Tune Measurement in RHIC1 M. Brennan, P. Cameron, P. Cerniglia, R. Connolly, J. Cupolo, W. Dawson, C. Degen, A. DellaPenna, J. DeLong, A. Drees, D. Gassner, M. Kesselman, R. Lee, A. Marusic, J. Mead, R. Michnoff, C. Schultheiss, R. Sikora, and J.Van Zeijts Brookhaven National Laboratory, Upton, NY 11973, USA Abstract. Three basic tune measurement methods are employed in RHIC; kicked beam, Schottky, and phase-locked loop. The kicked beam and 2GHz Schottky systems have been in operation since the first commissioning of circulating beam in RHIC in 1999. Preliminary PLL measurements utilizing a commercial off-the-shelf lockin amplifier were completed during that run, and the resonant BPM used in that system also delivered 230MHz Schottky spectra. With encouraging preliminary results and the thought of tune feedback in mind, a PLL tune system was implemented in the FPGA/DSP environment of the RHIC BPM system for the RHIC 2001 run. During that run this system functioned at the level of the present state-of-the-art in tune measurement accuracy and resolution, and was successfully incorporated into a tune feedback system for use during acceleration. Each of the tune measurement systems has particular strengths and weaknesses. We present specific and comparative details of systems design and operation. In addition, we present detailed tune measurements and their utilization in the measurement of chromaticity and the implementation of tune feedback. Finally, we discuss planned upgrades for the RHIC 2003 run. Introduction RHIC is a superconducting two-ring synchrotron, with the capability to accelerate and store particle species ranging from protons to Gold. All species heavier than protons must cross transition during acceleration. The effect of intra-beam scattering (IBS) on emittance grows with the square of charge, so that for heavier species such as Gold the luminosity lifetime at store is limited by longitudinal beam loss out of the bucket due to IBS. Ramp rate requirements and hysteresis effects in the superconducting magnets limit the machine cycle time from injection to store and back to injection to a minimum of about 30 minutes under optimum conditions. Without beam cooling, fast and efficient machine cycles are essential to maximize the integrated luminosity. The primary requirement for tune measurement in RHIC is defined by this need for fast and efficient machine cycles. A variety of problems are encountered in the development of an acceleration ramp. The first and most fundamental is that the machine model does not permit to accurately set the tunes to a predetermined value, but rather that the tunes during a ramp attempt must be measured and corrected, either by feedforward during the next ramp attempt, or by tune feedback during acceleration. The situation is complicated by the fact that lattice optics change up the ramp; due to aperture limitations beam is injected with (5*=10, and beta squeeze in the IRs is accomplished during ramping. As a result, when running without tune feedback a good many unsuccessful attempts, 1 Work performed under the auspices of the U.S. Department of Energy CP648, Beam Instrumentation Workshop 2002: Tenth Workshop, edited by G. A. Smith and T. Russo © 2002 American Institute of Physics 0-7354-0103-9/02/$19.00 134 often over the span of many weeks, have been required in the development of a successful ramp, and a ramp remained successful only so long as machine conditions didn't change. Beyond the problem with model accuracy, which does not appear to be surmountable in the foreseeable future, there are many additional problems to overcome in ramp development. Early in the ramp there are fast changes in tune and chromaticity due to snapback [1]. Through the ramp good chromaticity control is essential, but not always present during ramp development. The head-tail instability requires negative chromaticity below transition and positive above. Even with the correct sign, large chromaticities are harmful, first because the fast decoherence makes tune measurement difficult or impossible, and second because the large linewidth results in resonance overlap and beam loss. Beam loss drives currents in pickup electrodes, which often obscure beam signals at the time when measurements are most needed. Transition crossing presents its own special set of problems for tune measurement. The need for precise tune measurement to confirm the chromaticity sign change is made more difficult by transverse size oscillations and beam loss in dispersive regions (where the tune pickups are located) as a result of longitudinal quadrupole oscillations following the phase jump. The dynamic range problem always present in tune measurement (observation of the small difference signal at the betatron frequency in the presence of the much larger signal due to beam offset and sum mode at the revolution frequency) is sometimes aggravated by orbit changes at transition. Coupling often complicates the measurement and interpretation of tune data. And finally, there remain all the usual problems of data acquisition and processing, integration with the control system, and operator friendliness. Each of the tune measurements systems has its' own specific strengths and weaknesses in dealing with the problems outlined above. tune small timing con/ accuracy chrom req'd? incoh? chrom on ramp? coupling? comments need big kick from inj oscillations req'd? BPMs 10^3 yes ARTUS 10^3 yes yes con decoh (sign?) close approach emittance growth HFSchottky 10^3 no no incoh sideband width from line shape continuous, non-pert LFSchottky 10M no no incoh sideband width line presence continuous, non-pert PLL 10^5 yes no incoh? 1 Hz radial mod line presence cont, non-pert, sensitive QMM ? ? no incoh Head-Tail 10^3 yes yes coh no? coh? AC Dipole con inj matching, sensitivity? data analysis? parasitic to ARTUS DXBPM electronics? TABLE 1. Characteristics of various tune measurement methods. 