Applications of electron lenses: scraping of high-power beams, beam-beam compensation, and nonlinear optics
Giulio Stancari

TL;DR
Electron lenses are versatile tools used in high-energy physics to manipulate particle beams, enabling beam-beam compensation, halo scraping, and nonlinear optics, with applications in Fermilab, RHIC, and LHC upgrades.
Contribution
This paper reviews recent applications and developments of electron lenses in beam manipulation, including new experimental results and conceptual designs for future collider upgrades.
Findings
Successful beam-beam compensation in Fermilab Tevatron
Demonstration of halo scraping with hollow electron beams
Design studies for LHC collimation upgrades
Abstract
Electron lenses are pulsed, magnetically confined electron beams whose current-density profile is shaped to obtain the desired effect on the circulating beam. Electron lenses were used in the Fermilab Tevatron collider for bunch-by-bunch compensation of long-range beam-beam tune shifts, for removal of uncaptured particles in the abort gap, for preliminary experiments on head-on beam-beam compensation, and for the demonstration of halo scraping with hollow electron beams. Electron lenses for beam-beam compensation are being commissioned in the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL). Hollow electron beam collimation and halo control were studied as an option to complement the collimation system for the upgrades of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN; a conceptual design was recently completed. Because of their electric charge and the absence of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Accelerators and Free-Electron Lasers · Particle accelerators and beam dynamics · Superconducting Materials and Applications
