Publication | Open Access
Beam commissioning and operation of the J-PARC main ring synchrotron
41
Citations
5
References
2012
Year
EngineeringNuclear PhysicsBeam CommissioningHigh-energy AcceleratorsAccelerator PhysicAccelerator PhysicsJ-parc Accelerator CascadeSynchrotron Radiation ResearchAccelerator TechnologyBeam StabilitySlow Extraction SystemSynchrotron RadiationParticle Beam PhysicsNuclear AstrophysicsExperimental Nuclear PhysicsNatural SciencesParticle PhysicsParticle AcceleratorBeam Transport System
The slow cycling main ring synchrotron (MR) is located the furthest downstream in the J-PARC accelerator cascade. It became available for user operation in 2009 and provides high-intensity 30 GeV proton beams for various experiments on particle and nuclear physics. The MR has two beam extraction systems: a fast extraction system for beam delivery to the neutrino beam line of the Tokai-to-Kamioka (T2K) experiment and a slow extraction system for beam delivery to the hadron experimental hall. After a nine-month beam shutdown during the recovery from the Great East Japan Earthquake, the J-PARC facility resumed beam operation in December 2011. The MR delivers a 160–200 kW beam to the T2K experiment and a 3.5–6 kW beam to users in the hadron experimental hall. In this paper, a brief review of the MR and the recent status of beam operation are presented. Near-future plans for a beam intensity upgrade are also discussed.
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