Challenges and Constraints in Designing a High Gain Single-Pass Amplifier for Optical Stochastic Cooling
POSTER
Abstract
Optical Stochastic Cooling (OSC) is a proposed method to reduce the equilibrium energy spread and emittance of the beam in a particle accelerator. In OSC light generated in a pickup undulator is amplified and transported downstream to an identical kicker undulator. A magnetic bypass chicane between the pickup and kicker adjust the arrival time of each particle with its own radiation in such a way as to provide a corrective kick. The bypass chicane can only provide a few millimeters of optical delay for the amplification system and thus puts a strict constraint on the design. Fermilab is currently working towards a proof-of-principle OSC experiment with electrons at the Integrable Optics Test Accelerator (IOTA) that includes a passive test of OSC (no amplification) and an active test with an amplifier of 7 dB. For OSC to work in a hadron collider the amplifier gain must be increased to 20-30 dB, operate at a relatively large duty cycle of $\sim$ 1-10$\%$ and amplify pulses on the order of a few ns. Here we consider the challenges of reaching such high gains in a single pass amplifier with the above constraints.
*Work supported by the by the US Department of Energy (DOE) contract DE-SC0013761 to Northern Illinois University. Fermilab is operated by the Fermi research alliance LLC under US DOE contract DE-AC02- 07CH11359.