Phys. Rev. ST Accel. Beams 3, 101001 (2000) [7 pages]Image current heating on a metal surface due to charged bunches
Xintian E. Lin and David H. Whittum Received 18 February 2000; published 5 October 2000 When charged particles pass through a metal pipe, they are accompanied by an image current on the metal surface. With intense short bunches passing near or even into the metal surface, the peak image current density can be very high. This current may result in substantial temperature rise on the surface, especially in high peak current, multibunch operation. In this paper, we derive an explicit formula for the surface temperature rise due to this previously unrecognized pulsed heating effect and show that this effect dominates the proposed linear coherent light source collimator spoiler and wire scanner heating. Without proper account, it can result in component and instrument failures. The result also applies to optical transition radiation screens, profile screens, wire scanners, exit windows, and targets, which the beam crosses. ©2000 The American Physical Society
URL: http://link.aps.org/doi/10.1103/PhysRevSTAB.3.101001 [ Abstract | Previous article | Next article | Issue 10 ] |
A new free weekly publication from APS
Read the latest from Physics:
Viewpoint: Power laws in chess |


