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MOOCN2 | Tevatron Accelerator Physics and Operation Highlights | luminosity, antiproton, proton, collimation | 37 |
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Funding: Fermilab is operated by Fermi Research Alliance, LLC under Contract No. DE-AC02-07CH11359 with the United States Department of Energy. The performance of the Tevatron collider demonstrated continuous growth over the course of Run II, with the peak luminosity reaching 4·1032 cm-2 s-1 and the weekly integration rate exceeding 70 pb-1. This report presents a review of the most important advances that contributed to this performance improvement, including beam dynamics modeling, precision optics measurements and stability control, implementation of collimation during low-beta squeeze. Algorithms employed for optimization of the luminosity integration are presented and the lessons learned from high-luminosity operation are discussed. Studies of novel accelerator physics concepts at the Tevatron are described, such as the collimation techniques using crystal collimator and hollow electron beam, and compensation of beam-beam effects. |
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Slides MOOCN2 [5.422 MB] | ||
MOODN3 | Advanced Bent Crystal Collimation Studies at the Tevatron (T-980) | collimation, controls, simulation, beam-losses | 73 |
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Funding: * Work is supported by Fermi Research Alliance, LLC, under contract No. DE-AC02-07CH11359 with the U.S. Department of Energy through the US LHC Accelerator Research Program (LARP). The T-980 bent crystal collimation experiment at the Tevatron has recently acquired substantial enhancements. First, two new crystals - a 16-strip one manufactured and characterized by the INFN Ferrara group and a quasi-mosaic crystal manufactured and characterized by the PNPI group. Second, a two plane telescope with 3 high-resolution pixel detectors per plane along with corresponding mechanics, electronics, control and software has been manufactured, tested and installed in the E0 crystal region. The purpose of the pixel telescope is to measure and image channeled (CH), volume-reflected (VR) and multiple volume-reflected (MVR) beam profiles produced by bent crystals. Third, an ORIGIN-based system has been developed for thorough analysis of experimental and simulation data. Results of analysis are presented for different types of crystals used from 2005 to present for channeling and volume reflection including pioneering tests of two-plane crystal collimation at the collider, all in comparison with detailed simulations. |
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Slides MOODN3 [1.052 MB] | ||
MOODN5 | Chromaticity Correction for a Muon Collider Optics | sextupole, optics, quadrupole, luminosity | 79 |
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Funding: Work supported by Fermi Research Alliance, LLC under DE-AC02-07CH11359 with the U.S. DOE Muon Collider (MC) is a promising candidate for the next energy frontier machine. However, in order to obtain peak luminosity in the 1034cm-2s-1 range the collider lattice design must satisfy a number of stringent requirements. In particular the expected large momentum spread of the muon beam and the very small β* call for a careful correction of the chromatic effects. Here we present a particular solution for the interaction region (IR) optics whose distinctive feature is a three-sextupole local chromatic correction scheme. The scheme may be applied to other future machines where chromatic effects are expected to be large. |
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Slides MOODN5 [0.554 MB] | ||
MOODN6 | Muon Collider Interaction Region and Machine-detector Interface Design | quadrupole, dipole, background, neutron | 82 |
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Funding: Work is supported by Fermi Research Alliance, LLC, under contract No. DE-AC02-07CH11359 with the U.S. Department of Energy One of the key systems of a Muon Collider (MC)- seen as the most exciting options for the energy frontier machine in the post-LHC era - is its interaction region (IR). Designs of its optics, magnets and machine-detector interface are strongly interlaced and iterative. As a result of recent comprehensive studies, consistent solutions for the 1.5 TeV c.o.m. MC IR have been found and are described here. To provide the required momentum acceptance, dynamic aperture and chromaticity, innovative approach was used for the IR optics. Conceptual designs of large-aperture high-field dipole and high-gradient quadrupole magnets based on Nb3Sn superconductor were developed and analyzed in terms of the operation margin, field quality, mechanics, coil cooling and quench protection. Shadow masks in the interconnect regions and liners inside the magnets are used to mitigate unprecedented dynamic heat deposition due to muon decays (~1 kW/m). It is shown that an appropriately designed machine-detector interface with sophisticated shielding in the detector has a potential to substantially suppress the background rates in the MC detector. |
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Slides MOODN6 [1.233 MB] | ||
MOP001 | Charge Separation for Muon Collider Cooling | emittance, solenoid, simulation, acceleration | 103 |
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Most schemes for six dimensional muon ionization cooling work for only one sign. It is then necessary to have charge separation prior to that cooling. Schemes of charge separation using bent solenoids are described, and their simulated performances reported. It is found that for efficient separation, it should take place at somewhat higher momenta than commonly used for the cooling. | |||
MOP002 | Tapered Six-Dimensional Cooling Channel for a Muon Collider | emittance, solenoid, simulation, lattice | 106 |
