Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where T. Raubenheimer is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by T. Raubenheimer.


Archive | 2000

A 3 TeV

T. Raubenheimer; H Trautner; F Perriollat; Gilles Carron; Paul A. Pearce; J.C. Godot; Daniel Schulte; Philippe Royer; Steffen Döbert; Rudolf Bossart; A. Ferrari; G. Suberlucq; R. Assmann; Gunther Geschonke; L Groening; L. Thorndahl; Francesco Ruggiero; Louis Rinolfi; T. Kamitani; Olivier Napoly; F. Zhou; Erk Jensen; R. Corsini; Thys Risselada; Antonio Millich; H. Braun; J P Delahaye; Frederick F. Becker; Williame Coosemans; A Verdier

A possible design of a multi-TeV e+e- linear collider is presented. The design is based on the CLIC (Compact Linear Collider) two-beam technology proposed and developed at CERN. Though the study has shown that this technology is applicable to a linear collider with centre-of-mass energies from 500 GeV or less up to 5 TeV, the present report focuses on the nominal energy of 3 Te V. First, a short overview is given of the physics that could possibly be done with such a collider. Then, the description of the main-beam complex covers the injection system, the 30 GHz main linac, and the beam delivery system. The presentation of the RF power source includes the beam-generation scheme, the drive-beam decelerator, which consists of several 625 m long units running parallel to the main linac, and the power-extraction system. Finally, brief outlines are given of all the CLIC test facilities. They cover in particular the new CLIC test facility CTF3 which will demonstrate the feasibility of the power production technique, albeit on a reduced scale, and a first full-scale single-drive-beam unit, CLICI, to establish the overall feasibility of the scheme.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 1996

e^+ e^-

R. Tatchyn; J. Arthur; M. Baltay; K. Bane; R. Boyce; M. Cornacchia; T Cremer; A. Fisher; S.-J. Hahn; M. Hernandez; G. Loew; R. H. Miller; W.R. Nelson; H.-D. Nuhn; J.M. Paterson; T. Raubenheimer; J.N Weaver; Helmut Wiedemann; Herman Winick; C. Pellegrini; G. Travish; E.T. Scharlemann; S. Caspi; William M. Fawley; Klaus Halbach; Kwang-Je Kim; R. Schlueter; Ming Xie; D. D. Meyerhofer; R. Bonifacio

Abstract In recent years significant studies have been initiated on the feasibility of utilizing a portion of the 3 km S-band accelerator at SLAC to drive a short wavelength (4.5−1.5 A) Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS), a Free-Electron Laser (FEL) operating in the Self-Amplified Spontaneous Emission (SASE) regime. Electron beam requirements for single-pass saturation in a minimal time include: 1) a peak current in the 7 kA range, 2) a relative energy spread of e = λ 4π , where λ[m] is the output wavelength. Requirements on the insertion device include field error levels of 0.02% for keeping the electron bunch centered on and in phase with the amplified photons, and a focusing beta of 8 m/rad for inhibiting the dilution of its transverse density. Although much progress has been made in developing individual components and beam-processing techniques necessary for LCLS operation down to ∼20 A, a substantial amount of research and development is still required in a number of theoretical and experimental areas leading to the construction and operation of a 4.5−1.5 A LCLS. In this paper we report on a research and development program underway and in planning at SLAC for addressing critical questions in these areas. These include the construction and operation of a linac test stand for developing laser-driven photocathode rf guns with normalized emittances approaching 1 mm-mrad; development of advanced beam compression, stability, and emittance control techniques at multi-GeV energies; the construction and operation of a FEL Amplifier Test Experiment (FATE) for theoretical and experimental studies of SASE at IR wavelengths; an undulator development program to investigate superconducting, hybrid/permanent magnet (hybrid/PM), and pulsed-Cu technologies; theoretical and computational studies of high-gain FEL physics and LCLS component designs; development of X-ray optics and instrumentation for extracting, modulating, and delivering photons to experimental users; and the study and development of scientific experiments made possible by the source properties of the LCLS.