135 The table above outlines characteristics of various tune measurement methods. There has been experience with all these methods (except measurement of the quadrupole moment) in the first two RHIC beam runs. The first five methods will be discussed in greater detail in the following sections The ARTUS System The acronym ARTUS [2] is derived from "A Rhic Tune measurement System". Betatron oscillations are excited with a fast transverse kicker magnet and beam positions are recorded from a BPM. The fractional tunes are extracted by performing a FFT analysis. The BPM assigned to the tune meter resides at a location with high horizontal betatron function and moderately high vertical betatron function (at the Q3 magnets at 2 o'clock). The capability of multiple turn-by-turn kicks is included to ensure the needed signal amplitude at all beam energy settings. The readout electronics and controls are installed in a VME crate in the 1002 service building. control room tunnel power supply BPM FIGURE 1. ARTUS block diagram Each ring has two kicker modules with four 2-m stainless steel striplines, allowing both horizontal and vertical kicks. The two kickers are connected in series to provide 4 m of stripline. Each stripline subtends an angle of 70 degrees with an aperture of 7 cm. The assembly is designed to give 50Q impedance when opposing lines are driven in the difference mode. Single pulses can power each of the four 136 planes independently. The kick pulses are generated by fast fast FET switches, producing pulses that are approximately 140 ns long. Single bunch excitation is possible with even up to 120 bunches per ring. All switches for all all striplines in both rings rings are are charged by one 5kV/2A power supply. The kick angle after after one pulse with 3 kV received by an ion going through through the the kickers kickers isis approximately approximately 10 jirad µrad at at injection injection energy (y^lO). (γ≅10). Figure shows BPM signal processing Figure 11 shows BPM signal processing and and kicker kicker triggering. triggering. The The FET FET switches are triggered by a TTL pulse of 200 ns width from a numerically-controlled switches are triggered by a TTL pulse of 200 ns width from a numerically-controlled oscillator (NCO) (NCO) board. The NCO outputs pulses with the required phase and a remotely settable settable frequency of up up to 20 MHz. The phase and frequency frequency of frequency resolutions are 0.09 degrees and 11.6 mHz respectively. By selecting a NCO NCO frequency frequency close close to to the the betatron betatron frequency frequency the the beam beam is is kicked kicked resonantly, resonantly, enhancing enhancing the the effect effect on on the the beam beam significantly compared with aa single single kick. significantly compared with kick. A A set set point point equal equal or or very very close close to to the the betatron was shown shown to betatron frequency frequency was to kick kick the the beam beam out out of of the the ring ring if if the the number number of of turns turns was too high. In order to control the total number of kicks, the NCO is triggered synchronously with sync trigger synchronously with the the beam beam using using an an in-house in-house beam beam sync trigger VI24 V124 board. board. Other Other channels of the same VI24 board trigger the data acquisition from the channels of the same V124 board trigger the data acquisition from the BPM. BPM. This This board board allows allows the the tune tune measurement measurement to to be be triggered triggered by by any any event event broadcasted broadcasted on on the the beam synchronous link link or or on Thus the beam synchronous on demand. demand. Thus the tunes tunes can can be be easily easily correlated correlated any any time time with with any any other other instrumentation. instrumentation. 16 0-1B 0-20 0-22 O 24- 0 ZS D-ZB FIGURE ARTUS tune FIGURE 2. 2. ARTUS tune measurement measurement during during an an acceleration acceleration ramp ramp 137 oze O-ZB Figure 2 above shows ARTUS tune measurement results during an acceleration ramp in September of 2001. Horizontal tune is in the left panel, and vertical in the right. The beginning of the ramp is at the bottom of the figure, transition is about 1/4 of the way up, and flat-top is at the top. Several interesting observations can be made about this data. For the first 20% of the ramp the horizontal signal is obscured by broadband noise due to beam loss, and the vertical signal is absent, perhaps due to large chromaticity. When tune information does appear the horizontal tune is brushing the 1/5 resonance, and the horizontal signal is stronger than the vertical in the vertical spectrum. Horizontal tune again brushes 1/5 about 30% into the ramp, and then the spectrum becomes broad and somewhat confusing until midpoint. Shortly after midpoint horizontal tune sits on 1/5 for about 30 seconds, while vertical briefly walks onto the 1/4 resonance. For most of the last quarter of the ramp horizontal and vertical signals are virtually identical. The effect of coupling is somewhat confusing here. Finally, it appears that the tunes cross shortly before the end of the ramp. This ramp illustrates some of the difficulties of interpreting ARTUS spectra, as well as the fact that tunes and chromaticities were not under control in September, despite the fact that the run had been in progress for several months. Improvements planned for the RHIC 2003 run include moving the kicker to a region of higher beta, utilizing separate PUEs for horizontal and vertical to maximize pickup beta in both planes, and modifying the analog front end to simplify timing. The High Frequency Schottky System Two high-frequency cavities from Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory [3] are used