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A high-luminosity muon collider requires a reduction of the six-dimensional emittance of the captured muon beam by a factor of approximately 106. Most of this cooling takes place in a dispersive channel that simultaneously reduces all six phase space dimensions. We describe a tapered 6D cooling channel that should meet the requirements of a muon collider. The parameters of the channel are given and preliminary simulations are shown of the expected performance. | |||
MOP003 | Six-Dimensional Bunch Merging for Muon Collider Cooling | emittance, wiggler, kicker, simulation | 109 |
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A muon collider requires single, intense, muon bunches with small emittances in all six dimensions. It is most efficient to initally phase-rotate the muons into many separate bunches, cool these bunches in six dimensions (6D), and, when cool enough, merge them into single bunches (one of each sign). Previous studies only merged in longitudinal phase space (2D). In this paper we describe merging in all six dimensions (6D). The scheme uses rf for longitudinal merging, and kickers and transports with differing lengths (trombones) for transverse merging. Preliminary simulations, including incorporation in 6D cooling, is described. | |||
MOP017 | A Sphere Cooler Scheme for Muon Cooling | solenoid, factory, simulation, high-voltage | 139 |
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Muon cooling is the greatest obstacle for producing an intensive muon beam. The frictional cooling method holds promise for delivering low-energy muon beams with narrow energy spreads. We outline a sphere cooler scheme based on frictional cooling to effectively produce such a “cold” muon beam. As an example source, we take the parameters of a surface muon source available at the Paul Scherrer Institute. Simulation results show that the sphere cooler has an efficiency of 50% to produce a “cold” muon beam with an energy spread of 0.9 keV. The high quality beam can potentially meet the requirements of a neutrino factory or a muon collider. | |||
MOP018 | The Impact of Beam Emittance on BSM-Physics Discovery Potential at a Muon Collider | shielding, background, electron, luminosity | 142 |
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A muon collider would allow for high precision probing of the multi-TeV energy regime and the potential discovery of new physics. Background radiation from electrons from the decay of muons interacting with the beam pipes near the interaction point (IP) places limitations on the design of a muon-collider detector. In particular, conical shielding extending out from the IP along the outside of the beam pipes prevents detection of particles at small angles to the beam line. For a given luminosity, bunches with smaller emittances will have fewer muons and therefore smaller background levels, allowing for shielding with shallower angles. The angular-acceptance dependence of the discovery potential for Kaluza-Klein excitations of the standard model particles is presented as a motivation for improved beam-cooling techniques that can achieve high luminosities with small bunch populations. | |||
MOP023 | Particle Tracking and Beam Matching Through the New Variable Thickness MICE Diffuser | solenoid, emittance, factory, target | 154 |
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The Muon Ionisation Cooling Experiment (MICE) aims to demonstrate the transverse cooling of muons for a possible future Neutrino Factory or Muon Collider. The diffuser is an integral part of the MICE cooling channel. It aims to inflate the emittance of the incoming beam such that cooling can later be measured in the MICE channel. A novel new diffuser design is currently in development at Oxford, consisting of a high density scatterer of variable radiation lengths. Simulations have been carried out in order to fully understand the physics processes involved with the new diffuser design and to enable a proper matching of the beam to the MICE channel. | |||
MOP030 | Muon Capture for the Front End of a μ+μ- Collider | factory, target, proton, focusing | 157 |
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We discuss the design of the muon capture front end for a μ±μ- Collider. In the front end, a proton bunch on a target creates secondary pions that drift into a capture transport channel, decaying into muons. A sequence of rf cavities forms the resulting muon beams into strings of bunches of differing energies, aligns the bunches to (nearly) equal central energies, and initiates ionization cooling. The muons are then cooled and accelerated to high energy into a storage ring for high-energy high luminosity collisions. Our initial design is based on the somewhat similar front end of the International Design Study (IDS) neutrino factory. | |||
MOP040 | Fast Time-of-Flight System for Muon Cooling Experiments | simulation, cathode, scattering, emittance | 172 |
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Funding: Supported in part by SBIR Grant DE-SC0005445. A new generation of large-area, low cost time-of-flight detectors with time resolutions ≤ 10 ps and space resolutions ≤ 1 mm is being developed for use in nuclear and particle physics experiments, as well as for medical and industrial applications. Such detectors are being considered for use in muon cooling channel tests. Designs and fabrication of prototype planes and associated readout electronics are described. Results of simulations of time and space resolutions are presented. |
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MOP047 | Helical Channels with Variable Slip Factor for Neutrino Factories and Muon Colliders | simulation, solenoid, longitudinal-dynamics, target | 187 |
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Funding: Supported in part by DOE SBIR grant DE-SC0002739. In order to realize a muon collider or a neutrino factory based on a muon storage ring, the muons must be captured and cooled efficiently. For a muon collider, the resulting train of bunches should be coalesced into a single bunch. Design concepts for a system to capture, cool, and coalesce a muon beam are described here. In particular, variants of a helical channel are used, taking advantage of the ability to vary the slip factor and other parameters of such a channel. The cooling application has been described before; this paper reports recent studies of a system that includes two novel concepts to accomplish capture and coalescing via a slip-controlled helical channel. |
