Multipactor in Accelerating Cavities

£119.50

Multipactor in Accelerating Cavities

Scientific standards, measurement etc Particle and high-energy physics Nuclear power and engineering Electronics engineering

Authors: Valery D. Shemelin, Sergey A. Belomestnykh

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Collection: Particle Acceleration and Detection

Language: English

Published by: Springer

Published on: 10th August 2020

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 24 Mb

ISBN: 9783030481988


Introduction

This book is written by two world-recognized experts in radio frequency (RF) systems for particle accelerators and is based on many years of experience in dealing with the multipactor phenomenon. The authors introduce and review multipactor in RF cavities for scientists and engineers working in the field of accelerator physics and technology. The multipactor phenomenon of unintended electron avalanches occurs in the RF cavities commonly and quite often is a performance-limiting factor.

Overview and Content

The book starts with an Introductory Overview which contains historical observations and brief description of most common aspects of the phenomenon. Part I deals with the multipactor in a flat gap. It starts with description of the dynamics of electrons, derivation of the stability condition and analyzing influence of several factors on the multipactor. Then, the initial considerations are extended to derive a generalized phase stability and finally a particular case, called ping-pong multipacting, is considered. The part one is concluded with a brief review of computer codes used in multipactor simulations.

Part II is dedicated to the multipactor in crossed RF fields, the typical situation in accelerating cavities. Two cases of MP are considered: a two-point multipactor near the cavity equator in elliptical cavities and a one-point multipactor.

Part III describes optimization of the cavity shapes geared toward designing multipactor-free structures. The book will serve as an important reference on multipactor for those involved in developing and operating radio frequency cavities for particle accelerators.

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