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Cooling Rate for Microbunched Electron Cooling without Amplification

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 Added by Gennady Stupakov
 Publication date 2018
  fields Physics
and research's language is English




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The Microbunched Electron Cooling (MBEC) proposed by D. Ratner is a promising cooling technique that can find applications in future hadron and electron-ion colliders. In this paper, we develop a new framework for the study of MBEC which is based on the analysis of the dynamics of microscopic 1D fluctuations in the electron and hadron beams during their interaction and propagation through the system. Within this framework, we derive an analytical formula for the cooling rate and benchmark it against 1D computer simulations with a agreement between the analytical and numerical results. We then calculate the expecting cooling time for a set of parameters of the proposed electron-ion collider eRHIC in a simple cooling system with one chicane in the electron channel. While the cooling rate in this system turns out to be insufficient to counteract the intra-beam scattering in the proton beam, we discuss how the electron signal can be amplified by two orders of magnitude through the use of plasma effects in the beam.



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The Microbunched Electron Cooling (MBEC) is a promising cooling technique that can find applications in future hadron and electron-ion colliders to counteract intrabeam scattering that limits the maximum achievable luminosity of the collider. To minimize the cooling time, one would use amplification cascades consisting of a drift section followed by a magnetic chicane. In this paper, we first derive and optimize the gain factor in an amplification section for a simplified one-dimensional model of the beam. We then deduce the cooling rate of a system with one and two amplification cascades. We also analyze the noise effects that counteract the cooling process through the energy diffusion in the hadron beam. Our analytical formulas are confirmed by numerical simulations for a set of model parameters.
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