Brief
summary of coffee discussion on crab cavity, 21.09.2006
Participating:
Rama Calaga, Fritz Caspers, Rogelio Tomas, Joachim Tuckmantel,
Frank Zimmermann
Fritz pointed out that the
phase noise of the beam is many orders of magnitude larger than the noise of
the cavity. In his opinion, it does not make any sense to ask for cavity phase
stability much better than the beam.
We can profit from the fact
that only the relative noise of two cavities on either side of the IP matters.
With an approximate distance of 100 m, the integration of low-frequency noise should
give only a small relative timing jitter. Two cavities on either side should be
powered from the same transmitter to cancel the noise between sides.
Fritz drew some analogies to
stochastic cooling, and concluded that the calculated tolerances are too tight.
In any case they are an order of magnitude tighter than the best measurement
apparatus available could provide (the state of the art in measurements is a 20-fs
phase jitter).
The theoretical formulae for
emittance growth should be calibrated against
simulations or experiments. Frank will ask Kazuhito whether
he can run such simulations. In particular, it seems off that even with a
perfect feedback large emittance growth persists.
Another effect to be looked
at is the tolerance to transverse beam offsets and beam loading (does it cancel
between the two sides of the IP?).