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MOP051 | End-to-End Simulation of an Inverse Cyclotron for Muon Cooling | cyclotron, simulation, emittance, injection | 193 |
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Funding: DOE Office of High-Energy Physics, SBIR DE-FG02-08ER85044 Neutrino factories and muon colliders require significant cooling of the muon beam. Most muon cooling channels are long and expensive single-pass structures, due to the difficulty injecting very large emittance beams into a circular device. Inverse cyclotrons can potentially solve the injection problems associated with other circular cooling channels, and they can potentially provide substantial initial cooling of the beam. We present the first end-to-end (injection to extraction) simulations of an inverse cyclotron for muon cooling, performed with the particle-in-cell code VORPAL. We study the cooling capability of the device as well as potential limitations due to space charge effects and material interactions with the beam. |
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MOP053 | Measurement of Neutral Particle Contamination in the MICE Muon Beam | target, proton, luminosity, background | 199 |
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Funding: NSF The Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment (MICE) is being built at the ISIS proton synchrotron at Rutherford Appleton Laboratory (RAL) to test ionization cooling of a muon beam. Production of particles in the MICE beamline begins with a titanium target dipping into the ISIS proton beam. The resulting pions are captured, momentum-selected, and fed into a 5T superconducting solenoid. This magnet contains the pions and their decay muons which are then sent through the rest of the MICE beamline toward the cooling channel. During recent data-taking, it was determined that there is a significant background contamination of neutral particles populating the MICE muon beam. This contamination creates unwanted triggers in MICE, thus reducing the percentage of useful data taken during running. This paper describes the analysis done with time-of-flight detectors, used to identify particle type, in order to understand the level of contamination in both positive and negative polarity muon beams. |
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MOP054 | Racetrack Muon Ring Cooler Using Dipoles and Solenoids for a Muon Collider | dipole, lattice, solenoid, simulation | 202 |
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Funding: DOE Grant No. DE-FG02-92ER40695 A racetrack muon ring cooler for a muon collider is considered. The achromatic cooler uses both dipoles and solenoids. We describe the ring lattice and show the results of beam dynamic simulation that demonstrates a large aperture for acceptance. We also examine the 6D cooling of the muon beam in the cooler and discuss the prospects for the future. |
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MOP055 | Robust 6D Muon Cooling in Four-sided Ring Cooler using Solenoids and Dipoles for a Muon Collider | dipole, solenoid, emittance, lattice | 205 |
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Funding: DOE Grant No. DE-FG02-92ER40695 We present a four-sided ring cooler that employs both dipoles and solenoids to provide robust 6D muon cooling of large emittance beams in order to design and build a muon collider. Our studies show strong 6D cooling adequate for components of a muon collider front end. |
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MOP058 | Particle Production in the MICE Beamline | target, emittance, electron, quadrupole | 214 |
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Funding: NSF The Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment (MICE) will test transverse cooling of a muon beam, satisfying a crucial demonstration step along the path toward creating high intensity muon beams in a Neutrino Factory or Muon Collider. In the last year, MICE has taken a record amount of data to commission the beamline and calibrate the particle identification (PID) detectors. Studies of the MICE beamline and target timing will be discussed, including the use of Time-of-Flight (TOF) detectors to understand the MICE beam content. |
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MOP059 | Simulations of the Tapered Guggenheim 6d Cooling Channel for the Muon Collider | emittance, simulation, lattice, extraction | 217 |
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Funding: Work is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy. Recent progress in six-dimensional (6D) cooling simulations for the Muon Collider based on the RFOFO ring layout is presented. In order to improve the performance of the cooling channel a tapering scheme is studied that implies changing the parameters such as cell length, magnetic field strength, RF frequency, and the amount of the absorbing material along the cooling channel. This approach allows us to keep the cooling rates high throughout the process. The results of the simulations carried out in G4beamline are presented. |
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MOP062 | Usage of Li-rods for Ionization Cooling of Muons | emittance, simulation, plasma, focusing | 226 |
