학술논문

Optics studies of a Muon Accumulator Ring based on FFA cells
Document Type
Working Paper
Source
Subject
Physics - Accelerator Physics
Language
Abstract
The production of an intense, high energy and low emittance muon beam is interesting for a possible muon collider. The Low EMittance Muon Accelerator (LEMMA) team at the Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare (INFN), in Italy, is studying the production of a 22.5 GeV low emittance muon beam from a high energy positron beam at twice the muon energy impinging on a fixed thin target. The LEMMA scheme proposes to perform the muon accumulation from multiple ($10^2$ to $10^3$) positron bunches to increase the population of a single muon bunch that is recirculated through the target using two small accumulator rings, one per muon species. The three beams ($\mu^+$ and $\mu^-$ at 22.5 GeV and $e^+$ at twice the muon energy) share the same phase space at the target on every positron bunch interaction, producing new muons inside the preserved beam emittance. We study the requirements and optics design of the accumulator to recirculate the muons over the target using a Fixed Field Alternating Gradient (FFA) arc. As a result, we achieve a compact 230 m long accumulator with two Interaction Points, energy acceptance of $\pm5$ %, low twiss beta function at the target $\beta^*_\mu=20$ cm, and a drift space 2$L^*$ of 20 cm enough to accommodate 1 % of a radiation length $X_0$ for several material options. These optics parameters are obtained with magnets similar to those foreseen for new colliders like FCC or CLIC, and could be extended further with new magnet designs. The current muon accumulation results will serve as input for beam combination studies.
Comment: Low emittance muon accumulation studies