Arianna Formenti (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory)
SUPG024
Comparison of WarpX and GUINEA-PIG for electron positron collisions
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As part of the Snowmass'21 planning exercise, the Advanced Accelerator Concepts community proposed developing multi-TeV linear colliders and considered beam-beam effects for these machines [1]. Such colliders operate under a high disruption regime with an enormous number of electron-positron pairs produced from QED effects. Thus, it requires a self-consistent treatment of the fields produced by the pairs, which is not implemented in state-of-the-art beam-beam codes such as GUINEA-PIG. WarpX is a parallel, open-source, and portable particle-in-cell code with an active developer community that models QED processes with photon and pair generation in relativistic laser-beam interactions [2]. However, its application to beam-beam collisions has yet to be fully explored. In this work, we benchmark the luminosity spectra, photon spectra, and the recently implemented pair production processes from WarpX against GUINEA-PIG in ultra-tight collisions, and ILC scenarios. This is followed by a run-time comparison to demonstrate the speed-up advantage of WarpX. Ultimately, this work ensures a more robust modeling approach to electron-positron collisions, with the goal of scaling up to 15 TeV.
  • B. Nguyen
    Imperial College of Science and Technology
  • A. Formenti, J. Vay, R. Lehe
    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • L. Fedeli
    Laboratoire Interactions, Dynamiques et Lasers
  • S. Gessner
    SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2024-WEPC84
About:  Received: 14 May 2024 — Revised: 16 May 2024 — Accepted: 17 May 2024 — Issue date: 01 Jul 2024
Cite: reference for this paper using: BibTeX, LaTeX, Text/Word, RIS, EndNote
WEPC84
Comparison of WarpX and GUINEA-PIG for electron positron collisions
2166
As part of the Snowmass'21 planning exercise, the Advanced Accelerator Concepts community proposed developing multi-TeV linear colliders and considered beam-beam effects for these machines [1]. Such colliders operate under a high disruption regime with an enormous number of electron-positron pairs produced from QED effects. Thus, it requires a self-consistent treatment of the fields produced by the pairs, which is not implemented in state-of-the-art beam-beam codes such as GUINEA-PIG. WarpX is a parallel, open-source, and portable particle-in-cell code with an active developer community that models QED processes with photon and pair generation in relativistic laser-beam interactions [2]. However, its application to beam-beam collisions has yet to be fully explored. In this work, we benchmark the luminosity spectra, photon spectra, and the recently implemented pair production processes from WarpX against GUINEA-PIG in ultra-tight collisions and ILC scenarios. This is followed by a run-time comparison to demonstrate the speed-up advantage of WarpX. Ultimately, this work ensures a more robust modeling approach to electron-positron collisions, with the goal of scaling up to 15 TeV.
  • B. Nguyen
    Imperial College of Science and Technology
  • A. Formenti, J. Vay, R. Lehe
    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • L. Fedeli
    Laboratoire Interactions, Dynamiques et Lasers
  • S. Gessner
    SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory
Paper: WEPC84
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2024-WEPC84
About:  Received: 14 May 2024 — Revised: 16 May 2024 — Accepted: 17 May 2024 — Issue date: 01 Jul 2024
Cite: reference for this paper using: BibTeX, LaTeX, Text/Word, RIS, EndNote
WEPR65
ImpactX space charge modeling of high intensity linacs with mesh refinement
2656
The code ImpactX represents the next generation of the particle-in-cell code IMPACT-Z, featuring s-based symplectic tracking with 3D space charge, parallelism with GPU acceleration, adaptive mesh-refinement, modernized language features, and automated testing. While the code contains features that support the modeling of both linear and circular accelerators, we describe recent code development relevant to the modeling of high-intensity linacs (such as beam transport for the Fermilab PIP-II upgrade), with a focus on space charge benchmarking and the impact of novel code capabilities such as adaptive mesh refinement.
  • C. Mitchell, A. Formenti, A. Huebl, J. Vay, J. Qiang, M. Garten, R. Lehe, R. Sandberg
    Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
Paper: WEPR65
DOI: reference for this paper: 10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2024-WEPR65
About:  Received: 14 May 2024 — Revised: 23 May 2024 — Accepted: 23 May 2024 — Issue date: 01 Jul 2024
Cite: reference for this paper using: BibTeX, LaTeX, Text/Word, RIS, EndNote