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Dive into the research topics where S. Nagaitsev is active.

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Featured researches published by S. Nagaitsev.


Physical Review Special Topics-accelerators and Beams | 2010

Nonlinear accelerator lattices with one and two analytic invariants

V. Danilov; S. Nagaitsev

Integrable systems appeared in physics long ago at the onset of classical dynamics with examples being Keplers and other famous problems. Unfortunately, the majority of nonlinear problems turned out to be nonintegrable. In accelerator terms, any 2D nonlinear nonintegrable mapping produces chaotic motion and a complex network of stable and unstable resonances. Nevertheless, in the proximity of an integrable system the full volume of such a chaotic network is small. Thus, the integrable nonlinear motion in accelerators has the potential to introduce a large betatron tune spread to suppress instabilities and to mitigate the effects of space charge and magnetic field errors. To create such an accelerator lattice one has to find magnetic and electric field combinations leading to a stable integrable motion. This paper presents families of lattices with one invariant where bounded motion can be easily created in large volumes of the phase space. In addition, it presents 3 families of integrable nonlinear accelerator lattices, realizable with longitudinal-coordinate-dependent magnetic or electric fields with the stable nonlinear motion, which can be solved in terms of separable variables.


ieee particle accelerator conference | 2007

Plans for a 750 MeV electron beam test facility at Fermilab

M. Church; S. Nagaitsev; P. Piot

A 750 MeV electron beam test facility at Fermilab is in the planning and early construction phase. An existing building is being converted for this facility. The photoinjector currently in use at the Fermilab NICADD Photoinjector Laboratory (FNPL) will be moved to the new facility and upgraded to serve as an injector for a beam acceleration section consisting of three TTF or ILC- type RF cryomodules. A low energy off-axis beamline will be constructed to test ILC crab cavity designs and provide opportunities for other tests. Downstream beamlines will consist of a diagnostic section, a beam test area for additional beam experiments, and high power beam dumps. The initial program for this facility will concentrate on testing ILC-type cryomodules and RF control with full ILC beam intensity. A future building expansion will open up further possibilities for beam physics and beam technology experiments.


Journal of Instrumentation | 2017

IOTA (Integrable Optics Test Accelerator): facility and experimental beam physics program

Sergei Antipov; Daniel Broemmelsiek; David Bruhwiler; Dean Edstrom; Elvin Harms; V. Lebedev; Jerry Leibfritz; S. Nagaitsev; Chong Shik Park; Henryk Piekarz; P. Piot; Eric Prebys; Alexander Romanov; J. Ruan; Tanaji Sen; G. Stancari; Charles Thangaraj; R. Thurman-Keup; Alexander Valishev; V. Shiltsev

The Integrable Optics Test Accelerator (IOTA) is a storage ring for advanced beam physics research currently being built and commissioned at Fermilab. It will operate with protons and electrons using injectors with momenta of 70 and 150 MeV/c, respectively. The research program includes the study of nonlinear focusing integrable optical beam lattices based on special magnets and electron lenses, beam dynamics of space-charge effects and their compensation, optical stochastic cooling, and several other experiments. In this article, we present the design and main parameters of the facility, outline progress to date and provide the timeline of the construction, commissioning and research. The physical principles, design, and hardware implementation plans for the major IOTA experiments are also discussed.


Measurement Science and Technology | 2007

High precision SC cavity alignment measurements with higher order modes

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 Name: AIP Conf.Proc.868:313-324,2006; Conference: Presented at 12th Beam Instrumentation Workshop (BIW06), Fermilab, Batavia, Illinois, 1-4 May 2006 | 2006

Electronics and Algorithms for HOM Based Beam Diagnostics

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.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2000

Scenario for electron cooling of antiprotons in the Recycler

Alexey Burov; James MacLachlan; J. P. Marriner; S. Nagaitsev

Abstract A system of electron cooling of antiprotons in the Recycler must satisfy certain conditions. Analytic and numeric calculations of the cooling process allow to specify these requirements.


arXiv: Accelerator Physics | 2010

Superfluid helium testing of a stainless steel to titanium piping transition joint

W. Soyars; A. Basti; F. Bedeschi; J. Budagov; M. Foley; Elvin Harms; Arkadiy Klebaner; S. Nagaitsev; B. Sabirov

Stainless steel‐to‐titanium bimetallic transitions have been fabricated with an explosively bonded joint. This novel joining technique was conducted by the Russian Federal Nuclear Center, working under contract for the Joint Institute for Nuclear Research. These bimetallic transitions are being considered for use in future superconducting radio‐frequency cavity cryomodule assemblies. This application requires cryogenic testing to demonstrate that this transition joint remains leak‐tight when sealing superfluid helium. To simulate a titanium cavity vessel connection to a stainless steel service pipe, bimetallic transition joints were paired together to fabricate piping assemblies. These piping assemblies were then tested in superfluid helium conditions at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory test facilities. The transition joint test program will be described. Fabrication experience and test results will be presented.


Journal Name: AIP Conf.Proc.821:139-143,2006; Conference: Presented at International Workshop on Beam Cooling and Related Topics (COOL05), Eagle Ridge, Galena, IL, USA, 18 - 23 Sep 2005 | 2006

Optics of electron beam in the Recycler

Alexey Burov; Grigory Kazakevich; T. Kroc; Valeri Lebedev; S. Nagaitsev; L. Prost; S. Pruss; A. Shemyakin; M. Sutherland; M. Tiunov; A. Warner

Electron cooling of 8.9 GeV/c antiprotons in the Recycler ring (Fermilab) requires high current and good quality of the DC electron beam. Electron trajectories of ∼0.2 A or higher DC electron beam have to be parallel in the cooling section, within ∼ 0.2 mrad, making the beam envelope cylindrical. These requirements yielded a specific scheme of the electron transport from a gun to the cooling section, with electrostatic acceleration and deceleration in the Pelletron. Recuperation of the DC beam limits beam losses at as tiny level as ∼0.001%, setting strict requirements on the return electron line to the Pelletron and a collector. To smooth the beam envelope in the cooling section, it has to be linear and known at the transport start. Also, strength of the relevant optic elements has to be measured with good accuracy. Beam‐based optic measurements are being carried out and analysed to get this information. They include beam simulations in the Pelletron, differential optic (beam response) measurements and si...


arXiv: Accelerator Physics | 2016

Instability of a witness bunch in a plasma bubble

Alexey Burov; Valeri Lebedev; S. Nagaitsev

The stability of a trailing witness bunch, accelerated by a plasma wake accelerator (PWA) in a blow-out regime, is discussed. The instability growth rate as well as the energy spread, required for BNS damping, are obtained. A relationship between the PWA power efficiency and the BNS energy spread is derived.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2000

Envelope instability as a source of diffusion

Alexey Burov; S. Nagaitsev

Abstract Electron cooling increases the phase space density of the cooled particles up to a certain limit. This limit is normally characterized by a strong space charge tune shift, about 0.2–0.3. This tune shift is high enough to bring the cooled beam to the threshold of the envelope instability. The envelope instability can be in a kind of dynamic equilibrium with the cooling, keeping the cooled beam at a threshold with a high level of the coherent noise. This noise acts as a diffusion for the halo particles which puts a limit on the stored current.

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P. Piot

Northern Illinois University

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