to detect Schottky signals from both beams. The transverse modes are TM120 and TM210 at 2.069±0.002GHz. They have measured Q of 4700, and are separated by 4 MHz. A longitudinal mode is at 2.741 GHz. The signals are down-converted to 2MHz and amplified in the tunnel, then transported to an external 10MHz bandwidth FFT analyzer. Data is provided to the control system through Lab VIEW communicating with the FFT analyzer via TCP, as well as through a remote Xterm scope application. The usefulness of the 2GHz Schottky system during acceleration of Gold beams is limited by the large width and resulting overlap of the revolution and betatron lines at and near injection energies, where the relativistic slip factor is large. In addition, the 0.4% increase in RHIC revolution frequency during ramps results in line movement of 8MHz at 2GHZ during the ramp, causing rapid sweeping of the spectral lines across the 400KHz wide cavity resonance. The possibility of using a beam-synchronous frequency for down conversion was investigated and discarded because of bandwidth problems in the available frequency multiplier, and more significantly because of the timing system interface required to implement the linehopping needed to track the cavity resonance as it would then sweep under the stationary spectrum. A consequence was that averaging could not be used to decrease noise during ramps. Solutions to the problems arising out of the non-stationary spectrum were also hampered by limitations in the interface in the FFT analyzer, 138 which rate of of about about 1Hz. IHz. Within Within the the which permitted permitted transfer transfer of of spectra spectra at at aa maximum maximum rate limitations of available memory, some of these deficiencies could be overcome by limitations of available memory, some of these deficiencies could be overcome by utilizing the FFT analyzer in time capture mode. In this mode it digitized as fast as utilizing the FFT analyzer in time capture mode. In this mode it digitized as fast as possible for a given resolution bandwidth, then replayed the capture buffer to postpossible for a given resolution bandwidth, then replayed the capture buffer to postprocess 10 seconds seconds of of data data could could be be processthe theFFT FFToff-line. off-line. In In aa typical typical ramping ramping setup setup about about 10 saved in capture mode. Figure 3 shows a time capture of the first successful transition saved in capture mode. Figure 3 shows a time capture of the first successful transition crossing crossingin inRHIC. RHIC. FIGURE3.3. HF HF Schottky Schottky measurement measurement of of first first successful successful transition FIGURE transition crossing crossing Thehorizontal horizontal axis axis spans spans aa spectrum width of 78.125KHz. The 78.125KHz. The The vertical vertical axis axis isis time,the thetop topof of the the figure figure is is about Is 1s before transition, and time, and the the bottom bottom isis about about 2s 2safter after transition.The Therevolution revolution line line and betatron sidebands are transition. are sweeping sweeping from from upper upper right right toto lowerleft. left.The The frequency frequency sweeping sweeping results results from from the the fact, lower fact, as as mentioned mentioned above, above, that that the the local oscillator oscillator used used for for down-conversion down-conversion was was not not beam beam synchronous. synchronous. Two local Two sets sets of of betatron sidebands sidebands of of unequal unequal intensity intensity appear, appear, caused betatron caused by by weak weak coupling coupling of of the the tunes. tunes. Attransition transition the the sidebands sidebands cross cross due due to to nonzero nonzero chromaticity. chromaticity. It At It isis clear clear that that the the signs signs of vertical and horizontal chromaticity were opposite at transition. The broadband of vertical and horizontal chromaticity were opposite at transition. The broadband noise inin the the Schottky Schottky spectrum spectrum after after transition transition has has aa period period of noise of 0.08 0.08 seconds, seconds, which which corresponds to the period of bunch length oscillations observed by the corresponds to the period of bunch length oscillations observed by the wall wall current current monitor atat the the same same time. time. These These oscillations oscillations were just sufficient monitor were just sufficient to to drive drive the the tails tails of of the transverse distribution into the beampipe walls in high dispersion regions the transverse distribution into the beampipe walls in high dispersion regions (including the the location location of of the the Schottky Schottky cavities) cavities) at at times times of of maximum (including maximum intrabunch intrabunch momentum spread, causing currents that excited broadband noise momentum spread, causing currents that excited broadband noise in in the the cavity. cavity. The The 139 phenomenon noise in in the the Schottky Schottky spectrum spectrum during during beam beam loss loss isis phenomenon of of broadband broadband noise frequently observed at RHIC, for instance at transition in Figure 4 below. frequently observed at RHIC, for instance at transition in Figure 4 below. FIGURE 4. 4. HF HF Schottky Schottky measurement measurementof oftune tuneup upthe theramp ramp FIGURE During RHIC 2000 2000 aa Lab LabVIEW application that that centered centeredthe therevolution revolutionline lineinin During RHIC VIEW application each and permitted permitted visual visual averaging averaging of of the the resulting resulting spectrogram spectrogramwas was each raw raw spectrum spectrum and created partially circumvent circumvent the the FFT FFT box box difficulties difficulties discussed discussed above. above.Figure Figure44isisaa created to to partially spectrogram during aa complete complete ramp ramp from from y^lO.3 γ=10.3 to to y^70. γ=70. The Thevertical verticalaxis axis spectrogram acquired acquired during frequency span of 78KHz, the covers a frequency the RHIC RHIC revolution revolution frequency, frequency, so so that that only only aa single revolution line and set of betatron single betatron sidebands sidebands are are seen. seen. The The white white horizontal horizontal lines are markers generated to indicate indicate aa fractional fractional tune tune of of 0.225. 