Author: Michnoff, R.J.
Paper Title Page
MOPAB009 Review of the Fixed Target Operation at RHIC in 2020 69
 
  • C. Liu, P. Adams, E.N. Beebe, S. Binello, I. Blackler, M. Blaskiewicz, K.A. Brown, D. Bruno, B.D. Coe, K.A. Drees, A.V. Fedotov, W. Fischer, C.J. Gardner, C.E. Giorgio, X. Gu, T. Hayes, K. Hock, H. Huang, R.L. Hulsart, T. Kanesue, D. Kayran, N.A. Kling, B. Lepore, Y. Luo, D. Maffei, G.J. Marr, A. Marusic, K. Mernick, R.J. Michnoff, M.G. Minty, J. Morris, C. Naylor, S. Nemesure, M. Okamura, I. Pinayev, S. Polizzo, D. Raparia, G. Robert-Demolaize, T. Roser, J. Sandberg, V. Schoefer, S. Seletskiy, F. Severino, T.C. Shrey, P. Thieberger, M. Valette, A. Zaltsman, I. Zane, K. Zeno, W. Zhang
    BNL, Upton, New York, USA
 
  Funding: Work supported by Brookhaven Science Associates, LLC under Contract No. DE-SC0012704 with the U.S. Department of Energy.
As part of the Beam Energy Scan (BES) physics program, RHIC operated in Fixed Target mode at various beam energies in 2020. The fixed target experiment, achieved by scraping the beam halo of the circulating beam on a gold ring inserted in the beam pipe upstream of the experimental detectors, extends the range of the center-of-mass energy for BES. The machine configuration, control of rates, and results of the fixed target experiment operation in 2020 will be presented in this report.
 
poster icon Poster MOPAB009 [2.913 MB]  
DOI • reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2021-MOPAB009  
About • paper received ※ 16 May 2021       paper accepted ※ 17 August 2021       issue date ※ 23 August 2021  
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MOPAB010 RHIC Beam Energy Scan Operation with Electron Cooling in 2020 72
 
  • C. Liu, P. Adams, E.N. Beebe, S. Binello, I. Blackler, M. Blaskiewicz, K.A. Brown, D. Bruno, B.D. Coe, K.A. Drees, A.V. Fedotov, W. Fischer, C.J. Gardner, C.E. Giorgio, X. Gu, T. Hayes, K. Hock, H. Huang, R.L. Hulsart, T. Kanesue, D. Kayran, N.A. Kling, B. Lepore, Y. Luo, D. Maffei, G.J. Marr, A. Marusic, K. Mernick, R.J. Michnoff, M.G. Minty, J. Morris, C. Naylor, S. Nemesure, M. Okamura, I. Pinayev, S. Polizzo, D. Raparia, G. Robert-Demolaize, T. Roser, J. Sandberg, V. Schoefer, S. Seletskiy, F. Severino, T.C. Shrey, P. Thieberger, M. Valette, A. Zaltsman, I. Zane, K. Zeno, W. Zhang
    BNL, Upton, New York, USA
 
  Funding: Work supported by Brookhaven Science Associates, LLC under Contract No. DE-SC0012704 with the U.S. Department of Energy.
RHIC provided Au-Au collisions at beam energies of 5.75 and 4.59 GeV/nucleon for the physics program in 2020 as a part of the Beam Energy Scan II experiment. The operational experience at these energies will be reported with emphasis on their unique features. These unique features include the addition of a third harmonic RF system to enable a large longitudinal acceptance at 5.75 GeV/nucleon, the application of additional lower frequency cavities for alleviating space charge effects, and the world-first operation of cooling with an RF-accelerated bunched electron beam.
 
poster icon Poster MOPAB010 [3.523 MB]  
DOI • reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2021-MOPAB010  
About • paper received ※ 17 May 2021       paper accepted ※ 29 July 2021       issue date ※ 10 August 2021  
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MOPAB026 RHIC Delayed Abort Experiments 126
 
  • M. Valette, D. Bruno, K.A. Drees, K.M. Hartmann, G. Heppner, K. Mernick, C. Mi, J.-L. Mi, R.J. Michnoff, J. Morris, F. Orsatti, E. Rydout, T. Samms, J. Sandberg, V. Schoefer, C. Schultheiss, T.C. Shrey, C. Theisen
    BNL, Upton, New York, USA
 
