Journal of the Particle Accelerator Society of Japan
Online ISSN : 2436-1488
Print ISSN : 1349-3833
Volume 21, Issue 3
Displaying 1-23 of 23 articles from this issue
Preface
Accelerators in Civil Life
Topics
  • Ken-ichi Kanazawa
    2024Volume 21Issue 3 Pages 190-197
    Published: October 31, 2024
    Released on J-STAGE: October 31, 2024
    JOURNAL RESTRICTED ACCESS

    KEK B-factory (KEKB) was a project to pursue a luminosity frontier of high energy physics after the energy frontier by TRISTAN. KEKB was designed making use of experiences during TRISTAN as a stepping-stone. From the experience of designing and operating the KEKB vacuum system, some topics of concern in those days are picked up and summarized. They are, synchrotron radiation, one-dimensional molecular flow, and the density measurement of electron cloud.

    Download PDF (1158K)
  • Kazuro Furukawa, Masanori Satoh, Injector LINAC Group
    2024Volume 21Issue 3 Pages 198-207
    Published: October 31, 2024
    Released on J-STAGE: October 31, 2024
    JOURNAL RESTRICTED ACCESS

    The electron-positron injector at KEK has been delivering beams for both particle physics and synchrotron radiation science experiments for many years. To increase the efficiency of these experiments, we have been developing simultaneous top-up injection with fast beam switching. In particular, to meet the stringent beam conditions required for the SuperKEKB B-Factory project, a large number of pulsed-operated devices have been developed over a long period of time. These devices are coordinated by a high-speed wide-area event synchronization mechanism, enabling beam switching 50 times per second. During the full-scale beam commissioning of SuperKEKB in 2019, simultaneous top-up injection into five multipurpose storage rings was achieved. This led to more than 200% increase in the efficiency of particle physics experiments and improved the stability of the stored beam current of synchrotron radiation experiments to less than 0.1% fluctuation. The concept and development details of this project are described.

    Download PDF (1230K)
  • Hiroki Kanda, Takashi Nakano, Mitsuhiro Fukuda, Tetsuhiko Yorita, Nori ...
    2024Volume 21Issue 3 Pages 208-211
    Published: October 31, 2024
    Released on J-STAGE: October 31, 2024
    JOURNAL FREE ACCESS

    We have started a new platform for the support of the scientific research in many fields of science by the supply of short-lived radioisotopes and the technical support of their treatment. In this framework, many kinds of research projects which are not supported by the JSPS Grant-in-Aid (KAKENHI) are supported. Scientific research in the early stages and collaboration with industrial sector can be supported from this new platform. We plan to increase our human resources and focus on providing technical support and research consulting. We also plan to add new nuclides in our suppliable RI list. We aim at the promotion of scientific research using short-lived radioisotopes.

    Download PDF (500K)
  • Mamiko Nishiuchi
    2024Volume 21Issue 3 Pages 212-218
    Published: October 31, 2024
    Released on J-STAGE: October 31, 2024
    JOURNAL RESTRICTED ACCESS

    A quarter century has been passed since the discovery of high energy proton beam from the interaction between high intensity laser pulse and solid density targets. However, the controllability of the beam is not good enough for being used in many applications. Although high energy ion beam is desired from many fields of applications, proton with energy greater than 100 MeV was not easily accelerated. We show that the laser temporal pulse condition is a key for controlling the ion acceleration performance and demonstrated for the first time that the same ion acceleration performance is reproduced in two independent PW-class laser systems by tuning the temporal pulse condition exactly same. Furthermore, with even careful controlling of the laser temporal pulse condition, ~150 MeV proton beam is obtained by only 22 J laser on target, which is the world record so far.

    Download PDF (1085K)
  • Takaaki Yamaguchi
    2024Volume 21Issue 3 Pages 219-226
    Published: October 31, 2024
    Released on J-STAGE: October 31, 2024
    JOURNAL RESTRICTED ACCESS

    In vacuum chambers and accelerating cavities in recent accelerators, RF absorbing materials are widely used for damping higher-order modes and reducing the coupling impedance. For precisely measuring the RF characteristics of absorbing materials, we developed a new resonant-cavity method for measuring RF absorbing materials. In our method, the cavity-eigenmode simulation is used to evaluate the complex permittivity or permeability of a sample from the results of RF measurements. We fabricated a rectangular cavity for this method and measured the complex permeability of a ferrite sample in frequency range of 1.5–3 GHz. The result was compared with one from the Nicolson-Ross-Weir method.

    Download PDF (1072K)
Lecture
Meeting Reports
Recent PhD. Graduates
Obituaries
Notice Board & PASJ Announcements
List of Supporting Members
feedback
Top