0.225.The Thebeginning beginningofofthe the ramp is at the left left of the figure. figure. Betatron Betatron sidebands sidebands are are not not resolved resolved until until the the relativistic slip factor factor becomes small about about 30 30 seconds seconds into intothe theramp. ramp.All Alllines linesbecome become narrow as transition is approached, where where by by definition definition the therevolution revolutionfrequency frequencyisisthe the same for particles of differing same differing momentum. momentum. Broadband Broadband noise noise isis observed observedimmediately immediately following transition. Sidebands remain remain clearly clearly resolved resolved until until the the end end of of the the ramp, ramp, allowing easy measurement of tune. Note the asymmetry between sidebands Note the asymmetry between sidebands ininthe the latter part of the ramp, indicating large large chromaticity, chromaticity, and and the the presence presenceofoflines linesfrom from both planes due to coupling. The betatron width is betatron line linewidth is quantitatively quantitatively expressed expressed [4] [4] as: as: M = f00 ∆p/p Ap/p[(n±v)T| a ∆f [(n + ν) η + + ξ] where the the revolution where revolution frequency frequency fo~78KHz, f0~78KHz, momentum momentum spread spread Ap/p~.001, ∆p/p~.001,harmonic harmonic number n~26500 n~26500 at at 2.07GHz, 2.07GHz, tune number tune v~.23, ν~.23, slip slip factor factor T|η varies varies from from -.008 -.008atatinjection injection to .002 .002 at at store, store, and and chromaticity chromaticity £ξ is to is typically typically aa few few units units either either positive positive or ornegative. negative. The chromatic chromatic contribution contribution to The to linewidth linewidth adds adds to to the the upper upper sideband sidebandand andsubtracts subtractsfrom from the lower. lower. the 140 In addition to the spectrogram displays of the previous figures, it has proven useful [5] to construct stripchart displays of tune, chromaticity, momentum spread, and transverse emittance as measured from the Schottky spectra. Several improvements are planned for the RHIC 2003 beam run. Amplifier saturation due to beam steering offsets and the effect of the 200MHz storage RF is frequently encountered, and greatly diminishes the reliability of the data. Beam offsets are present because of an aperture restriction that forces unconventional steering to get good collisions at the adjacent IP. Efforts are underway to locate and remove the obstruction. Sensitivity to beam loss might also be helped by this. An improved VME/DSP based data acquisition system is planned to overcome the limitations of the HP89410 DSAs. These instruments are good studies tools, but suffer from high cost, poor data accessibility, and poor integration with the control and (perhaps more significantly) timing systems. In addition, they seem to sometimes provoke networks data storms. The improved controls and timing interface gained in the VME/DSP based data acquisition system will permit tracking of the cavity resonance with a beam-synchronous local oscillator, so that S/N can be straightforward improved with signal averaging. Finally, improvements to chromaticity and emittance calculations are planned. The Low Frequency Schottky System Initial motivation for the development of the LF Schottky came from dissatisfaction with the comparatively poor frequency resolution of the HF Schottky system. Implementing a resonant pickup at a frequency that is an order of magnitude lower will result in momentum-dependent linewidths that are an order of magnitude lower. The quarter-wave 50 ohm shorted striplines of a standard RHIC BPM were resonated [6] in the lowest-order difference mode at ~240MHz by coupling them with a half wavelength section of 3/8" heliax. Achieving optimal coupling (defined as Qloaded = Qunloaded/2) to the quarter wave points was accomplished with a quarter wave transmission line impedance transformation to 50 ohms. Fine tuning was accomplished with capacitors at the end of additional quarter wave stubs. The difference signal from a hybrid was filtered, amplified, and brought out of the tunnel. Figure 5 shows data taken during a ramp when beam was lost shortly after transition. The horizontal axis spans a spectrum width of 78.125KHz. The vertical axis is time, with the top of the figure at the start of the ramp, and the bottom shortly after transition. The revolution line is at the center. Unlike the HF Schottky, all lines are clearly resolved at injection energy. Due to coupling, signals from both planes are visible, and it appears that the tunes crossed a third of the way to transition. At transition both tunes shift down, and chromaticities are the same sign and approximately the same magnitude in horizontal and vertical. Sidebands around the revolution line at transition are probably due to oscillation of the RF loops as beam intensity drops below that required for stability. Sharp lines are also prominent at the quarter and at .375. In general sharp resonance lines are most often observed at frequencies that oddly enough correspond to the traditional British fractions, and the amount of spectral power present correlates with beam loss. An accelerator physics explanation of these lines is not yet available. 