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Commissioning and First Operation of the Antiproton Decelerator (AD)

The Antiproton Decelerator (AD) is a simplified source of antiprotons which provides low energy antiprotons for experiments, replacing four machines: AC (Antiproton Collector), AA (Antiproton Accumulator), PS and LEAR (Low Energy Antiproton Ring), shutdown in 1996. The former AC was modified to incl...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Belochitskii, P, Bosser, Jacques, Buttkus, J, Carli, Christian, Caspers, Friedhelm, Chohan, V, Cornuet, D, Eriksson, T, Findlay, A, Giovannozzi, Massimo, Holzer, B, MacCaferri, R, Madsen, N, Marchesotti, M, Maury, S, Möhl, D, Pasinelli, S, Pedersen, F, Søby, L, Tan, J, Tranquille, G
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2001
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/507788
Descripción
Sumario:The Antiproton Decelerator (AD) is a simplified source of antiprotons which provides low energy antiprotons for experiments, replacing four machines: AC (Antiproton Collector), AA (Antiproton Accumulator), PS and LEAR (Low Energy Antiproton Ring), shutdown in 1996. The former AC was modified to include deceleration and electron cooling. The AD started operation in July 2000 and has since delivered cooled beam at 100 MeV/c (kinetic energy of 5.3 MeV) to 3 experiments (ASACUSA, ATHENA and ATRAP) for 1500 h. The flux (up to 2.5´105pbars /s delivered in short pulses of 330 ns every 110 s) and the quality of the ejected beam are not far from the design specifications. A linear RF Quadrupole Decelerator (RFQD) was commissioned in November 2000 to post-decelerate the beam for ASACUSA from 5.3 MeV to about 15 keV. Problems encountered in converting the fixed energy AC into a decelerating machine will be outlined, and the present status of the AD, including the performance of the cooling systems and the special diagnostics to cope with beams of less than 107 pbars, will be reviewed. Possible future developments will be sketched