N. Eddy
Fermilab
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Featured researches published by N. Eddy.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2011
R. Thurman-Keup; C. Bhat; W. Blokland; J. Crisp; N. Eddy; B. Fellenz; R. Flora; A. Hahn; S. Hansen; T. Kiper; A. Para; S. Pordes; A. Tollestrup
The measurement of the longitudinal behavior of the accelerated particle beams at Fermilab is crucial to the optimization and control of the beam and the maximizing of the integrated luminosity for the particle physics experiments. Longitudinal measurements in the Tevatron and Main Injector synchrotrons are based on the analysis of signals from resistive wall current monitors. This article describes the signal processing performed by a 2 GHz-bandwidth oscilloscope together with a computer running a LabVIEW program which calculates the longitudinal beam parameters.
Measurement Science and Technology | 2007
S. Molloy; Josef Frisch; D. McCormick; Justin May; Marc Ross; T.I. Smith; N. Eddy; S. Nagaitsev; Ron Rechenmacher; Luciano Piccoli; Nicoleta Baboi; Olaf Hensler; Lyudvig Petrosyan; Olivier Napoly; Rita Paparella; Claire Simon
Experiments at the FLASH linac at DESY have demonstrated that the higher order modes (HOMs) induced in superconducting cavities can be used to provide a variety of beam and cavity diagnostics. The centers of the cavities can be determined from the beam orbit which produces minimum power in the dipole HOM modes. The phase and amplitude of the dipole modes can be used as a high resolution beam position monitor. For most superconducting accelerators, the existing HOM couplers provide the necessary signals, and the downmix and digitizing electronics are straightforward, similar to those for a conventional BPM.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2012
Pei Zhang; N. Baboi; R. M. Jones; N. Eddy
Beam-excited higher order modes (HOMs) can provide remote diagnostics information of the beam position and cavity misalignment. In this paper we report on recent studies on the resolution with specially selected series of modes with custom-built electronics. This constitutes the first report of measurements of these cavities in which we obtained a resolution of 20 micron in beam offset. Details of the setup of the electronics and HOM measurements are provided.
Journal Name: AIP Conf.Proc.868:313-324,2006; Conference: Presented at 12th Beam Instrumentation Workshop (BIW06), Fermilab, Batavia, Illinois, 1-4 May 2006 | 2006
Josef Frisch; Nicoleta Baboi; N. Eddy; S. Nagaitsev; Olaf Hensler; D. McCormick; Justin May; S. Molloy; Olivier Napoly; Rita Paparella; Lyudvig Petrosyan; Marc Ross; Claire Simon; T.I. Smith
The signals from the Higher Order Mode (HOM) ports on superconducting cavities can be used as beam position monitors and to do survey structure alignment. A HOM-based diagnostic system has been installed to instrument both couplers on each of the 40 cryogenic accelerating structures in the DESY TTF2 Linac. The electronics uses a single stage down conversion form the 1.7 GHz HOM spectral line to a 20MHz IF which has been digitized. The electronics is based on low cost surface mount components suitable for large scale production. The analysis of the HOM data is based on Singular Value Decomposition. The response of the OM modes is calibrated using conventional BPMs.
Journal Name: AIP Conf.Proc.868:293-297,2006; Conference: Presented at 12th Beam Instrumentation Workshop (BIW06), Fermilab, Batavia, Illinois, 1-4 May 2006 | 2006
N. Eddy; James L. Crisp; M. Hu
A transverse damping system is used in the Recycler at Fermilab to damp beam instabilities which arise from large beam intensities with electron cooling. Initial tests of electron cooling demonstrated beam loss due to transverse beam motion when the beam was cooled past the beam density threshold. The transverse damper system consists of two horizontal and two vertical pickups whose signals are amplified and passed into an analog hybrid to generate a difference signal from each pickup. The difference signals are input to a custom digital damper board which digitizes the analog signals at 212MHz, performs digital processing of the signals inside a large Altera Stratix II FPGA, then provides analog output at 212MHz via digital to analog converters. The digital damper output is sent to amplifiers which drive one horizontal and one vertical kicker. An initial prototype digital damper board has been successfully used in the Recycler for over six months. Currently, work is underway to replace the prototype board with an upgraded VME version.
arXiv: Accelerator Physics | 2011
L.R. Prost; Alexey Burov; A. Shemyakin; C.M. Bhat; J. Crisp; N. Eddy
Transverse instabilities of the antiproton beam have been observed in the Recycler ring soon after its commissioning. After installation of transverse dampers, the threshold for the instability limit increased significantly but the instability is still found to limit the brightness of the antiprotons extracted from the Recycler for Tevatron shots. In this paper, we describe observations of the instabilities during the extraction process as well as during dedicated studies. The measured instability threshold phase density agrees with the prediction of the rigid beam model within a factor of 2. Also, we conclude that the instability threshold can be significantly lowered for a bunch contained in a narrow and shallow potential well due to effective exclusion of the longitudinal tails from Landau damping.
ieee particle accelerator conference | 2007
M. Hu; Daniel Broemmelsiek; Brian Chase; James L. Crisp; N. Eddy; P. W. Joireman; K.Y. Ng
The Fermilab recycler ring is a permanent magnet based 8 GeV anti-proton storage ring. A wideband RF system, driven with ARBs (ARBitrary waveform generators), allows the system to produce programmable barrier waveforms. Beam current profile distortion was observed, its origin verified both experimentally and theoretically, and an FPGA-based correction system was designed, tested and implemented to level the bunch profile.
ieee particle accelerator conference | 2007
S. Molloy; C. Adolphsen; K. Bane; J. Frisch; Z. Li; J. May; D. McCormick; T. Smith; N. Baboi; N. Eddy; Luciano Piccoli; R. Rechenmacher; R. Jones
Higher Order Modes (HOMs) excited by the passage of the beam through an accelerating cavity depend on the properties of both the cavity and the beam. It is possible, therefore, to draw conclusions on the inner geometry of the cavities based on observations of the properties of the HOM spectrum. A data acquisition system based on two 20 GS/s, 6 GHz scopes has been set up at the FLASH facility, DESY, in order to measure a significant fraction of the HOM spectrum predicted to be generated by the TESLA cavities used for the acceleration of its beam. The HOMs from a particular cavity at FLASH were measured under a range of known beam conditions. The dipole modes have been identified in the data. 3D simulations of different manufacturing errors have been made, and it has been shown that these simulations can predict the measured modes.
Physical Review Special Topics-accelerators and Beams | 2006
S. Molloy; Josef Frisch; D. McCormick; Justin May; Marc Ross; T.I. Smith; Nicoleta Baboi; Olaf Hensler; Lyudvig Petrosyan; Olivier Napoly; Rita Paparella; Claire Simon; N. Eddy; S. Nagaitsev; Manfred Wendt
arXiv: Accelerator Physics | 2008
N. Eddy; James L. Crisp; M. Hu