Journal of Applied Physics | 2008

Linear Collider Based on CLIC Technology

M. Pivi; F. K. King; R. E. Kirby; T. Raubenheimer; Gennady Stupakov; F. Le Pimpec

The effect of an artificially enhanced rough surface on the secondary electron yield (SEY) was investigated both theoretically and experimentally. Analytical studies on triangular and rectangular grooved surfaces show the connection between the characteristic parameters of a given geometry to the SEY reduction. The effect of a strong magnetic field is also discussed. SEY of grooved samples have been measured and the results agree with particle simulations using a Monte Carlo approach.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 1991

Research and development toward a 4.5−1.5 Å linac coherent light source (LCLS) at SLAC

T. Raubenheimer; Ronald D. Ruth

Abstract In this paper, we describe a new trajectory correction technique for high energy linear accelerators. Current correction techniques force the beam trajectory to follow misalignments of the beam position monitors (BPMs). Since the particle bunch has a finite energy spread and particles with different energies are deflected differently, this causes “chromatic” dilution of the transverse beam emittance. The algorithm which we describe in this paper reduces the chromatic dilution by minimizing the energy dependence of the trajectory. To test the method we compare the effectiveness of our algorithm with a standard correction technique in simulations of the Stanford Linear Collider (SLC) linear accelerator and a design linac for a Next Linear Collider (NLC). While the simulations do not indicate that chromatic dilutions are a serious problem in the SLC linac, they would be debilitating in a future linear collider because of the very small beam sizes required to achieve the necessary luminosity. For example, in simulations of the NLC we have found that with typical alignment tolerances the beam size increased substantially after correcting the trajectory with a standard correction algorithm. In contrast, after correcting with our technique, the dilution was negligible. We feel that this technique will prove essential for future linear colliders.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 1993

Sharp reduction of the secondary electron emission yield from grooved surfaces

C. Pellegrini; J. B. Rosenzweig; H.-D. Nuhn; P. Pianetta; R. Tatchyn; Herman Winick; K. Bane; P. Morton; T. Raubenheimer; J. T. Seeman; Klaus Halbach; Kwang-Je Kim; Janos Kirz

Abstract We report the results of preliminary studies of a 2 to 4 nm SASE FEL, using a photoinjector to produce the electron beam, and the SLAC linac to accelerate it to an energy up to 10 GeV. Longitudinal bunch compression is used to increase ten fold the peak current to 2.5 kA, while reducing the bunch length to the subpicosecond range. The saturated output power is in the multi-gigawatt range, producing about 1014 coherent photons within a bandwidth of about 0.2% rms, in a pulse of several millijoules. At 120 Hz repetition rate the average power is about 1 W. The system is optimized for X-ray microscopy in the water window around 2 to 4 nm, and will permit imaging a biological sample in a single subpicosecond pulse.


international conference on particle accelerators | 1993

A dispersion-free trajectory correction technique for linear colliders☆

T. Raubenheimer; P. Emma; S. Kheifets

In this paper, we discuss bunch compressors for future linear colliders. In the past, the bunch compression optics has been based upon achromatic cells using strong sextupoles to correct the dispersive and betatron chromaticity. To preserve the very small emittances required in most future collider designs, these schemes tend to have very tight alignment tolerances. Were, we describe bunch compressors based upon magnetic chicanes or wigglers which do not need sextupoles to correct the chromatic emittance dilution. The dispersive chromaticity cancels naturally and the betatron chromaticity is not a significant source of emittance dilution. Thus, these schemes allow for substantially reduced alignment tolerances. Finally, we present a detailed design for the NLC linear collider.<<ETX>>


