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Title: High Intensity Polarized Electron Sources

Journal Article · · AIP Conference Proceedings
DOI:https://doi.org/10.1063/1.2888121· OSTI ID:21055232
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  1. Jefferson Lab, 12000 Jefferson Ave., Newport News, VA 23606 (United States)

During the 1990s, at numerous facilities world wide, extensive R and D devoted to constructing reliable GaAs photoguns helped ensure successful accelerator-based nuclear and high-energy physics programs using spin polarized electron beams. Today, polarized electron source technology is considered mature, with most GaAs photoguns meeting accelerator and experiment beam specifications in a relatively trouble-free manner. Proposals for new collider facilities however, require electron beams with parameters beyond today's state-of-the-art and serve to renew interest in conducting polarized electron source R and D. And at CEBAF/Jefferson Lab, there is an immediate pressing need to prepare for new experiments that require considerably more beam current than before. One experiment in particular - Q-weak, a parity violation experiment that will look for physics beyond the Standard Model--requires 180 uA average current at polarization >80% for a duration of one year, with run-averaged helicity correlated current asymmetry less than 0.1 ppm. Neighboring halls will continue taking beam during Q-weak, pushing the total average beam current from the gun beyond 300 uA. This workshop contribution describes R and D at Jefferson Lab, dedicated toward extending the operating current of polarized electron sources to meet the requirements of high current experiments at CEBAF and to better appreciate the technological challenges of new accelerators, particularly high average current machines like eRHIC that require at least 25 mA at high polarization.

OSTI ID:
21055232
Journal Information:
AIP Conference Proceedings, Vol. 980, Issue 1; Conference: PSTP2007: 12. international workshop on polarized ion sources, targets and polarimetry, Upton, NY (United States), 10-14 Sep 2007; Other Information: DOI: 10.1063/1.2888121; (c) 2008 American Institute of Physics; Country of input: International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA); ISSN 0094-243X
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English