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Yang, S.Q.

Paper Title Page
MOPCH189 Calculating the Muon Cooling within a MICE Liquid Absorber 502
 
  • M.A. Green, S.P. Virostek
    LBNL, Berkeley, California
  • S.Q. Yang
    OXFORDphysics, Oxford, Oxon
 
  The key elements of the Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment (MICE) cooling channel are the absorbers that are a part of the MICE absorber focus coil modules (AFC modules). The boundaries of room temperature solid absorbers are well defined. The density of most solid absorber materials is also well understood. The properties of solid absorber are most certainly understood to 0.3 percent. The MICE liquid absorbers are different in that their dimensions are a function of the absorber temperature and the fluid pressure within the absorber. The second element in the liquid absorber is the variability of the liquid density with temperature and pressure. While one can determine the absorber boundary within 0.3 percent, the determination of the liquid density within 0.3 percent is more difficult (particularly with liquid helium in the absorber). This report presents a method of calculating absorber boundary and the cooling performance of the MICE absorbers as a function of fluid temperature and pressure.  
WEPLS114 Progress on the MICE Tracker Solenoid 2646
 
  • M.A. Green, S.P. Virostek
    LBNL, Berkeley, California
  • W. Lau, S.Q. Yang
    OXFORDphysics, Oxford, Oxon
 
  This report describes the 400 mm warm bore tracker solenoid for the Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment (MICE). The 2.923 m long tracker solenoid module includes the radiation shutter between the end absorber focus coil modules and the tracker as well as the 2.780 meter long magnet cryostat vacuum vessel. The 2.554 m long tracker solenoid consists of two sections, a three-coil spectrometer magnet and a two-coil matching section that matches the uniform field 4 T spectrometer solenoid into the MICE cooling channel. The two tracker magnets are used to provide a uniform magnetic field for the fiber detectors that are used to measure the muon beam emittance at the two ends of the cooling channel. This paper describes the design for the tracker magnet coils and the 4.2 K cryogenic coolers that are used to cool the superconducting magnet. Interfaces between the magnet and the detectors are discussed.