Status of the Beam Thermalization Area at the NSCL

ORAL

Abstract

Beam thermalization is a necessary process for the production of low-energy ion beams at projectile fragmentation facilities. Present beam thermalization techniques rely on passing high-energy ion beams through solid degraders followed by a gas cell where the remaining kinetic energy is dissipated through collisions with buffer gas atoms. Recently, the National Superconducting Cyclotron Laboratory (NSCL) upgraded its thermalization area with the implementation of new large acceptance beam lines and~a large RF-gas catcher constructed by Argonne National Lab (ANL). Two high-energy beam lines were commissioned~along with the installation and commissioning of this new device in late~2012. Low-energy radioactive ion beams have been successfully delivered to the Electron Beam Ion Trap (EBIT) charge breeder for the ReA3 reaccelerator, the SuN detector, the Low Energy Beam Ion Trap (LEBIT) penning trap, and~the Beam Cooler and Laser Spectroscopy (BeCoLa) collinear laser beamline. Construction of a gas-filled reverse cyclotron dubbed the CycStopper is also underway. The status of the beam thermalization area will be presented and the overall efficiency of the system will be~discussed.

Authors

  • Kortney Cooper

    MSU/NSCL

  • Bradley Barquest

    MSU/NSCL

  • David Morrissey

    MSU/NSCL

  • Jose Alberto Rodriguez

    NSCL

  • Stefan Schwarz

    NSCL, NSCL, Michigan State University, East Lansing, MI 48824, USA

  • Chandana Sumithrarachchi

    NSCL

  • Jeff Kwarsick

    UC Berkeley

  • Guy Savard

    ANL