141 Improvements Improvements to to the the LF LF Schottky Schottky for for the the RHIC RHIC 2003 2003 beam beam run run are are similar similar to to those those planned planned for for the the HF HF Schottky. Schottky. Position Position information information from from adjacent adjacent BPMs BPMs will will be be used used to to center center the the moveable moveable pickup pickup on on the the beam, beam, reducing reducing dynamic range and saturation saturation problems. problems. Sensitivity Sensitivity will be improved by moving the pickup pickup to a region region of of higher higher beta. beta. FIGURE 5. 5. LF LF Schottky Schottky measurement measurement of of tune tune up up the the ramp ramp FIGURE An improved improved VME/DSP VME/DSP based based data data acquisition acquisition system system is is planned planned to to overcome overcome An the constraints constraints of of the the HP HP FFT FFT boxes. boxes. Because Because the the signal signal from from the the LF LF Schottky Schottky pickup pickup the also used used for for tune tune feedback feedback and and there there was was only only aa single single local local oscillator, oscillator, LF LF Schottky Schottky isis also spectra were were not not available available simultaneously simultaneously with with PLL PLL tune tune measurements. measurements. The The signal signal spectra will be be split split and and separate separate beam beam synchronous synchronous LOs LOs will will be be available available next next run. run. Finally, Finally, will improvements to to tune, tune, chromaticity, chromaticity, coupling, coupling, and and emittance improvements emittance calculations calculations are are planned. planned. The Phase Phase Locked Locked Loop Loop Tune Tune Measurement Measurement System System The The PLL PLL utilizes utilizes signals signals from from the the LF LF Schottky Schottky pickup. pickup. The The primary primary difficulty difficulty The in constructing constructing aa high high sensitivity sensitivity transverse transverse pickup pickup is is the the dynamic dynamic range range problem problem that that in results from from trying trying to to see see signals signals at at the the Schottky Schottky level level in in the the presence presence of of the the coherent coherent results beam spectrum, spectrum, which which is is typically typically at at least least 100dB the PLL PLL tune beam lOOdB stronger. stronger. In In designing designing the tune measurement system for RHIC 2001 we dealt with this problem in several ways. We measurement system for RHIC 2001 we dealt with this problem in several ways. We placed the pickup resonance well above the coherent spectrum, at 8.5 times the placed the pickup resonance well above the coherent spectrum, at 8.5 times the 28MHz acceleration acceleration RF. RF. We We resonated resonated only only aa difference difference mode mode so so that that the the sum sum mode mode 28MHz 142 coherent signal remaining at the pickup frequency would not enjoy enhancement of its power by the Q of the difference mode. We utilized a moveable BPM so that the remaining difference mode coherent signal at the revolution harmonic due to beam offset could be minimized. We bandpass filtered the output of the BPM with a high-Q cavity filter before the first stage of amplification to avoid saturation. And finally, we employed a 1 KHz bandwidth high-Q filter at the baseband 78KHz input to the digitizer to get rid of the revolution line ~15KHz away. At the core of the PLL tune system is a custom numerically controlled oscillator [7] sitting in VME and clocked from the 28MHz low level RF system. All frequencies in the tune system are thus synchronous with the beam. To simplify the discussion that follows, it is accurate only within the fractional portion of the betatron tune at harmonic 3061. To this level of approximation, the output of the NCO is at harmonic 96 of the 78 KHz revolution frequency. When the loop is locked and after x32 frequency multiplication, the output of NCO C is at ~238MHz (i.e RFx8.5, or harmonic 3060) plus the betatron frequency. These frequencies (harmonic 3060 and harmonic 1) are mixed in a suppressed carrier single sideband modulator. The output is at the betatron line above harmonic 3061, and is highpass filtered before entering a 10W class A amplifier. The output of the amplifier drives the 1m long 50 ohm kicker striplines through a difference hybrid and about 100m of heliax into the tunnel. The kicker excitation travels with the beam through the betatron-tune-dependent phase shift between the kicker and the resonant pickup. Pickup output at 238MHz is bandpass filtered, boosted by 30dB, and again transported via 100m of heliax to the mixer, whose output is again at 78KHz. The signal is delivered to the high impedance input of a Dynamic Signal Analyzer for FFT analysis and display, as well as to the 50 ohm input of the analog front end for amplification and filtering. By including the betatron frequency in the local oscillator for up and down conversion, the tune signal is always nominally at the same frequency (78KHz), and the need for a tracking filter at the input to the digitizer is eliminated. pickup FIGURE 6. PLL/Tune Feedback Block Diagram 143 The The digitizer digitizer clock clock isis generated generated by by aa divide-by-24 divide-by-24 in in the the gate gate array array of of aa modified RHIC RHIC BPM BPM module module [8]. [8]. The The 78KHz 78KHz signal signal which which isis up-converted, up-converted, phase phase modified shifted by by the the beam beam tune tune and and down-converted, down-converted, isis generated generated by by an an additional additional divide-bydivide-byshifted to permit permit aa simple simple I/Q I/Q demodulation demodulation [9] [9] of of the the signal. signal. The The data data isis processed processed in in the the 44 to DSP of of the the BPM BPM module. module. The The functions