Particle beam cooling
Appearance
Particle beam cooling is the process of improving the quality of particle beams produced by particle accelerators, by reducing the emittance. Techniques for particle beam cooling include:[1]
- Stochastic cooling[2]
- Electron cooling[3][4]
- Ionization cooling
- Laser cooling[5]
- Radiation damping
- Buffer-gas cooling within RF quadrupoles
References
- ^ Proceedings of Cern Accelerator School Workshop on Beam Cooling and related topics, Montreux October 1993
- ^ van der Meer, S. (1985). "Stochastic cooling and the accumulation of antiprotons" (PDF). Reviews of Modern Physics. 57 (3): 689–697. Bibcode:1985RvMP...57..689V. doi:10.1103/RevModPhys.57.689.
- ^ I. Meshkov, Electron Cooling: Status and Perspectives, Physics of Particles and Nuclei, Vol. 25, Issue 6, pp. 631-661, 1994
- ^ Parkhomchuk, V V; Skrinsky, A N (1 July 1991). "Electron cooling: physics and prospective applications". Reports on Progress in Physics. 54 (7): 919–947. Bibcode:1991RPPh...54..919P. doi:10.1088/0034-4885/54/7/001. S2CID 250856492.
- ^ E. Bonderup, Laser Cooling, CAS 1993, CERN 95-06, pp. 731-748