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Four different schemes of final ionization cooling are discussed. The first scheme is the straight channel based on lithium rods, which can provide only 4D cooling, but which can be modified to obtain 6D cooling. The helical orbit scheme with decrement redistribution is one such modification. Two other modifications use emittance redistribution and emittance exchange procedures, respectively, to transfer phase-space volume from longitudinal to transverse degrees of freedom (where the transverse degrees of freedom alternate for each successive exchange or redistribution). By emittance redistribution is meant a arbitrary redistribution of phase-space volume from one degree of freedom to another and by emittance exchange is meant a symplectic operation of emittance swap. Estimates of the final emittance, calculations of the technical parameters and simulations of beam movement are presented for each scheme. The study focused on the scheme with emittance exchange because it looks the most promising and simple, both conceptually and in terms of implementation, and it can also extend the cooling process to handle a larger initial emittance relative to the basic straight channel scheme. | |||
MOP087 | A Laser-Driven Linear Collider: Sample Machine Parameters and Configuration | laser, emittance, focusing, linear-collider | 262 |
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Funding: Work supported by Department of Energy contracts DE-AC03-76SF00515 (SLAC) and DE-FG03-97ER41043-III (LEAP). We present a design concept for an e+ e- linear collider based on laser-driven dielectric accelerator structures, and discuss technical issues that must be addressed to realize such a concept. With a pulse structure that is quasi-CW, dielectric laser accelerators potentially offer reduced beamstrahlung and pair production, reduced event pileup, and much cleaner environment for high energy physics and. For multi-TeV colliders, these advantages become significant. |
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MOP112 | Study of Enhanced Transformer Ratio in a Coaxial Dielectric Wakefield Accelerator using a Profiled Drive Bunch Train | wakefield, simulation, accelerating-gradient, acceleration | 304 |
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Funding: The research was supported by US Department of Energy, Office of High Energy Physics, Advanced Accelerator R & D. A key parameter of wakefield acceleration is the transformer ratio T. For a dielectric wakefield accelerator, it has been suggested to use a ramped drive bunch train (RBT), or a multizone dielectric structure to enhance T. Here we show the possibility of greatly improving the RBT technique by the use of a numerical algorithm. We study a two-channel 28 GHz structure with two nested Alumina cylindrical shells (CDWA) which is to be excited by a train of four annular bunches having energy 14 MeV and axial RMS size 1mm; the total charge of bunches is 200 nC. For bunch charge and spacing chosen for optimum acceleration gradient, or for optimizing T using the standard method, we obtain T~3.6. We found that if the charge ratios are 1.0:2.4:3.5:5.0 and the spaces between the bunches are 2.5, 2.5, and 4.5 wakefield periods, then T~17. The RBT also can be used successfully in a high gradient THz CDWA structure. * C.Jing et.al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 98 144801, (2007) ** C. Wang, et.al. Proc. PAC 2005. IEEE, 2005, p.1333. *** G. Sotnikov et.al. PRST-AB, 061302 (2009). |
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MOP123 | Colliding Pulse Injection Control in a Laser-Plasma Accelerator | laser, plasma, injection, controls | 325 |
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Funding: This work is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy, National Nuclear Security Administration, NA-22, and in part by the Office of Science under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231. Control of injection into a high gradient laser-plasma accelerator is presented using the beat between two ’colliding’ laser pulses to kick electrons into the plasma wake accelerating phase. Stable intersection and performance over hours of operation were obtained using active pointing control. Dependence of injector performance on laser and plasma parameters were characterized in coordination with simulations. By scanning the intersection point of the lasers, the injection position was controlled, mapping the acceleration length. Laser modifications to extend acceleration length are discussed towards production of tunable stable electron bunches as needed for applications including Thomson gamma sources and high energy colliders. |
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MOP152 | G4beamline Particle Tracking in Matter Dominated Beam Lines | simulation, space-charge, electron, wakefield | 373 |
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Funding: Supported in part by USDOE STTR Grant DE-FG02-06ER86281 The G4beamline program is a useful and steadily improving tool to quickly and easily model beam lines and experimental equipment without user programming. It has both graphical and command-line user interfaces. Unlike most accelerator physics codes, it easily handles a wide range of materials and fields, being particularly well suited for the study of muon and neutrino facilities. As it is based on the Geant4 toolkit, G4beamline includes most of what is known about the interactions of particles with matter. We are continuing the development of G4beamline to facilitate its use by a larger set of beam line and accelerator developers. A major new feature is the calculation of space-charge effects. G4beamline is open source and freely available. |
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MOP247 | Quick Setup of Unit Test For Accelerator Controls System | controls, kicker, heavy-ion, status | 574 |
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Funding: Work supported by Brookhaven Science Associates, LLC under Contract No. DE-AC02-98CH10886 with the U.S. Department of Energy. Testing a single hardware unit of an accelerator control system often requires the setup of a graphical user interface. Developing a dedicated application for a specific hardware unit test could be time consuming and the application may become obsolete after the unit tests. This paper documents a methodology for quick design and setup of an interface focused on performing unit tests of accelerator equipment with minimum programming work. The method has three components. The first is a generic accelerator device object (ADO) manager which can be used to setup, store, and log testing controls parameters for any unit testing system. The second involves the design of a TAPE (Tool for Automated Procedure Execution) sequence file that specifies and implements all testing and control logic. The third is the design of a PET (parameter editing tool) page that provides the unit tester with all the necessary control parameters required for testing. This approach has been used for testing the horizontal plane of the Stochastic Cooling Motion Control System at RHIC. |