arXiv: Accelerator Physics | 2013

A 2 to 4 nm high power FEL on the SLAC linac

E. Adli; Jean-Pierre Delahaye; Spencer Gessner; Mark Hogan; T. Raubenheimer; Weiming An; C. Joshi; W. B. Mori

Plasma wakefield acceleration (PWFA) holds much promise for advancing the energy frontier because it can potentially provide a 1000-fold or more increase in acceleration gradient with excellent power efficiency in respect with standard technologies. Most of the advances in beam-driven plasma wakefield acceleration were obtained by a UCLA/USC/SLAC collaboration working at the SLAC FFTB[ ]. These experiments have shown that plasmas can accelerate and focus both electron and positron high energy beams, and an accelerating gradient in excess of 50 GeV/m can be sustained in an 85 cm-long plasma. The FFTB experiments were essentially proof-of-principle experiments that showed the great potential of plasma accelerators. The FACET[ ] test facility at SLAC will in the period 2012-2016 further study several issues that are directly related to the applicability of PWFA to a high-energy collider, in particular two-beam acceleration where the witness beam experiences high beam loading (required for high efficiency), small energy spread and small emittance dilution (required to achieve luminosity). The PWFA-LC concept presented in this document is an attempt to find the best design that takes advantage of the PWFA, identify the critical parameters to be achieved and eventually the necessary R&D to address their feasibility. It best benefits from the extensive R&D that has been performed for conventional rf linear colliders during the last twenty years, especially ILC[ ] and CLIC[ ], with a potential for a comparably lower power consumption and cost.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 1999

Chicane and wiggler based bunch compressors for future linear colliders

Jean-Pierre Delahaye; Gilbert Guignard; T. Raubenheimer; Ian H Wilson

Abstract Design studies of a future TeV e+e− Linear Collider (TLC) are presently being made by five major laboratories within the framework of a world-wide collaboration. A figure of merit is defined which enables an objective comparison of these different designs. This figure of merit is shown to depend only on a small number of parameters. General scaling laws for the main beam parameters and linac parameters are derived and prove to be very effective when used as guidelines to optimize the linear collider design. By adopting appropriate parameters for beam stability, the figure of merit becomes nearly independent of accelerating gradient and RF frequency of the accelerating structures. In spite of the strong dependence of the wake fields with frequency, the single-bunch emittance blow-up during acceleration along the linac is also shown to be independent of the RF frequency when using equivalent trajectory correction schemes. In this situation, beam acceleration using high-frequency structures becomes very advantageous because it enables high accelerating fields to be obtained, which reduces the overall length and consequently the total cost of the linac.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 1994

A Beam Driven Plasma-Wakefield Linear Collider: From Higgs Factory to Multi-TeV

C. Pellegrini; J. B. Rosenzweig; G. Travish; K. Bane; R. Boyce; G. Loew; P. Morton; H.-D. Nuhn; J.M. Paterson; P. Pianetta; T. Raubenheimer; J. Seeman; R. Tatchyn; V. Vylet; Herman Winick; K. Halbach; K.-J. Kim; M. Xie; D. Prosnitz; E.T. Scharlemann; R. Bonifacio; L. De Salvo; P. Pierini

We discuss the design and performance of a 2 to 4 nm FEL operating in Self-Amplified Spontaneous Emission (SASE), using a photoinjector to produce the electron beam, and the SLAC linac to accelerate it to an energy of about 7 GeV. Longitudinal bunch compression is used to increase the peak current to 2.5 kA, while reducing the bunch length to about 40 μm. The FEL field gain length is about 6 m, and the saturation length is about 60 m. The saturated output power is about 10 GW, corresponding to about 1014 photons in a single pulse in a bandwidth of about 0.1%, with a pulse duration of 0.16 ps. Length compression, emittance control, phase stability, FEL design criteria, and parameter tolerances are discussed.


international conference on particle accelerators | 1993

Scaling laws for e+/e− linear colliders

K. Bane; T. Raubenheimer; J. Seeman

A linac configuration providing a low emittance high peak current electron beam is under study for a potential Linac Coherent Light Source (LCLS) based on the SLAC accelerator. The parameters of the final electron bunch are nearing the technological limits of present accelerators in both transverse and longitudinal phase space. In this note we describe a layout of the RF gun, linac, and bunch compressors to deliver the required bunch properties.<<ETX>>

Collaboration


Dive into the T. Raubenheimer's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Z. Li

Stanford University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge