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An rf chopper system is being designed for the ReAccelerator (ReA) linac at the Facility for Rare Isotope Beams at Michigan State University. The 80.5 MHz ReA radio-frequency quadrupole accelerates prebunched 16.1 MHz beams, producing four satellite bunches for every main bunch. The chopper system includes an rf deflector that kicks every bunch vertically to spatially separate main and satellite bunches. A constant magnetic field superimposed with the chopper electric field biases the beam trajectory to ensure the high-intensity bunches do not experience a net deflection and are injected straight to the ReA6 cryomodule or sent for experiments. The kicked bunches are low in intensity and will be sent to a beam dump, resulting in a clean 16.1 MHz beam structure, which allows for a reliable time-of-flight separation of the isotopes.
Gonzalez et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
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