Author: Versaci, R.
Paper Title Page
MOPPD077 Studies for an Alternative LHC Non-Linear Collimation System 544
 
  • L. Lari, R.W. Assmann, V. Boccone, F. Cerutti, A. Mereghetti, R. Versaci, V. Vlachoudis
    CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
  • A. Faus-Golfe, L. Lari, J. Resta-López
    IFIC, Valencia, Spain
 
  Funding: This work has been carried out through of the European Coordination for Accelerator Research and Development (EuCARD), co-sponsored by EU 7th Framework Program.
A LHC nonlinear Betatron cleaning collimation system would allow larger gap for the mechanical jaws, reducing as a consequence the collimator-induced impedance, which may limit the LHC beam intensity. In this paper, the performance of the proposed system is analyzed in terms of beam losses distribution around the LHC ring and cleaning efficiency in stable physics condition at 7TeV for Beam1. Moreover, the energy deposition distribution on the machine elements is compared to the present LHC Betatron cleaning collimation system in the Point 7 Insertion Region (IR).
 
 
MOPPD081 Upgrade of the LHC Beam Dumping Protection Elements 556
 
  • W.J.M. Weterings, T. Antonakakis, B. Balhan, J. Borburgh, B. Goddard, C. Maglioni, R. Versaci
    CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
 
  The Beam Dumping System for the Large Hadron Collider comprises for each ring a set of horizontally deflecting extraction kicker magnets, vertically deflecting steel septa, dilution kickers and finally, a couple of hundred meters further downstream, an absorber block. A mobile diluter (TCDQ) protects the superconducting quadrupole immediately downstream of the extraction as well as the arc at injection energy and the triplet aperture at top energy from bunches with small impact parameters, in case of a beam dump that is not synchronized with the particle free gap or a spontaneous firing of the extraction kickers. Simulations have shown that an asynchronous dump of a 7 TeV nominal beam into the TCDQ absorber blocks could damage it. This paper describes the proposed changes to this device in order to maintain the protection for the downstream elements while reducing the risk of damaging the TCDQ in case of such a beam loss.  
 
MOPPR063 Exploiting the Undesired: Beam-gas Interactions in the LHC 927
 
  • R. Versaci, V. Baglin, M. Brugger
    CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
  • A. Mereghetti
    UMAN, Manchester, United Kingdom
 
  The vacuum inside the LHC pipes has a key role in correct operation of the accelerator. The interaction of the beam with residual gas in the pipes can lead to the loss of the beam itself and damage accelerator components. Nevertheless, beam-gas interactions can be exploited to indirectly measure the gas pressure inside the beam pipe, detecting the secondaries produced. The showers generated are detected by Beam Loss Monitors, whose signals depend on the gas pressure. This technique would also allow to punctually measure the gas pressure in sections of the accelerator where vacuum gauges are not frequent, such as the arcs. The problem has been addressed by means of FLUKA simulations and the results have been benchmarked with direct measurements performed in the LHC in 2011.  
 
WEPPD071 The FLUKA LineBuilder and Element DataBase: Tools for Building Complex Models of Accelerator Beam Lines 2687
 
  • A. Mereghetti
    UMAN, Manchester, United Kingdom
  • V. Boccone, F. Cerutti, R. Versaci, V. Vlachoudis
    CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
 
  Extended FLUKA models of accelerator beam lines can be extremely complex: heavy to manipulate, poorly versatile and prone to mismatched positioning. We developed a framework capable of creating the FLUKA model of an arbitrary portion of a given accelerator, starting from the optics configuration and a few other information provided by the user. The framework includes a builder (LineBuilder), an element database and a series of configuration and analysis scripts. The LineBuilder is a Python program aimed at dynamically assembling complex FLUKA models of accelerator beam lines: positions, magnetic fields and scorings are automatically set up, and geometry details such as apertures of collimators, tilting and misalignment of elements, beam pipes and tunnel geometries can be entered at user's will. The element database (FEDB) is a collection of detailed FLUKA geometry models of machine elements. This framework has been widely used for recent LHC and SPS beam-machine interaction studies at CERN, and led to a drastic reduction in the time otherwise required to rework old machine models, and to a coherent and traceable description of the inputs used for all the simulations.