6-11 November 2022
Hyatt Regency Long Island
America/New_York timezone

Observation of Skewed Electromagnetic Wakefields in an Asymmetric Structure Driven by Flat Electron Bunches

8 Nov 2022, 17:00
2h 30m
Salons F, G, H and Foyer

Salons F, G, H and Foyer

Board: P32
Student Poster WG4 Poster: Beam-Driven Acceleration Poster Session and Reception

Speaker

Walter Lynn (UCLA)

Description

Relativistic charged-particle beams which generate intense longitudinal fields in accelerating structures also inherently couple to transverse modes. The effects of this coupling may lead to beam break-up instability, and thus must be countered to preserve beam quality in applications such as linear colliders. Beams with highly asymmetric transverse sizes (flat-beams) have been shown to suppress the initial instability in slab-symmetric structures. However, as the coupling to transverse modes remains, this solution serves only to delay instability. In order to understand the hazards of transverse coupling in such a case, we describe here an experiment characterizing the transverse effects on a flat-beam, traversing near a planar dielectric lined structure. The measurements reveal the emergence of a previously unobserved skew-quadrupole-like interaction when the beam is canted transversely, which is not present when the flat-beam travels parallel to the dielectric surface. We deploy a multipole field fitting algorithm to reconstruct the projected transverse wakefields from the data. We generate the effective kick vector map using a simple two-particle theoretical model, and particle-in-cell simulations provide further insight for realistic particle distributions.

Acknowledgments

The authors acknowledge insightful discussions and contributions from S. Baturin. This work is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, Office of High Energy Physics, under Contracts DE-SC0017648 (UCLA), DE- SC0018656 (NIU), and DE-AC02-06CH11357 (ANL).

Primary authors

Walter Lynn (UCLA) Tianzhe Xu Gerard Andonian (UCLA/Radiabeam) Scott Doran (Argonne National Laboratory) Gwanghui Ha (Argonne National Laboratory) Nathan Majernik Philippe Piot John Power James Rosenzweig Charles Whiteford (Argonne National Laboratory) Eric Wisniewski (Argonne National Laboratory)

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