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Autonomous Particle Accelerators: Accelerate Smarter With Artificial Intelligence

At DESY´s ARES accelerator, the research team wants to gain experience with autonomous operation. Credit: DESY/F. Burkart

Particle accelerators are universal tools: They help in production processes in industry, in tumor therapy in hospitals and enable unique discoveries and insights in research. Growing demands on the stability and properties of particle beams make a manual operation of these complex devices increasingly challenging – and require the highest possible level of automation to support operators.

A new project of DESY and KIT (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology) is now taking the first steps towards a fully autonomously operated accelerator. The cooperation “Autonomous Accelerator,” which is supported by the Helmholtz Association and the two participating Helmholtz research centers within the framework of the Helmholtz Artificial Intelligence Cooperation Unit, brings “reinforcement learning” to the operation of two linear accelerators at DESY and KIT. Reinforcement learning involves measuring state values and adjusting control variables to determine their influence on each other, thus learning a control strategy that also takes into account its effects in the future. In the long run, this will completely replace manual intervention.

FLUTE Accelerator

The FLUTE accelerator is located at KIT. Credit: KIT

“The important characteristic of reinforcement learning is that the control system not only reacts but also plans into the future how to achieve a goal,” explains Annika Eichler from DESY, who coordinates the overall project. “For this purpose, the control system can decide on the basis of the information collected so far, but it must also have enough range to literally ‘conquer’ new control regions in previously unknown terrain. The long-term goal of the research team is to operate an accelerator fully autonomously. But first of all, the team is concentrating on controlling the density at which the electrons are distributed along the accelerated bunches. In addition to the length of these electron bunches — some of which pass the measuring device in less than a femtosecond – it is particularly the build-up effects in the particle bunches that make controlling this size very challenging; autonomous control is, therefore, essential for efficient and rapid optimization.

For their experiments, the research team uses the test accelerators ARES (Accelerator Research Experiment at SINBAD) at DESY and FLUTE (Far-Infrared Linac and Test Experiment) at KIT. Both facilities are available for accelerator research within the framework of the “Matter and Technologies” program and offer sufficient test times for developing such algorithms.

“By using two similar, compact but not identical accelerators for the development of our artificial intelligence, we gain valuable experience on the transferability of our algorithms to other and larger accelerators,” says Erik Bründermann, project manager at KIT.

This is important in order to be able to use such algorithms later also for complex user machines such as FLASH and European XFEL.

Source: SciTechDaily