Author: Burt, G.
Paper Title Page
MOPC106 Study of the Variation of Transverse Voltage in the 4 Rod Crab Cavity for LHC 322
 
  • B.D.S. Hall, P.K. Ambattu, G. Burt, C. Lingwood
    Cockcroft Institute, Lancaster University, Lancaster, United Kingdom
  • P. Goudket, C. Hill
    STFC/DL/ASTeC, Daresbury, Warrington, Cheshire, United Kingdom
 
  The planned high luminosity upgrade to LHC will utilise crab cavities to rotate the beam in order to increase the luminosity in the presence of a finite crossing angle. A compact design is required in order for the cavities to fit between opposing beam-lines. In this paper we discuss we discuss one option for the LHC crab cavity based on a 4 rod TEM deflecting cavity. Due to the large transverse size of the LHC beam the cavity is required to have a large aperture while maintaining a constant transverse voltage across the aperture. The cavity has been optimised to minimise the variation of the transverse voltage while keeping the peak surface electric and magnetic fields low for a given kick. This is achieved while fitting within the strict design space of the LHC. The variation of deflecting voltage across the aperture has been studied numerically and compared with numerical and analytical estimates of other deflecting cavity types. Performance measurements an aluminium prototype of this cavity are presented and compared to the simulated design.  
 
TUPC026 Status of the Crab Cavity Design for the CLIC 1054
 
  • P.K. Ambattu, G. Burt, A.C. Dexter
    Cockcroft Institute, Lancaster University, Lancaster, United Kingdom
  • V.A. Dolgashev
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California, USA
  • A. Grudiev
    CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
  • R.M. Jones
    UMAN, Manchester, United Kingdom
  • P.A. McIntosh
    STFC/DL/ASTeC, Daresbury, Warrington, Cheshire, United Kingdom
 
  RF design of a crab cavity (2π/3, 11.9942 GHz) for the Compact Linear Collide (CLIC) is presented. As part of the UK-CLIC collaboration, CERN is building two copper prototypes, designed by Lancaster University / Cockcroft Institute. The first prototype to be made will be a 12 cell undamped cavity and the second will be waveguide damped cavity. The RF test at CERN will help characterisation of the dipole mode with X-band RF pulses of 15 MW peak power and pulse length of ~242 ns. Since the cavity frequency and phase advance per cell are identical to those of the CLIC main linac, the first prototype could exploit CERN’s X-band cavity characterisation facilities. A fully damped cavity will be required for the actual machine in order to meet the luminosity specs. The damped prototype will use an identical coupler type as the undamped one, but the cells will have damping waveguides with / without dielectric material.  
 
WEPS024 Beta Beams: An Accelerator-based Facility to Explore Neutrino Oscillation Physics 2535
 
  • E.H.M. Wildner, E. Benedetto, T. De Melo Mendonca, C. Hansen, T. Stora
    CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
  • D. Berkovits
    Soreq NRC, Yavne, Israel
  • G. Burt, A.C. Dexter
    Cockcroft Institute, Lancaster University, Lancaster, United Kingdom
  • A. Chancé, J. Payet
    CEA/DSM/IRFU, France
  • M. Cinausero, G. De Angelis, F. Gramegna, T. Marchi, G.P. Prete
    INFN/LNL, Legnaro (PD), Italy
  • G. Collazuol
    Univ. degli Studi di Padova, Padova, Italy
  • F. Debray, C. Trophime
    GHMFL, Grenoble, France
  • T. Delbar, T. Keutgen, M. Loiselet, S. Mitrofanov
    UCL, Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium
  • G. Di Rosa
    INFN-Napoli, Napoli, Italy
  • M. Hass, T. Hirsch
    Weizmann Institute of Science, Physics, Rehovot, Israel
  • I. Izotov, S. Razin, V. Skalyga, V. Zorin
    IAP/RAS, Nizhny Novgorod, Russia
  • L.V. Kravchuk
    RAS/INR, Moscow, Russia
  • T. Lamy, L. Latrasse, M. Marie-Jeanne, T. Thuillier
    LPSC, Grenoble Cedex, France
  • M. Mezzetto
    INFN- Sez. di Padova, Padova, Italy
  • A.V. Sidorov
    BINP SB RAS, Protvino, Moscow Region, Russia
  • P. Sortais
    ISN, Grenoble, France
  • A. Stahl
    RWTH, Aachen, Germany
 
  Funding: This contribution is a project funded by European Community under the European Commission Framework Programme 7 Design Study: EUROnu, Project Number 212372.
The recent discovery of neutrino oscillations, has implications for the Standard Model of particle physics (SM). Knowing the contribution of neutrinos to the SM, needs precise measurements of the parameters governing the neutrino oscillations. The EUROν Design Study will review three facilities (the so-called Super-Beams, Beta Beams and Neutrino Factories) and perform a cost assessment that, coupled with the physics performance, will give means to the European research authorities to make a decision on future European neutrino oscillation facility. "Beta Beams" produce collimated pure electron (anti-)neutrino by accelerating beta active ions to high energies and having them decay in a storage ring. EUROν Beta Beams are based on CERN’s infrastructure and existing machines. Using existing machines is an advantage for the cost evaluation, however, this choice is also constraining the Beta Beams. Recent work to make the Beta Beam facility a solid option will be described: production of Beta Beam isotopes, the 60 GHz pulsed ECR source development, integration into the LHC-upgrades, ensure the high intensity ion beam stability, and optimizations to get high neutrino fluxes.