functions performed performed by by the the DSP DSP include include I/Q I/Q DSP demodulation, phase phase compensation compensation during during the the frequency frequency swing swing of of acceleration, acceleration, loop loop demodulation, gain/linewidth compensation compensation during during the the relativistic relativistic slip slip factor factor swing swing of of acceleration, acceleration, gain/linewidth signal averaging/lowpass averaging/lowpass filtering, filtering, and and NCO NCO control. control. The The processing processing is is performed on on signal blocks of of data, data, whose whose length length isis typically typically 8KB. 8KB. Update Update of of the the NCO NCO is is at at around around 30Hz. 30Hz. blocks The DSP DSP communicates communicates with with VME VME via via IEEE1394. IEEE1394. High-level High-level control control of of the the PLL The system isis accomplished accomplished with with aa MacIntosh Macintosh running running LabVIEW, Lab VIEW, communicating communicating with with system VME via via ethernet. ethernet. The The functions functions performed performed by by the the LabVIEW Lab VIEW program program include include writing writing VME setup parameters, parameters, calculating calculating and and writing writing the the loop loop lock lock indicator, indicator, and and beam beam transfer transfer setup function (BTF) (BTF)measurement. measurement. BTF BTF measurements measurements were were used used to determine determine the amount function of phase phase shift shift compensation compensation required required during during ramping. ramping. AA typical typical BTF BTF isis shown shown in in of figure 7. 7. figure FIGURE 7. 7. BTF BTF atat Injection Injection Energy Energy FIGURE The revolution revolution line line isis the the slight slight disturbance disturbance at at the the center center of of the the image, image, and and its The smallness indicates indicates that that beam beam was was well well centered centered in in the the pickup. pickup. The The difference difference in in smallness linewidth between between the the upper upper and and lower lower sidebands sidebands indicates indicates chromaticity chromaticity was was small small and and linewidth negative. What What appears appears to to be be fuzz fuzz or or noise noise in in the the signal signal is is the the structure structure of the negative. synchrotron satellites. satellites. synchrotron Figure 88 shows shows horizontal horizontal and and vertical vertical tune tune as as measured measured by by both both the the PLL PLL and and Figure Artus during a ramp. The lower black continuous trace is the horizontal PLL, and the Artus during a ramp. The lower black continuous trace is the horizontal PLL, and the blue dots that overlay it are Artus measurements. The PLL appears unperturbed while blue dots that overlay it are Artus measurements. The PLL appears unperturbed while Artus isis delivering delivering instantaneous instantaneous kicker kicker power power ~80dB ~80dB above above the the PLL PLL excitation excitation at at Artus random phase phase every every two two seconds. seconds. The The upper upper red red trace trace isis vertical vertical PLL, PLL, and and the the green green random dots are are vertical vertical Artus. Artus. Agreement Agreement between between PLL PLL and and Artus Artus isis generally generally quite quite good. good. dots The left left vertical vertical scale scale isis fractional fractional tune. tune. The The right right vertical vertical scale scale isis beam beam intensity, intensity, and and The 144 refers It shows shows significant significant refers to to the the blue blue line line that that starts starts at at the the upper upper left left of of the the image. image. It beam loss early in the ramp, which is probably a result of the tail of the horizontal tune beam loss early in the ramp, which is probably a result of the tail of the horizontal tune distribution crossing the 1/5 resonance. In an effort to measure chromaticity, during distribution crossing the 1/5 resonance. In an effort to measure chromaticity, during this at 1Hz. IHz. The The modulation modulation this ramp ramp the the radial radial beam beam position position was was modulated modulated by by 200|i 200µ at pattern was on for 3 seconds, then off for 3 seconds. The resulting tune modulation pattern was on for 3 seconds, then off for 3 seconds. The resulting tune modulation is is clearly this clearly visible visible near near the the end end of of the the ramp ramp in in the the horizontal. horizontal. If If one one looks looks closely closely this pattern and vertical vertical at at other other times times in in the the ramp. ramp. pattern can can also also be be discerned discerned in in both both horizontal horizontal and A A detailed detailed analysis analysis is is presented presented elsewhere [11]. The large variance in the PLL data in the the second second half half of of the the ramp ramp is is probably probably due to a combination of high loop gain and beam-beam beam-beam tune tune shift. shift. 17:58:30 1?:! ———— qLoopTune.bh:tuneBuffM[.]2095 (YD ........... uertical,tune,,lst.peak.2095 <Y1> —*—— bluDCCTtota!2095 (Y2> FIGURE 8. 