U.S. Particle Accelerator School
U.S. Particle Accelerator School
Education in Beam Physics and Accelerator Technology

Microwave Measurement and Beam Instrumentation Lab course

Sponsoring University:

University of Texas at Austin

Course:

Microwave Measurement and Beam Instrumentation Lab

The USPAS would like to thank Agilent Technologies , Rohde & Schwarz and National Instruments for their generous loan of test equipment in support of the Microwave Measurements course.

Instructors:

Ralph Pasquinelli, Fermilab and David McGinnis, European Spallation Source


Purpose and Audience
This laboratory course is designed for students with a theoretical accelerator physics background to gain insight into the workings and capabilities of modern instrumentation. Students will spend most of their time on actual measurements.

Prerequisites
Upper division (second-level) undergraduate course in electromagnetism. Recommended: USPAS undergraduate course "Fundamentals of Accelerator Physics & Technology" or equivalent experience.

It is the responsibility of the student to ensure that they meet the course prerequisites or have equivalent experience.

Objectives
Provide the student with hands-on measurements of accelerator related hardware and signals utilizing state of the art measurement equipment.

Instructional Method
This course includes a series of 8 lectures during morning sessions and supplemented experimental sessions to emphasize the implementation of theoretical concepts. The hands-on labs include:

(1) Spectrum Analyzer: for measurement of simple signals on a spectrum analyzer to understand resolution bandwidth, video bandwidth, dynamic range, noise, etc;
(2) TDR: measuring characteristics of various connector families, transmission lines, complex loads;
(3) Components: measuring the s-parameters of a variety of components;
(4) Beam Signals: utilize an arbitrary function generator to simulate beam signals from the accelerator, AM for betatron signals, FM for synchrotron signals;
(5) Noise: consists of measuring the noise performance of a microwave amplifier. The amplifier will then be part of a "system" and noise performance of the system will be compared to individual noise performance of the components;
(6) Matching: design and build a simple single stub transmission line matching circuit; and
(7) RF Cavities: measure mode spectrums of a cavity, the cavity coupling, loaded and unloaded Q, the electric field profile and R/Q of a cavity by the bead pull method.
(8) Use of a vector signal analyzer for measuring beam signals.

Course Content
(1) Microwave Measurements in the time and frequency domains, basics of spectrum analyzers, vector signal analyzers, and time domain reflectometers;
(2) Transmission lines, complex impedance, reflection coefficients;
(3) Microwave measurements with a Vector Network Analyzer, basics of vector network analyzers;
(4) Microwave components and devices, splitters, circulators, directional couplers, filters, etc.;
(5) Beam signals for Circular Accelerators, beam spectrums, power spectral density, betatron and synchrotron signals;
(6) Signals, noise, and dynamic range, basic noise performance of devices and systems;
(7) Impedance matching, basic of matching devices; and
(8) RF cavity measurements, cavity basics, bead pull, coupling, cavity bandwidth.

Reading Requirements
(to be provided by the USPAS) "Microwave Engineering" third edition, by David M. Pozar, Wiley & Sons Publishers (2005). A hard copy of: "Microwave Theory and Applications" by Stephen F. Adam will be provided as reference material to each student. The course will follow our notes which will be available on-line.

Credit Requirements
Students will be evaluated based on performance in the laboratory (40% of final grade), exams (30% of the final grade) and the final examination (30% of the final grade). Both instructors will be actively involved with each of the students during the course of each day and each experiment. The experiments have definitive responses and the instructors will monitor the results. If the student has the wrong answer, he(she) needs to repeat the experiment to see where a mistake was made. The instructors check with each student to see that they have made the measurements correctly.

IU/USPAS course number P571