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MOP248 | Automating Power Supply Checkout | power-supply, controls, heavy-ion, ion | 577 |
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Funding: Work supported by Brookhaven Science Associates, LLC under Contract No. DE-AC02-98CH10886 with the U.S. Department of Energy. Power Supply checkout is a necessary, pre-beam, time-critical function. At odds are the desire to decrease the amount of time to perform the checkout while at the same time maximizing the number and types of checks that can be performed and analyzing the results quickly (in case any problems exist that must be addressed). Controls and Power Supply Group personnel have worked together to develop tools to accomplish these goals. Power Supply checkouts are now accomplished in a time-frame of hours rather than days, reducing the number of person-hours needed to accomplish the checkout and making the system available more quickly for beam development. |
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MOP249 | Improved Alarm Tracking for Better Accountability | controls, diagnostics, feedback, status | 579 |
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Funding: Work supported by Brookhaven Science Associates, LLC under Contract No. DE-AC02-98CH10886 with the U.S. Department of Energy. An alarm system is a vital component of any accelerator, as it provides a warning that some element of the system is not functioning properly. The severity and age of the alarm may sometimes signify whether urgent or deferred attention is required. For example, older alarms may inadvertently be given a lower priority if an assumption is made that someone else is already investigating it, whereas those that are more current may indicate the need for an immediate response. The alarm history also provides valuable information regarding the functionality of the overall system, thus careful tracking of these data is likely to improve response time and remove uncertainty about the current status. Since one goal of every alarm display is to be free of alarms, a clear and concise presentation of an alarm along with useful historic annotations can help the end user address the warning more quickly. By defining a discrete set of very specific alarm states and by utilizing database resources to maintain a complete and easily accessible alarm history, we anticipate a decrease in down time due to more efficient operator response and management of alarms. |
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MOP267 | Fast BPM Data Distribution for Global Orbit Feedback Using Commercial Gigabit Ethernet Technology | feedback, HOM, monitoring, status | 606 |
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Funding: Work supported by Brookhaven Science Associates, LLC under Contract No. DE-AC02-98CH10886 with the U.S. Department of Energy. In order to correct beam perturbations in RHIC around 10Hz, a new fast data distribution network was required to deliver BPM position data at rates several orders of magnitude above the capability of the existing system. The urgency of the project limited the amount of custom hardware that could be developed, which dictated the use of as much commercially available equipment as possible. The selected architecture uses a custom hardware interface to the existing RHIC BPM electronics together with commercially available Gigabit Ethernet switches to distribute position data to devices located around the collider ring. Using the minimum Ethernet packet size and a field programmable gate array (FPGA) based state machine logic instead of a software based driver, real-time and deterministic data delivery is possible using Ethernet. The method of adapting this protocol for low latency data delivery, bench testing of Ethernet hardware, and the logic to construct Ethernet packets using FPGA hardware will be discussed. |
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MOP277 | The Machine Protection System for the R&D Energy Recovery LINAC | controls, status, linac, interlocks | 630 |
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Funding: Work supported by Brookhaven Science Associates, LLC under Contract No. DE-AC02-98CH10886 with the U.S. Department of Energy. The Machine Protection System (MPS) is a device-safety system that is designed to prevent damage to hardware by generating interlocks, based upon the state of input signals generated by selected sub-systems. It protects all the key machinery in the R&D Project called the Energy Recovery LINAC (ERL) against the high beam current. The MPS is capable of responding to a fault with an interlock signal within several microseconds. The ERL MPS is based on a National Instruments CompactRIO platform, and is programmed by utilizing National Instruments' development environment for a visual programming language. The system also transfers data (interlock status, time of fault, etc.) to the main server. Transferred data is integrated into the pre-existing software architecture which is accessible by the operators. This paper will provide an overview of the hardware used, its configuration and operation, as well as the software written both on the device and the server side. |
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TUOAN1 | SuperB: Next-Generation e+e− B-factory Collider | solenoid, emittance, luminosity, quadrupole | 690 |
