Shintake Monitor in ATF2 : Present Status
Takashi Yamanaka, Masahiro Oroku, Yohei Yamaguchi, Yoshio Kamiya,, Taikan Suehara, Sachio Komamiya, Toshiyuki Okugi, Nobuhiro Terunuma, Toshiaki, Tauchi, Sakae Araki, Junji Urakawa

TL;DR
The paper reports on the current status of the Shintake monitor at ATF2, a device that measures electron beam size using inverse Compton scattering with laser interference fringes, after successful commissioning and initial measurements.
Contribution
It provides an update on the design, installation, and commissioning progress of the Shintake monitor at ATF2, highlighting its capability to measure beam size via gamma-ray fringe patterns.
Findings
Successful measurement of the laser interference fringe pattern
Commissioning of the Shintake monitor at ATF2 completed
Demonstrated the monitor's potential for precise beam size measurement
Abstract
A beam size monitor so called Shintake monitor, which uses the inverse Compton scattering between the laser interference fringe and the electron beam was designed for and installed at ATF2. The commissioning at ATF2 was started in the end of 2008 and succeeded in the measurement of the fringe pattern from the scattered gamma-rays. The present status of the Shintake monitor is described here.
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Taxonomy
TopicsNuclear Physics and Applications · Laser-Plasma Interactions and Diagnostics · Magnetic confinement fusion research
