Resistive wall impedance in elliptical multilayer vacuum chambers

The resistive wall impedance of a vacuum chamber with elliptic cross section is of particular interest for circular particle accelerators as well as for undulators in free electron lasers. By using the electric field of a point charge and of a small dipole moving at arbitrary speed in an elliptical...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: M. Migliorati, L. Palumbo, C. Zannini, N. Biancacci, V. G. Vaccaro
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: American Physical Society 2019-12-01
Series:Physical Review Accelerators and Beams
Online Access:http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevAccelBeams.22.121001
id doaj-e21b9b3329a94ea781556ae01555fe19
record_format Article
spelling doaj-e21b9b3329a94ea781556ae01555fe192020-11-25T01:56:25ZengAmerican Physical SocietyPhysical Review Accelerators and Beams2469-98882019-12-01221212100110.1103/PhysRevAccelBeams.22.121001Resistive wall impedance in elliptical multilayer vacuum chambersM. MiglioratiL. PalumboC. ZanniniN. BiancacciV. G. VaccaroThe resistive wall impedance of a vacuum chamber with elliptic cross section is of particular interest for circular particle accelerators as well as for undulators in free electron lasers. By using the electric field of a point charge and of a small dipole moving at arbitrary speed in an elliptical vacuum chamber, expressed in terms of Mathieu functions, in this paper we take into account the finite conductivity of the beam pipe walls by means of the surface impedance, and evaluate the longitudinal and transverse driving and detuning impedances for any beam velocity. We also extend the definition of the Yokoya form factors, valid in the thick wall regime, at any beam energy, and show that, in the ultra-relativistic limit, they coincide with the ones that are found in literature. The method is also extended to the multilayer vacuum chamber case. Under conditions generally satisfied with particle accelerator beam pipes, the classical transmission line theory can be used to modelling the impedance seen by a bunch in a vacuum chamber with several layers as an equivalent circuit with the same number of load impedances, giving, as result, a surface impedance that can be used in combination with the fields of the elliptic geometry to obtain the resistive wall impedance in an elliptical multilayer vacuum chamber. The results are also compared with a more time consuming 3D electromagnetic code and with solutions for known cases of circular and flat beam pipe.http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevAccelBeams.22.121001
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author M. Migliorati
L. Palumbo
C. Zannini
N. Biancacci
V. G. Vaccaro
spellingShingle M. Migliorati
L. Palumbo
C. Zannini
N. Biancacci
V. G. Vaccaro
Resistive wall impedance in elliptical multilayer vacuum chambers
Physical Review Accelerators and Beams
author_facet M. Migliorati
L. Palumbo
C. Zannini
N. Biancacci
V. G. Vaccaro
author_sort M. Migliorati
title Resistive wall impedance in elliptical multilayer vacuum chambers
title_short Resistive wall impedance in elliptical multilayer vacuum chambers
title_full Resistive wall impedance in elliptical multilayer vacuum chambers
title_fullStr Resistive wall impedance in elliptical multilayer vacuum chambers
title_full_unstemmed Resistive wall impedance in elliptical multilayer vacuum chambers
title_sort resistive wall impedance in elliptical multilayer vacuum chambers
publisher American Physical Society
series Physical Review Accelerators and Beams
issn 2469-9888
publishDate 2019-12-01
description The resistive wall impedance of a vacuum chamber with elliptic cross section is of particular interest for circular particle accelerators as well as for undulators in free electron lasers. By using the electric field of a point charge and of a small dipole moving at arbitrary speed in an elliptical vacuum chamber, expressed in terms of Mathieu functions, in this paper we take into account the finite conductivity of the beam pipe walls by means of the surface impedance, and evaluate the longitudinal and transverse driving and detuning impedances for any beam velocity. We also extend the definition of the Yokoya form factors, valid in the thick wall regime, at any beam energy, and show that, in the ultra-relativistic limit, they coincide with the ones that are found in literature. The method is also extended to the multilayer vacuum chamber case. Under conditions generally satisfied with particle accelerator beam pipes, the classical transmission line theory can be used to modelling the impedance seen by a bunch in a vacuum chamber with several layers as an equivalent circuit with the same number of load impedances, giving, as result, a surface impedance that can be used in combination with the fields of the elliptic geometry to obtain the resistive wall impedance in an elliptical multilayer vacuum chamber. The results are also compared with a more time consuming 3D electromagnetic code and with solutions for known cases of circular and flat beam pipe.
url http://doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevAccelBeams.22.121001
work_keys_str_mv AT mmigliorati resistivewallimpedanceinellipticalmultilayervacuumchambers
AT lpalumbo resistivewallimpedanceinellipticalmultilayervacuumchambers
AT czannini resistivewallimpedanceinellipticalmultilayervacuumchambers
AT nbiancacci resistivewallimpedanceinellipticalmultilayervacuumchambers
AT vgvaccaro resistivewallimpedanceinellipticalmultilayervacuumchambers
_version_ 1724980273705123840