8. Artus Artus and and PLL PLL tunes FIGURE tunes up up the the ramp ramp In addition addition to to beam-beam beam-beam tune tune shift, In shift, several several other other interesting interesting features features are are illustrated in the ramp of figure 9. At the time of this ramp a hardware problem illustrated in the ramp of figure 9. At the time of this ramp a hardware problem (since (since corrected) existed existed which which caused caused loop loop phase phase on on aa given given ramp ramp to corrected) to be be arbitrary arbitrary modulo modulo π/2. Autolock was initiated by setting a window around the injection tune as measured Ti/2. Autolock was initiated by setting a window around the injection tune as measured by Artus, Artus, then then sampling sampling the the phase phase within within that that window by window with with loop loop gain gain very very high. high. The The average sampled sampled phase phase was was then then taken taken to to be be the the beam beam phase, phase, the average the loop loop gain gain was was turned turned down, the the window window was was opened, opened, and and the the loop loop would would lock. down, lock. On On this this particular particular ramp ramp the the initial vertical vertical tune tune from from Artus Artus was was incorrect, incorrect, and and the initial the loop loop locked locked lower lower when when the the window was was opened. opened. Early Early in in the the ramp, ramp, as as the the lower lower horizontal horizontal tune window tune rose rose and and approached the the vertical, vertical, the the vertical vertical lock lock jumped jumped to to the the opposite opposite side approached side of of the the horizontal horizontal line, then then jumped jumped back back as as the the horizontal horizontal tune tune moved moved away. line, away. This This is is typical typical of of behavior behavior often seen seen in in the the PLL, PLL, namely namely that that itit is is not not stable stable as as the the tunes tunes approach approach each each other. often other. Around 16:07 16:07 the the effect effect of of beam-beam beam-beam tune tune shift Around shift appears appears dramatically dramatically in in the the vertical vertical as the the collision collision point point of of the the unclogged unclogged beams beams sweeps sweeps alternately alternately into as into and and out out of of the the 145 intersection region. region. At At the the same same time time the the horizontal horizontal signal appears to be smoothed. intersection This probably probably is is the the result result of very very large chromaticity, which causes the beam transfer This function portion portion of the loop gain to be small and lowers the loop bandwidth, giving function giving the the effect of of low-pass low-pass filtering. filtering. The The ramp ramp ends ends at at about about 16:07:30. effect 16:07:30. The The vertical vertical tune tune is is then then chirped as as the the rings rings are are first first cogged, cogged, then then un-cogged un-cogged and and slipped slipped to to properly properly align chirped align the the abort gaps, gaps, then then re-cogged. re-cogged. Beam-beam Beam-beam tune tune shifts shifts throughout throughout are abort are about about .002. .002. • desiredTune.bht*] • qLoopTune.bv:tuneBuffM:valueflndTime[*] • qLoopTune.bh:lockBuffM[*] • desiredTune.bvM • qLoopStren9th.bf:deltaStren9thBuffM:walueflndTiine[*] • qLoopTune.bvllockBuffML*] ———— qLoopTune.bh:tuneBuffM:valueflndTiine[*] qLoopStrength.bd^eltaStrengthBuffMrualueflndTimei:*] FIGURE 9. 9. A A ramp ramp illustrating illustrating several several features features of of PLL PLL measurement FIGURE measurement Tune Feedback Feedback Tune The tune tune feedback feedback control control loop loop [11,12] [11,12] is is implemented implemented as The as aa digital digital control control loop loop running in in aa power power PC PC Front Front End End Computer Computer in in VME. VME. The The horizontal horizontal and running and vertical vertical tunes tunes are converted converted to to horizontal horizontal and and vertical vertical strengths strengths through through aa matrix matrix that that relates relates the are the desired tune tune change change to to strengths. strengths. The The horizontal horizontal and and vertical vertical strengths not desired strengths are are not independent since since this this matrix matrix contains contains cross cross terms. terms. These independent These strengths strengths are are then then used used to to calculate the required magnet currents. As shown in the block diagram of figure calculate the required magnet currents. As shown in the block diagram of figure 4, 4, magnet coefficients coefficients are are calculated calculated in in the the Front Front End End Computer Computer local local to to the the PLL PLL tune tune magnet measurement, then then transported transported via via reflected reflected memory memory and and aa dedicated dedicated fiber measurement, fiber optic optic line line to to the power supply building 600m away, where quadrupole currents are written the power supply building 600m away, where quadrupole currents are written to to the the power supplies supplies via via the the Real Real Time Time Data Data Link. Link. power Data from the first successful ramp with tune tune feedback feedback is Data from the first successful ramp with is shown shown in in figure figure 10. 10. As in in figure figure 7, 7, the the vertical vertical scale scale at at the the right right and and the the blue blue trace trace correspond correspond to to beam beam As current. Losses Losses early early in in the the ramp ramp do do not not differ differ much much from current. from those those in in figure figure 8, 8, and and are are probably due due again again to to large large horizontal horizontal tune tune spread spread overlapping overlapping the the 1/5 1/5 resonance. resonance. The probably The 146 large excursion in vertical about one third the way up the ramp was due to a power large large excursion excursion in in vertical vertical about about one one third third the the way way up up the the ramp ramp was was due due to to aa power power supply problem, and resulted in about 15% beam loss. Without tune feedback the ramp supply supplyproblem, problem, and andresulted resulted in in about about 15% beam beam loss. Without Without tune feedback the ramp would would would 11:52:55 11:53:05 11:53:15 11:53:25 11:53:35 11:53:45 11:53:55 11:54:05 11:54:15 11:54:25 11:54:35 11:54:45 11:54:55 11:55:05 11:55:15 FIGURE tune feedback feedback FIGURE10. 