The Conversion of CESR to Operate as the Test Accelerator, CesrTA, Part 3: Electron Cloud Diagnostics
M.G. Billing, J.V. Conway, J.A. Crittendan, S. Greenwald, Y. Li, R.E., Meller, C.R. Strohman, J.P. Sikora, J.R. Calvey, M.A. Palmer

TL;DR
This paper details the development of new instrumentation in CesrTA for studying electron clouds and mitigation techniques, enhancing its capabilities for advanced accelerator physics research.
Contribution
It introduces specialized diagnostics for electron cloud studies in CesrTA, expanding its research potential beyond initial collider-focused applications.
Findings
Development of electron cloud diagnostics in four experimental regions
Implementation of mitigation techniques for electron cloud effects
Enhanced versatility of CesrTA for diverse accelerator physics studies
Abstract
Cornell's electron/positron storage ring (CESR) was modified over a series of accelerator shutdowns beginning in May 2008, which substantially improves its capability for research and development for particle accelerators. CESR's energy span from 1.8 to 5.6 GeV with both electrons and positrons makes it ideal for the study of a wide spectrum of accelerator physics issues and instrumentation related to present light sources and future lepton damping rings. Additionally a number of these are also relevant for the beam physics of proton accelerators. This paper is the third in a series of four describing the the conversion of CESR to the test accelerator, CesrTA. The first two papers discuss the overall plan for the conversion of the storage ring to an instrument capable of studying advanced accelerator physics issues and the details of the vacuum system upgrades. This paper focusses on…
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