CERN Accelerating science

Article
Title Chapter 6: Energy-recovery linacs
Author(s) Klein, M (Freiburg U.) ; Hutton, A (Jefferson Lab) ; Angal-Kalinin, D (Daresbury) ; Aulenbacher, K (Mainz U.) ; Bogacz, A (Jefferson Lab) ; Hoffstaetter, G (Cornell U. ; Brookhaven Natl. Lab.) ; Jensen, E (CERN) ; Kaabi, W (IJCLab, Orsay) ; Kayran, D (Brookhaven Natl. Lab.) ; Knobloch, J (U. Siegen (main) ; Darmstadt, Tech. U.) ; Kuske, B (Helmholtz-Zentrum, Berlin) ; Marhauser, F (Jefferson Lab) ; Pietralla, N (Darmstadt, Tech. U.) ; Tanaka, O (KEK, Tsukuba) ; Vaccarezza, C (LNF, Dafne Light) ; Vinokurov, N (Novosibirsk, IYF) ; Williams, P (Daresbury) ; Zimmermann, F (CERN)
Publication 2022
Number of pages 43
In: European Strategy for Particle Physics - Accelerator R&D Roadmap, pp.185-227
DOI 10.23731/CYRM-2022-001.185
Subject category Accelerators and Storage Rings
Abstract Energy Recovery is at the threshold of becoming a key means for the advancement of accelerators. Recycling the kinetic energy of a used beam for accelerating a newly injected beam, i.e. reducing the power consumption, utilising the high injector brightness and dumping at injection energy: these are the key elements of a novel accelerator concept, invented half a century ago. The potential of this technique may be compared with the finest innovations of accelerator technology such as by Widerøe, Lawrence, Veksler, Kerst, van der Meer and others during the past century. Innovations of such depth are rare, and their impact is only approximately predictable.This chapter presents a roadmap, its motivation and key objectives focused on the next five years, for a coordinated, advanced development of ERL technology and facilities in Europe and beyond.
Copyright/License © 2022-2024 CERN (License: CC-BY-4.0)

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 Rekord stworzony 2022-04-09, ostatnia modyfikacja 2022-04-12


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