workshop“Aktuelle Probleme der Beschleuniger- und Plasmaphysik”des Instituts für Angewandte Physikder Johann Wolfgang Goethe-Universität Frankfurt am MainRiezlern, 7-13 March 2010

  2. Outline • Emittance in geometrical optics • Beam moments • Invariant associated with Hill’s equation • Moment equations • Analysis of emittance measurements • Conclusions

  3. 1. Emittance in geometrical optics Sharp focal point: this corresponds to a zero beam emittance “Plane wave” from a distant light source Astigmatism: this corresponds to a beam with finite emittance Light from a spatially extended light source (e.g. sun) The emittance measures the “disorder” of the beam. An analytical description will be given in this talk.

  4. 2. Beam moments • In charged particle beam dynamics, we are commonly not interested in the phase-space location of individual particles • statistical mechanics approach is appropriate. For a given distribution of N beam particles with coordinates xi, we define the moments of this distribution as The similar definition applies for all other coordinates.

  5. 2. Beam moments Of particular importance are the second beam moments: and the ratios of the fourth moments to the square of the second beam moments:

  6. 2. Beam moments • We ask: how are these moments related to physical beam properties? • To answer this question, we consider a uniform density of points in the (x,x′)-plane and calculate the second central moments. • we make the transition to a continuous description! Assuming a centered distribution (i.e. zero first moments), the second moment in x is given by: For a uniform density r within an elliptical boundary, this means

  7. 2. Beam moments To ease the calculation, we can convert the ellipse into a circle by means of a normal form and a scaling transformation.  The shape of the distribution is maintained.  The second moment is thus proportional to the square of the distribution’s maximum, here the beam envelope. The factor ¼ is a characteristic of the uniform density!

  8. 2. Beam moments The 4th moment of a uniform distribution in a phase plane is obtained as The dimensionless ratio of the 4th moment to the square of the corresponding 2nd moment follows as The ratio of 2 is a characteristic of the uniform density!  The ratio characterizes the type of beam distribution (hollow, uniform, gaussian, …)

  9. 2. Beam moments Table 1: Characteristic ratios of beam moments

  10. 2. Beam moments We have seen that the beam moments have a physical meaning at a fixed position s along the beam axis. Now the dynamical properties of the beam moments will be derived. To this end, we set up their equations of motion from the single particle equations of motions. We first derive the invariant of Hill’s equation.

  11. 3. Invariant of Hill’s equation Given a pair of distinct particles whose motion follows from Hill’s equation Then is a non-trivial invariant, i.e. We can prove this easily by direct computation: Remark: the particle’s energy is not invariant.

  12. 3. Invariant of Hill’s equation • Interpretation: • both particles experience the same focusing function k2(s)  in a two-dimensional rectangular system, this corresponds to a circular symmetric force, i.e., a central force field • The invariant thus corresponds to the conservation of angular momentum in central force fields. •  for a system of n particles the sum D1 is also a constant

  13. 4. Moment equations We now set up the equations of motion for the second moments: Inserting the second equation into the first yields the second order equation for the second central moment in x: This form is not useful as it contains two kinds of second moments.

  14. 4. Moment equations Yet — in the linear approximation — we can express the unwanted moment in terms of the invariant of Hill’s equation D1≡ex2,rms: We thus obtain an equation that only contains constants and functions of the second central moment in x: This equation can be simplified making use of the identity

  15. 4. Moment equations Defining the abbreviation we obtain the final form for the equation of motion of the variance of the set of beam particles in x: This is the rms envelope equation. It applies to arbitrary phase-space distributions of the beam particles if the particle equations of motion are linear. If the particle motion is non-linear, then ex,rms is an unknown function of s. We can nevertheless use this equation as an approximation as long as the rms emittance is an adiabatic invariant (e.g.: transient effects).

  16. 4. Moment equations One source of rms emittance change is due to a reversible change of the beam’s field energy. With the scaled beam current K this effect is described (for unbunched beams) by the equation The quantity W and denotes the field energy per unit length of all particles of the actual distribution. Wu the describes the field energy for a uniform charge distribution of same rms size. We see that the rms emittance is directly related to physical quantities, hence it is physical on its part.

  17. 4. Moment equations Mismatched beam in a quadrupole channel, s0 = 60°

  18. 4. Moment equations Matched beam in a quadrupole channel, s0 = 60°

  19. 4. Moment equations We have seen that the beam moments have both a static and a dynamic meaning. It will now be shown that we can directly measure the moments.

  20. 5. Analysis of emittance measurements Principle and setup of a “slit and collector” emittance measurement device

  21. 5. Analysis of emittance measurements Simple graphical 3D representation of the raw data of a “slit-and-collector” emittance measurement

  22. 5. Analysis of emittance measurements Calculation of beam moments from the raw data, given by the current matrix with inm the collector current as a function of n and m, and Dx: step size of the slit position. This defines the spatial resolution of the device. Dx′: angle between neighboring collector stripes, which defines the angular resolution.

  23. 5. Analysis of emittance measurements The first beam moments are now The second moment follow as

  24. 5. Analysis of emittance measurements Finally, the 4th beam moments are given by Higher order moments can be calculated correspondingly. The “rms emittance” follows from the “current matrix” inm as

  25. 6. Conclusions Measuring the properties of charged particle beam dynamics, a statistical approach is appropriate in terms of beam moments. The naïve approach to derive emittance “areas” from the raw data fails as a “boundary” is not well defined and hence so inaccurate that the results are mostly useless (see PhD thesis A. Schönlein). To demonstrate this, we consider the phase-space evolution of a set of points representing solutions of the mathematical pendulum, with each point representing the evolution of a specific initial condition. What would happen if we derived “areas” with a finite resolution measuring device?

  26. 6. Conclusions Time evolution of a uniform (top) and a Gaussian (bottom) phase-space distribution for the mathematical pendulum.

  27. 6. Conclusions • Properties of the rms emittance calculation: • no assumption is made with respect to the phase-space distribution of the beam particles • all information from the measurement is taken into account • there is usually no need to define a cut-off current imin, so that inm=0 for inm,raw<imin • the calculated moments (and hence the rms emittance) can directly be compared to the moments of multi-particle simulations and to the moments of continuous model distributions. • The method can be generalized: if we find a method to measure simultaneously the current at n(Dx), m(Dx′), j(Dy), k(Dy′) yielding a current tensor inmjk, then the entire 4×4 transverse beam matrix could be calculated.

More Related