Calculate Document
Electron Clouds

Electron Clouds

Authors Giovanni Rumolo CERN Giovanni Iadarola CERN

Related articles

Manually Integrating Cisco Umbrella with Meraki Networks Cloud Nine Cafe VeloCloud and satellite 始祖鸟与BEAMS合作系列3.0来了,Beta、Atom依然在列,将于12月2日发售!_冲锋衣_什么值得买 A Cloud Nightmare: UniSuper Loses Data (and Backups!)

Authors


  • Giovanni Rumolo


    CERN

  • Giovanni Iadarola


    CERN

Keywords:


Collective effects, two-stream interactions, heat load, mitigation, scrubbing, coherent instabilities.

abstract

The term ‘electron cloud’ refers to an accumulation of electrons inside the vacuum chamber of a particle accelerator, which is sufficiently strong to produce undesired effects on the accelerator operation, e.g., by causing beam loss, emittance growth, increase in the vacuum pressure, or unacceptable heat load on cold surfaces. Electrons in the beam chamber can primarily be generated by a number of processes, e.g., ionization of the residual gas. Their number, however, can exponentially increase via a beam-induced multipacting mechanism, which relies on acceleration of electrons in the field of the particle beam and efficient secondary emission from their impact on the chamber wall. Several machines running with high-intensity positively charged beams, made of trains of closely spaced bunches, suffer severe effects from electron clouds, and in some cases their performance is even limited by it. Techniques of electron cloud suppression or mitigation exist; the most popular ones are based on the
reduction of the secondary electron yield of the chamber inner surfaces. This can be achieved passively through the so-called process of machine scrubbing, or actively by coating the inner pipe walls with appropriate low secondary electron yield materials.

License

Authors is agree who publish with this publication agree to the follow term :

  1. CERN retains copyright and publishes the work licensed under the Creative Commons Attribution License 4.0 that allows others to share the work with an acknowledgement of the work’s authorship and initial publication in this series.
  2. Authors are able to enter into separate, additional contractual arrangements for distribution of the published version of the work (e.g., post it to an institutional repository or publish it in a book), with an acknowledgement of its initial publication in this series.
  3. author are permit and encourage to post their work online ( e.g. , in institutional repository or on their website ) prior to and during the submission process , as it can lead to productive exchange , as well as early and great citation of publish work ( See   The effect of Open Access ) .