학술논문

Use of A Reconfigurable VME Module to Measure Beam Energy at the Los Alamos Proton Storage Ring
Document Type
Conference
Source
Proceedings of the 2005 Particle Accelerator Conference Particle Accelerator Conference, 2005. PAC 2005. Proceedings of the. :1658-1660 2005
Subject
Fields, Waves and Electromagnetics
Engineered Materials, Dielectrics and Plasmas
Nuclear Engineering
Robotics and Control Systems
Energy measurement
Particle beams
Particle beam measurements
Protons
Storage rings
Frequency
Neutrons
Field programmable gate arrays
Control systems
Instruments
Language
ISSN
1944-4680
2152-9582
Abstract
Custom instrumentation has been developed at the Los Alamos Neutron Science Center (LANSCE) to measure the Proton Storage Ring (PSR) beam energy. The PSR accumulates up to 4•10 13 protons from the linear accelerator for delivery to a spallation neutron source. The energy of the beam injected into the PSR must be adjusted so that the revolution frequency matches the ring buncher frequency, otherwise a large momentum spread will cause increased losses in high-dispersion areas such as the extraction line. Errors in injected beam energy appear as deviations from the ideal 2.8 MHz revolution frequency. A low-cost reconfigurable VME module developed at LANSCE has been configured to calculate the PSR revolution frequency in real-time. The module connects directly to a raw analog wall current monitor output and uses analog signal conditioning electronics, an analog to digital converter, field programmable gate arrays (FPGAs) and an embedded floating-point digital signal processor (DSP) to calculate the revolution frequency. The module is compliant with the EPICS based accelerator control system and calculation results are sent through the network to the control room. This is an improvement over the existing method of manually measuring the frequency with an oscilloscope. Accelerator physicists can now simply observe the PSR frequency, which is dependent on beam energy, on a control room display.