Optimization of the beam crossing angle at the ILC for e+e- and gamma-gamma collisions
V.I. Telnov (Institute of Nuclear Physics, Novosibirsk State Univ.,, Novosibirsk, Russia)

TL;DR
This paper analyzes the beam crossing angle at the ILC, proposing an increase from 14 to 20 mrad to optimize gamma-gamma collision capabilities without compromising e+e- luminosity, especially with a 2 micron laser wavelength.
Contribution
It introduces a strategy to increase the ILC crossing angle to 20 mrad by using a 2 micron laser wavelength, enabling high luminosity gamma-gamma collisions and future energy upgrades.
Findings
A 20 mrad crossing angle is feasible without luminosity loss.
A 2 micron laser wavelength enhances gamma-gamma collision performance.
The proposed change supports future collider energy upgrades.
Abstract
At this time, the design of the International Linear Collider (ILC) is optimized for e+e- collisions; the photon collider (gamma-gamma and gamma-electron) is considered as an option. Unexpected discoveries, such as the diphoton excess F(750 GeV) seen at the LHC, could strongly motivate the construction of a photon collider. In order to enable the gamma-gamma collision option, the ILC design should be compatible with it from the very beginning. In this paper, we discuss the problem of the beam crossing angle. In the ILC technical design, this angle is 14 mrad, which is just enough to provide enough space for the final quadrupoles and outgoing beams. For gamma-gamma collisions, the crossing angle must be larger because the low-energy electrons that result from multiple Compton scattering get large disruption angles in collisions with the opposing electron beam and some deflection in the…
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