10. First Firstsuccessful successful ramp ramp with with tune FIGURE 10. First successful ramp with FIGURE11. 11. Down-ramp Down-ramptune tune and and chromaticity chromaticity from from HF HF Schottky Schottky FIGURE 11. Down-ramp tune and FIGURE from Schottky 147 have aborted at this point. Tune feedback was attempted on four additional up-ramps before the end of the run, with one failure in the final second of the ramp due to excessively large horizontal chromaticity. Near the end of the polarized proton run the greater portion of a shift was devoted to down-ramps. The motivation was to decelerate polarized beam and remeasure polarization at injection energy, where the analyzing power of the p-Carbon polarimeter is known, to get a lower limit on polarization at lOOGeV, where the analyzing power is not known. Figure 11 shows data from the horizontal HF Schottky during an attempted down-ramp. The ramp begins at the discontinuity near the top of the image. Tune regulation is good for the first half of the ramp. As chromaticity gets large and coupling appears the combination of reduced BTF/ loop gain and phase information from the opposite plane causes tune control to suffer. The huge chromaticity becomes evident from the striking difference in upper and lower sideband widths. Perhaps the most interesting aspect of the down-ramp effort was that it revealed a divergence in the view of just what kind of tool one possesses in the PLL/tune feedback, and how this tool might best be used. The controversy arose over whether tune feedback is a ramp development tool, or a control that is engaged after the ramp development effort is complete. The bulk of the effort was done without tune feedback, and down-ramps were not successful. The benefits of this failure were that the importance of chromaticity in tune feedback became evident to all, and clear thought was stimulated on the nature of tune feedback as a ramp development tool. Several improvements in PLL/tune feedback are planned for RHIC 2003. The system will benefit from the pickup improvements mentioned in the LF Schottky section. In ramp development emittance growth is a secondary concern, so rather than kicker excitations of less than IW that were typical of RHIC 2001, the full 10W of amplifier power can be applied. Kickers are also being moved to a region of larger beta to better utilize the available kicker power. To coherently kick all bunches in a multi-bunch fill, the excitation frequency must be Q+v (sum of integer and fractional tunes) plus an integer multiple of the bunching frequency [13]. This condition was not observed during the last run, will be observed during the next, and will result in more efficient excitation (and may remove some ambiguities in phase). Moving beyond pickup and kicker improvements, the BPM module-based data acquisition system will be replaced with a VME-based FPGA/DSP system. Baseband frequency will be shifted from 78KHz to 455KHz, permitting the use of easily available very sharp ceramic filters to remove the adjacent revolution line, as well as resulting in an additional 6dB of processing gain. Improved digital filtering will be implemented. The VME-based system will permit operation from the control room rather that the diagnostics building, improving communications and accelerating the development of operator familiarity. Finally, a considerable effort is underway to model system behavior, including PLL behavior in Matlab and beam behavior via UAL [14]. Summary A variety of sophisticated tune measurement systems exist in RHIC. This is the result of significant effort by a great many individuals over the span of several years, and that effort continues in the form significant improvements for the coming beam 148 run. The plan for RHIC 2003 is to commission the machine from day one with tune feedback. This will require the best possible operation of all tune, chromaticity, and coupling measurement systems. Acknowledgements The authors would like to express their gratitude to the many individuals who supported the design, development, and operation of the systems described in this paper. We are particularly grateful to Mike Harrison for his initiative in the collaboration with Berkeley to create the HF Schottky system, and to Tom Shea for his excellent accomplishment in building the foundation for RHIC Beam Instrumentation. References 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11. 12. 13. 14. W. Fischer et al, "Beam-Based Measurement of Persistent Current Decay in RHIC", BNL/RHIC/C-A/AP 32, Nov 2000. P. Cameron et al, "ARTUS: A Rhic Tune monitor System", BNL/RHIC/AP/156, July 1998. http://www.agsrhichome.bnl.gov/AP/ap_notes/rap_index.html W. Barry, J. Corlett, D. Goldberg, D. Li, "Design of a Schottky Signal Detector for Use at RHIC", EPAC98, Stockholm. http://accelconf.web.cern.ch/AccelConf/e98/PAPERSAVEP16G.PDF D. Boussard, "Schottky Noise and Beam Transfer Function Diagnostics", CERN 95-06, p749. P. Cameron et al, "Schottky Measurements During RHIC 2000", PAC2001, NY. M. Kesselman et al, "Resonant BPM for Continuous Tune Measurement in RHIC", PAC2001, NY. J. DeLong et al, "Synthesizer-Controlled Beam Transfer from the AGS to RHIC", PAC2001, NY. TJ. Shea et al, "DSP Based Data Acquisition for RHIC", PAC95, Dallas. C. Ziomek and P. Corredoura, "Digital I/Q Demodulator", PAC95, Dallas. S. Tepikian et al, "Measuring Chromaticity along the Ramp Using the PLL Tune-meter in RHIC", EPAC2002, Paris. P. Cameron et al, "Tune Feedback at RHIC", PAC2001, NY. C. Schultheiss et al, Real-Time Betatron Tune Control in RHIC, EPAC2002, Paris. K. Lohman et al, "Q-Monitoring in LEP", CERN/LEP-BI/88-45, p7. N. Malitsky and R. Talman, AIP 391 (1996). 149
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