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Carli, C.

Paper Title Page
MOPC131 Ions for LHC: Towards Completion of the Injector Chain 376
 
  • D. Manglunki, M. Albert, M.-E. Angoletta, G. Arduini, P. Baudrenghien, G. Bellodi, P. Belochitskii, E. Benedetto, T. Bohl, C. Carli, E. Carlier, M. Chanel, H. Damerau, S. S. Gilardoni, S. Hancock, D. Jacquet, J. M. Jowett, V. Kain, D. Kuchler, M. Martini, S. Maury, E. Métral, L. Normann, G. Papotti, S. Pasinelli, M. Schokker, R. Scrivens, G. Tranquille, J. L. Vallet, B. Vandorpe, U. Wehrle, J. Wenninger
    CERN, Geneva
 
  The CERN LHC experimental programme includes heavy ion physics with collisions between two counter-rotating Pb82+ ion beams at a momentum of 2.76 TeV/c/nucleon per beam and luminosities as high as 1·1027 cm-2 s-1. To achieve the beam parameters required for this operation the ion accelerator chain has undergone substantial modifications. Commissioning with beam of the various elements of this chain started in 2005 and in 2007 it was the turn of the final stage, the Super-Proton-Synchrotron (SPS) following extensive changes to the low-level RF hardware. The major limitations of this mode of operation of the SPS (space charge, intra-beam scattering) are presented, together with the performance reached so far. The status of the pre-injector performance will also be reviewed together with a description of the steps required to reach nominal performance.  
TUPC102 Cooled Beam Diagnostics on LEIR 1296
 
  • G. Tranquille, C. Bal, C. Carli, M. Chanel, V. Prieto, R. S. Sautier, J. Tan
    CERN, Geneva
 
  Electron cooling is central in the preparation of dense bunches of lead beams for the LHC. Ion beam pulses from the LINAC3 are transformed into short high-brightness bunches using multi-turn injection, cooling and accumulation in the Low Energy Ion Ring, LEIR. The cooling process must therefore be continuously monitored in order to guarantee that the lead ions have the required characteristics in terms of beam size and momentum spread. In LEIR a number of systems have been developed to perform these measurements. These include Schottky diagnostics, ionisation profile monitors and scrapers. Along with their associated acquisition and analysis software packages these instruments have proved to be invaluable for the optimisation of the electron cooler.