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Funding: Work supported by the U.S. Department of Energy under contract DE-AC02-76SF00515. The SuperB international team continues to optimize the design of an electron-positron collider, which will allow the enhanced study of the origins of flavor physics. The project combines the best features of a linear collider (high single-collision luminosity) and a storage-ring collider (high repetition rate), bringing together all accelerator physics aspects to make a very high luminosity of 1036 cm-2 s-1. This asymmetric-energy collider with a polarized electron beam will produce hundreds of millions of B-mesons at the Y(4S) resonance. The present design is based on extremely low emittance beams colliding at a large Piwinski angle to allow very low ßy* without the need for ultra short bunches. Use of crab-waist sextupoles will enhance the luminosity, suppressing dangerous resonances and allowing for a higher beam-beam parameter. The project has flexible beam parameters, improved dynamic aperture, and spin-rotators in the Low Energy Ring for longitudinal polarization of the electron beam at the Interaction Point. Optimized for best colliding-beam performance, the facility may also provide high-brightness photon beams for synchrotron-radiation applications. |
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Slides TUOAN1 [9.378 MB] | ||
TUOAN3 | Lattice Design for the Future ERL-Based Electron Hadron Colliders eRHIC and LHeC | electron, linac, lattice, dipole | 696 |
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Funding: Work performed under a Contract Number DE-AC02-98CH10886 with the auspices of the US Department of Energy. We present a lattice design of a CW Electron Recovery Linacs (ERL) for future electron-hadron colliders eRHIC and LHeC. In eRHIC, an six-pass ERL installed in the existing Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) tunnel will collide 5-30 GeV polarized electrons with RHIC’s 50-250 (325) GeV polarized protons or 20-100 (130) GeV/u heavy ions. In LHeC, a stand-along 3-pass 60 GeV CW ERL will collide polarized electrons with 7 TeV protons. After collision, electron beam energy is recovered and electrons are dumped at low energy. Two superconducting linacs are located in the two straight sections in both ERLs. . The multiple arcs are made of Flexible Momentum Compaction lattice (FMC) allowing adjustable momentum compaction for electrons with different energies. The multiple arcs, placed above each other, are matched to the two linacs straight sections with splitters and combiners. |
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Slides TUOAN3 [3.002 MB] | ||
TUP094 | Novel Crab Cavity RF Design | cavity, electron, ion, coupling | 1006 |
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Funding: Supported in part by DOE SBIR grant DE-SC0005444 A 20-50 MV integrated transverse voltage is required for the Electron-Ion Collider. The most promising of the crab cavity designs that have been proposed in the last five years are the TEM type crab cavities because of the higher transverse impedance. The TEM design approach is extended here to a hybrid crab cavity that includes the input power coupler as an integral part of the design. A prototype was built with Phase I monies and tested at JLAB. The results reported on, and a system for achieving 20-50 MV is proposed. |
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TUP153 | Fabrication and Test of Short Helical Solenoid Model Based on YBCO Tape | solenoid, insertion, cavity, target | 1118 |
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Funding: Supported in part by USDOE STTR Grant DE-FG02-07ER84825 and by Fermi Research Alliance, LLC, under contract No. DE-AC02-07CH11359 with the U.S. Department of Energy. A helical cooling channel (HCC) is a new technique proposed for six-dimensional (6D) cooling of muon beams. To achieve the optimal cooling rate, the high field section of HCC need to be developed, which suggests using High Temperature Superconductors (HTS). This paper updates the parameters of a YBCO based helical solenoid (HS) model, describes the fabrication of HS segments (double-pancake units) and the assembly of six-coil short HS model with two dummy cavity insertions. Three HS segments and the six-coil short model were tested. The results are presented and discussed. |
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TUP169 | The Effect of Axial Stress on YBCO Coils | solenoid, alignment | 1139 |
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Funding: This work is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC02-98CH10886. A spiral wound “pancake” coil made from YBCO coated conductor has been stressed to a pressure of 100MPa in the axial direction at 77K. In this case axial refers to the coil so that the force is applied to the edge of the conductor. The effect on the critical current was small and completely reversible. Repeatedly cycling the pressure had no measureable permanent effect on the coil. The small current change observed exhibited a slight hysteretic behaviour during the loading cycle. |
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TUP177 | Open Midplane Dipoles for a Muon Collider | dipole, radiation, storage-ring, luminosity | 1160 |
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Funding: This work is supported by the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC02-98CH10886 and SBIR contract DOE Grant Numbers DE-FG02-07ER84855 and DE-FG02-08ER85037. For a muon collider with copious decay particles in the plane of the storage ring, open-midplane dipoles (OMD) may be preferable to tungsten-shielded cosine-theta dipoles of large aperture. The OMD should have its midplane completely free of material, so as to dodge the radiation from decaying muons. Analysis funded by a Phase I SBIR suggests that a field of 10-20 T should be feasible, with homogeneity of 1x10-4 and energy deposition low enough for conduction cooling to 4.2 K helium. If funded, a Phase II SBIR would refine the analysis and build and test a proof-of-principle magnet. |
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TUP178 | Current Progress of TAMU3: A Block Coil Stress-managed High Field (>12T) Nb3Sn Dipole | dipole, status, target, controls | 1163 |