  Funding: Work supported by Brookhaven Science Associates, LLC under Contract No. DE-SC0012704 with the U.S. Department of Energy.
For RHIC to operate at its top energy (100 GeV/n) while protecting the future sPHENIX detector, spontaneous and asynchronous firing of abort kicker modules (pre-fires) have to be avoided. A new triggering circuit for the abort kickers was implemented with relatively slow mechanical relays in series with the standard fast thyratron tubes. The relays prevents unwanted pre-fires during operation, but comes at the expense of a long latency - about 7 milliseconds - between the removal of beam permit and the actual firing of the abort kickers. Protection considerations of RHIC’s superconducting magnets forbid delaying energy extraction from the main dipoles and quadrupoles for too long after a quench. The beam has thus to circulate in both RHIc rings for a few milliseconds as the current in dipole and quadrupole circuit is being extracted. We present the results of delayed abort experiments conducted in July 2018 with the analysis of fast orbit and tune measurements and discuss the safety implications of this implementation for future RHIC operation.
 
DOI • reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2021-MOPAB026  
About • paper received ※ 19 May 2021       paper accepted ※ 26 May 2021       issue date ※ 23 August 2021  
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TUPAB042 Large Radial Shifts in the EIC Hadron Storage Ring 1443
 
  • S. Peggs, J.S. Berg, K.A. Drees, X. Gu, C. Liu, H. Lovelace III, Y. Luo, G.J. Marr, A. Marusic, F. Méot, R.J. Michnoff, V. Ptitsyn, G. Robert-Demolaize, M. Valette, S. Verdú-Andrés
    BNL, Upton, New York, USA
  • K.E. Deitrick
    Cornell University (CLASSE), Cornell Laboratory for Accelerator-Based Sciences and Education, Ithaca, New York, USA
  • B.R. Gamage
    JLab, Newport News, Virginia, USA
 
  Funding: Work supported by Brookhaven Science Associates, LLC under Contract No. DE-SC0012704 with the U.S. Department of Energy.
The Electron Ion Collider will collide hadrons in the Hadron Storage Ring (HSR) with ultra-relativistic electrons in the Electron Storage Ring. The HSR design trajectory includes a large radial shift over a large fraction of its circumference, in order to adjust the hadron path length to synchronize collisions over a broad range of hadron energies. The design trajectory goes on-axis through the magnets, crab cavities and other components in the six HSR Insertion Regions. This paper discusses the issues involved and reports on past and future beam experiments in the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider, which will be upgraded to become the HSR.
 
DOI • reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2021-TUPAB042  
About • paper received ※ 18 May 2021       paper accepted ※ 15 June 2021       issue date ※ 21 August 2021  
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THPAB007 Technology Spinoff and Lessons Learned from the 4-Turn ERL CBETA 3762
 
  • K.E. Deitrick, N. Banerjee, A.C. Bartnik, D.C. Burke, J.A. Crittenden, J. Dobbins, C.M. Gulliford, G.H. Hoffstaetter, Y. Li, W. Lou, P. Quigley, D. Sagan, K.W. Smolenski
    Cornell University (CLASSE), Cornell Laboratory for Accelerator-Based Sciences and Education, Ithaca, New York, USA
  • J.S. Berg, S.J. Brooks, R.L. Hulsart, G.J. Mahler, F. Méot, R.J. Michnoff, S. Peggs, T. Roser, D. Trbojevic, N. Tsoupas
    BNL, Upton, New York, USA
  • T. Miyajima
    KEK, Ibaraki, Japan
 
  The Cornell-BNL ERL Test Accelerator (CBETA) developed several energy-saving measures: multi-turn energy recovery, low-loss superconducting radiofrequency (SRF) cavities, and permanent magnets. With green technology becoming imperative for new high-power accelerators, the lessons learned will be important for projects like the FCC-ee or new light sources, where spinoffs and lessons learned from CBETA are already considered for modern designs.  
DOI • reference for this paper ※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2021-THPAB007  
About • paper received ※ 20 May 2021       paper accepted ※ 05 July 2021       issue date ※ 12 August 2021  
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