Paper |
Title |
Page |
TUPTY059 |
First Considerations on Beam Optics and Lattice Design for the Future Electron-Positron Collider FCC-ee |
2162 |
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- B. Härer, B.J. Holzer, F. Zimmermann
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
- A.V. Bogomyagkov
BINP SB RAS, Novosibirsk, Russia
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The Future Circular Collider (FCC) study includes the design of a 100-km electron positron collider (FCC-ee) with collision energies between 90 GeV and 350 GeV. This paper describes first aspects of the design and the optics of the FCC-ee collider, optimised for four different beam energies. Special emphasis is put on the need for a highly flexible magnet lattice in order to achieve the required beam emittances in each case and on the layout of the interaction region that will have to combine an advanced mini-beta concept, an effective beam separation scheme and a local chromaticity control to optimise the momentum acceptance and dynamic aperture of the ring.
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DOI • |
reference for this paper
※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2015-TUPTY059
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TUPTY060 |
The FCC-ee Study: Progress and Challenges |
2165 |
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- M. Koratzinos
DPNC, Genève, Switzerland
- S. Aumon, C. Cook, A. Doblhammer, B. Härer, B.J. Holzer, R. Tomás, F. Zimmermann
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
- A.V. Bogomyagkov, E.B. Levichev, D.N. Shatilov
BINP SB RAS, Novosibirsk, Russia
- M. Boscolo
INFN/LNF, Frascati (Roma), Italy
- L.E. Medina Medrano
UGTO, Leon, Mexico
- U. Wienands
SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
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The FCC (future circular collider) study represents a vision for the next large project in high energy physics, comprising a 80-100 km tunnel that can house a future 100TeV hadron collider. The study also includes a high luminosity e+e− collider operating in the centre-of-mass energy range of 90-350 GeV as a possible intermediate step, the FCC-ee. The FCC-ee aims at definitive electro-weak precision measurements of the Z, W, H and top particles, and search for rare phenomena. Although FCC-ee is based on known technology, the goal performance in luminosity and energy calibration make it quite challenging. During 2014 the study went through an exploration phase and during the next three years a conceptual design report will be prepared.
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DOI • |
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※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2015-TUPTY060
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TUPTY061 |
Combined Operation and Staging Scenarios for the FCC-ee Lepton Collider |
2169 |
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- M. Benedikt, B.J. Holzer, E. Jensen, R. Tomás, J. Wenninger, F. Zimmermann
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
- A.V. Bogomyagkov, E.B. Levichev, D.N. Shatilov
BINP SB RAS, Novosibirsk, Russia
- K. Ohmi, K. Oide
KEK, Ibaraki, Japan
- U. Wienands
SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
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FCC-ee is a proposed high-energy electron positron circular collider that would initially occupy the 100-km FCC tunnel that will eventually house the 100 TeV FCC-hh hadron collider. The parameter range for the e+/e− collider is large, operating at a cm energy from 90 GeV (Z-pole) to 350 GeV (t-tbar production) with the maximum beam current ranging from 1.5 A to 6 mA for each beam, corresponding to a synchrotron radiation power of 50 MW and a radiative energy loss varying from ~30 MeV/turn to ~7500 MeV/turn. This presents challenges for the rf system due to the varying rf voltage requirements and beam loading conditions. In this paper we present a possible gradual evolution of the FCC-ee complex by step-wise expansion, and possibly reconfiguration, of the superconducting RF system. The performance attainable at each step is discussed, along with the possible advantages and drawbacks.
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※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2015-TUPTY061
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WEBB2 |
First Considerations on Beam Optics and Lattice Design for the Future Hadron-Hadron Collider FCC-hh |
2466 |
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- B. Dalena
CEA/IRFU, Gif-sur-Yvette, France
- R. Alemany-Fernández, B.J. Holzer, D. Schulte
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
- A. Chancé, J. Payet
CEA, Gif-sur-Yvette, France
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The main emphasis of the Future Circular Collider study is the design of a 100~TeV proton-proton collider in a new tunnel of about 100 km circumference. This paper presents the first optics design of the future hadron collider (FCC-hh). The basic layout follows a quasi-circular geometry ‘‘quasi racetrack'' with 8 arcs and 8 straight sections, four of which designed as interaction points. Assuming 16~T dipole magnets, a first version of the ring geometry and magnet lattice is presented, including the optics of the foreseen high luminosity regions and of the other straight sections dedicated to the installation of injection/extraction lines, beam dump etc., and an arc structure with optimized dipole fill factor to reach the target center-of-mass energy of 100~TeV.
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Slides WEBB2 [4.622 MB]
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DOI • |
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※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2015-WEBB2
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THPF100 |
Status of the ESSnuSB Accumulator |
3942 |
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- E.H.M. Wildner, B.J. Holzer, M. Martini, Y. Papaphilippou, H.O. Schönauer
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
- T.J.C. Ekelöf, M. Olvegård, R.J.M.Y. Ruber
Uppsala University, Uppsala, Sweden
- M. Eshraqi
ESS, Lund, Sweden
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The European Spallation Source (ESS) is a research center based on the world's most powerful neutron source currently under construction in Lund, Sweden. 2.0 GeV, 2.86 ms long proton pulses at 14 Hz are produced for the spallation facility (5MW on target). The possibility to pulse the linac at higher frequency to deliver, in parallel with the spallation neutron production, a very intense, cost effective, high performance neutrino beam. Short pulses on the target require an accumulator ring. The optimization of the accumulator lattice to store these high intensity beams from the linac (1.1x1015 protons per pulse) has to take into account the space available on the ESS site, transport of H− beams (charge exchange injection), radiation and shielding needs. Space must be available in the ring for collimation and an RF system for the extraction gap and loss control. We present the status of the accumulator for ESS neutrino facility.
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DOI • |
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※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2015-THPF100
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