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Funding: This work was supported by the U.S. Department of Energy under Grant DE-FG02-06ER41405 TAMU3 is a block-coil short model dipole which embodies for the first time at high field (>12T) strength the techniques of stress management within the superconducting windings. The dipole consists of two planar racetrack coil assemblies, assembled within the rectangular aperture of a flux return core. Each assembly contains an inner and outer winding, and a high-strength support structure which is integrated within the assembly to intercept the Lorentz stress produced from the inner winding so that it does not accumulate to produce high stress in the outer winding. Iso-static preload is applied by pressurizing a set of thin stainless steel bladders with molten Woods metal and then freezing the metal under pressure. Current technology, difficulties, and present status of construction of magnet assembly will be presented. |
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TUP220 | Cryogenic Sub-System for the 56 MHz SRF Storage Cavity for RHIC | cavity, cryogenics, superconducting-RF, booster | 1226 |
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Funding: Work supported by Brookhaven Science Associates, LLC under Contract No. DE-AC02-98CH10886 with the U.S. Department of Energy. A 56 MHz Superconducting RF Cavity is being constructed for the RHIC collider. This cavity is a quarter wave resonator that will be operated at 4.4K. The cavity requires an extreme quiet environment to maintain its operating frequency. The cavity besides being engineered for a mechanically quiet system, also requires a quiet cryogenic system. Liquid helium is taken from RHIC's main helium 3.5 atm, 4.9K supply header to supply this sub-system and the boil-off is return to a separate local compressor system nearby. To acoustically separate the cryogenics' delivery and return lines, a condenser/boiler heat exchanger is used to re-liquefy the helium vapor generated by the cavity. A system description and operating parameters is given about the cryogen delivery sub-system. |
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TUP222 | Helium Release Rates and ODH Calculations from RHIC Magnet Line Cooling Line Failure | vacuum, simulation, injection, controls | 1232 |
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Funding: Work supported by Brookhaven Science Associates, LLC under Contract No. DE-AC02-98CH10886 with the U.S. Department of Energy. A catastrophic failure of the magnet cooling lines, similar to the LHC superconducting bus failure incident, could discharge cold helium into the RHIC tunnel and cause an Oxygen Deficiency Hazard (ODH) problem. A SINDA/FLUINT® model, which simulated the 4.5K/ 4 atm helium flowing through the magnet cooling system distribution lines, then through a line break into the insulating vacuum volumes and discharging via the reliefs into the RHIC tunnel, had been developed. Arc flash energy deposition and heat load from the ambient temperature cryostat surfaces are included in the simulations. Three typical areas: the sextant arc, the Triplet/DX/D0 magnets, and the injection area, had been analyzed. Results, including helium discharge rates, helium inventory loss, and the resulting oxygen concentration in the RHIC tunnel area, are reported. Good agreement had been achieved when comparing the simulation results, a RHIC sector depressurization test measurement, and some simple analytical calculations. |
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TUP265 | A Solenoid Capture System for a Muon Collider | target, proton, factory, solenoid | 1316 |
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Funding: This work was supported in part by the US DOE Contract No. DE-AC02-98CH10886. The concept for a muon-production system for a muon collider or neutrino factory calls for an intense 4-MW-class proton beam impinging upon a free-flowing mercury jet immersed in a 20-T solenoid field. This system is challenging in many aspects, including magnetohydrodynamics of the mercury jet subject to disruption by the proton beam, strong intermagnetic forces, and the intense thermal loads and substantial radiation damage to the magnet coils due to secondary particles from the target. Studies of these issues are ongoing, with a sketch of their present status given here. |
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WEOBN5 | Concept and Architecture of the RHIC LLRF Upgrade Platform | LLRF, controls, booster, target | 1410 |
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Funding: Work supported by Brookhaven Science Associates, LLC under Contract No. DE-AC02-98CH10886 with the U.S. Department of Energy The goal of the RHIC LLRF upgrade has been the development of a stand alone, generic, high performance, modular LLRF control platform, which can be configured to replace existing systems and to serve as a common platform for all new RF systems. The platform is also designed to integrate seamlessly into a distributed network based controls infrastructure, be easy to deploy, and to be useful in a variety of digital signal processing and data acquisition roles. Reuse of hardware, software and firmware has been emphasized to minimize development effort and maximize commonality of system components. System interconnection, synchronization and scaling is facilitated by a deterministic, high speed serial timing and data link, while standard intra and inter chassis communications utilize high speed, non-deterministic protocol based serial links. System hardware configuration is modular and flexible, based on a combination of a main carrier board which can host up to six custom or commercial daughter modules as required to implement desired functionality. This paper will provide an overview of the platform concept, architecture, features and benefits. |
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Slides WEOBN5 [31.462 MB] | ||
WEOCS1 | Development of Long Nb3Sn Quadrupoles by the US LHC Accelerator Research Program | quadrupole, luminosity, alignment, radiation | 1455 |
