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Cavity types

In the field of particle accelerators the most common use of RF cavities is to increase the particle velocity of traversing particles. This feature makes them one of the core ingredients of every accelerator, and in the case of linear accelerators they are even the dominant machine component. Since...

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Autor principal: Gerigk, Frank
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: CERN 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.5170/CERN-2011-007.277
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1401088
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author Gerigk, Frank
author_facet Gerigk, Frank
author_sort Gerigk, Frank
collection CERN
description In the field of particle accelerators the most common use of RF cavities is to increase the particle velocity of traversing particles. This feature makes them one of the core ingredients of every accelerator, and in the case of linear accelerators they are even the dominant machine component. Since there are many different types of accelerator, RF cavities have been optimized for different purposes and with different abilities, e.g., cavities with fixed or variable RF frequency, cavities for short or long pulses/CW operation, superconducting and normal-conducting cavities. This lecture starts with a brief historical introduction and an explanation on how to get from Maxwell's equations to a simple cavity. Then, cavities will be classified by the type of mode that is employed for acceleration, and an explanation is given as to why certain modes are used in particular cavity types. The lecture will close with a comparison of normal versus superconducting cavities and a few words on the actual power consumption of superconducting cavities.
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spelling cern-14010882023-03-14T19:05:06Zdoi:10.5170/CERN-2011-007.277http://cds.cern.ch/record/1401088engGerigk, FrankCavity typesAccelerators and Storage RingsIn the field of particle accelerators the most common use of RF cavities is to increase the particle velocity of traversing particles. This feature makes them one of the core ingredients of every accelerator, and in the case of linear accelerators they are even the dominant machine component. Since there are many different types of accelerator, RF cavities have been optimized for different purposes and with different abilities, e.g., cavities with fixed or variable RF frequency, cavities for short or long pulses/CW operation, superconducting and normal-conducting cavities. This lecture starts with a brief historical introduction and an explanation on how to get from Maxwell's equations to a simple cavity. Then, cavities will be classified by the type of mode that is employed for acceleration, and an explanation is given as to why certain modes are used in particular cavity types. The lecture will close with a comparison of normal versus superconducting cavities and a few words on the actual power consumption of superconducting cavities.In the field of particle accelerators the most common use of RF cavities is to increase the particle velocity of traversing particles. This feature makes them one of the core ingredients of every accelerator, and in the case of linear accelerators they are even the dominant machine component. Since there are many different types of accelerator, RF cavities have been optimized for different purposes and with different abilities, e.g., cavities with fixed or variable RF frequency, cavities for short or long pulses/CW operation, superconducting and normal-conducting cavities. This lecture starts with a brief historical introduction and an explanation on how to get from Maxwell's equations to a simple cavity. Then, cavities will be classified by the type of mode that is employed for acceleration, and an explanation is given as to why certain modes are used in particular cavity types. The lecture will close with a comparison of normal versus superconducting cavities and a few words on the actual power consumption of superconducting cavities.CERNarXiv:1111.4897oai:cds.cern.ch:14010882011-11-22
spellingShingle Accelerators and Storage Rings
Gerigk, Frank
Cavity types
title Cavity types
title_full Cavity types
title_fullStr Cavity types
title_full_unstemmed Cavity types
title_short Cavity types
title_sort cavity types
topic Accelerators and Storage Rings
url https://dx.doi.org/10.5170/CERN-2011-007.277
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1401088
work_keys_str_mv AT gerigkfrank cavitytypes