Burt, G. and Carter, Richard G. and Dexter, A. and Jenkins, R. and Tahir, I. and Beard, C. and Goudket, P. and Kalinin, A. and Ma, L. and McIntosh, P. (2007) Development of circuits and system models for the synchronization of the ILC crab cavities. In: 2007 IEEE Particle Accelerator Conference, VOLS 1-11, 2007-06-25 - 2007-06-29.
Full text not available from this repository.Abstract
The ILC reference design report (RDR) recommends a 14 mrad crossing angle for the positron and electron beams at the IP. A matched pair of crab cavity systems are required in the beam delivery system to align both bunches at the IP. The use of a multi-cell, 3.9 GHz dipole mode superconducting cavity is proposed, derived from the Fermilab CKM cavity being developed as a beam slice diagnostic [1]. Dipole-mode cavities phased for crab rotation are shifted by 900 with respect to similar cavities phased for deflection. Uncorrelated phase errors of 0.086 degrees (equivalent to 61 fs) for the two cavity systems, gives an average of 180 nm for the relative deflection of the bunch centers. For a horizontal bunch size sigma(x) = 655 nm, a deflection of 180nm reduces the ILC luminosity by 2%. The crab cavity systems are to be placed similar to 30 m apart and synchronization to within 61 fs is required; this is on the limit of what is presently achievable. This paper describes LLRF circuits under development at the Cockcroft Institute for proof of principle experiments planned on the ERLP at Daresbury and on the ILCTA test beamline at FNAL. Simulation results for stabilisation performance are also given.}