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Insertion quadrupoles with large aperture and high gradient are required to upgrade the luminosity of the Large Hadron Collider (HL-LHC). The US LHC Accelerator Research Program (LARP) is a collaboration of DOE National Laboratories aiming at demonstrating the feasibility of Nb3Sn magnet technology for this application. Several series of magnets with increasing performance and complexity have been fabricated, with particular emphasis on addressing length scale-up issues. Program results and future directions are discussed. | |||
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Slides WEOCS1 [4.433 MB] | ||
WEP074 | Correcting Aberrations in Complex Magnet Systems for Muon Cooling Channels | simulation, dipole, resonance, quadrupole | 1615 |
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Funding: Supported in part by DOE SBIR grant DE-SC0005589 Designing and simulating complex magnet systems needed for cooling channels in both neutrino factories and muon colliders requires innovative techniques to correct for both chromatic and spherical aberrations. Optimizing complex systems, such as helical magnets for example, is also difficult but essential. By using COSY INFINITY, a differential algebra based code, the transfer and aberration maps can be examined to discover what critical terms have the greatest influence on these aberrations. |
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WEP134 | Depolarization and Beam-beam Effects at Future e+e− Colliders | polarization, photon, positron, undulator | 1731 |
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In order to exploit the full potential of proposed future high-energy electron-positron linear colliders, precise knowledge of the polarization state of the beams is required. In this paper we present an updated analysis of the depolarization effects caused by the intense beam-beam interaction, which is expected to be the dominant source of depolarization. The impact of higher-order effects are considered and numerical results from the Guinea-Pig and CAIN simulations are presented for the latest International Linear Collider (ILC) and Compact LInear Collider (CLIC) parameters. | |||
WEP152 | Parallel Optimization of Beam-Beam Effects in High Energy Colliders | luminosity, simulation, beam-beam-effects, controls | 1770 |
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Funding: Work supported by the Director of the Office of Science of the US Department of Energy under Contract no. DEAC02-05CH11231. Beam-beam effects limit luminosity in high energy colliders. Parallel beam-beam simulation codes were developed to study those beam-beam effects and to help the collider design. In this paper, we will present a parallel optimization algorithm integrating together with the parallel beam-beam simulation to optimize the luminosity of the colliding beams. This algorithm is based on a differential evolutionary global optimization method and takes advantage of the two-level parallelization in both parallel search and parallel objective function evaluation. This significantly increases the scalability of the simulation on peta-scale supercomputers and reduces the time for finding the optimal working point. |
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WEP167 | Searching for the Optimal Working Point of the MEIC at JLab Using an Evolutionary Algorithm | luminosity, resonance, simulation, betatron | 1805 |
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Funding: Authored by Jefferson Science Associates, LLC under U.S. DOE Contract No. DE-AC05-06OR23177. Supported in part by SciDAC collaboration. The Medium-energy Electron Ion Collider (MEIC), a proposed medium-energy ring-ring electron-ion collider based on CEBAF at Jefferson Lab. The collider luminosity and stability are sensitive to the choice of a working point – the betatron and synchrotron tunes of the two colliding beams. Therefore, a careful selection of the working point is essential for stable operation of the collider, as well as for achieving high luminosity. Here we describe a novel approach for locating an optimal working point based on evolutionary algorithm techniques. |
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WEP242 | Project X Functional Requirements Specification | linac, proton, injection, kaon | 1936 |
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Funding: Work supported by the Fermi Research Alliance, under contract to the U.S. Department of Energy Project X is a multi-megawatt proton facility being designed to support intensity frontier research in elementary particle physics, with possible applications to nuclear physics and nuclear energy research, at Fermilab. A Functional Requirements Specification has been developed in order to establish performance criteria for the Project X complex in support of these multiple missions. This paper will describe the Functional Requirements for the Project X facility and the rationale for these requirements. |
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WEP249 | Intense Muon Beams for Experiments at Project X | target, simulation, proton, linac | 1951 |
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Funding: Supported in part by DOE SBIR grant DE-SC00002739 A coherent approach for providing muon beams to several experiments for the intensity-frontier program at Project X is described. Concepts developed for the front end of a muon collider/neutrino factory facility, such as phase rotation and ionization cooling, are applied, but with significant differences. High-intensity experiments typically require high-duty-factor beams pulsed at a time interval commensurate with the muon lifetime. It is challenging to provide large RF voltages at high duty factor, especially in the presence of intense radiation and strong magnetic fields, which may preclude the use of superconducting RF cavities. As an alternative, cavities made of materials such as ultra-pure Al and Be, which become very good - but not super - conductors at cryogenic temperatures, can be used. |
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WEP251 | Design Studies of Pre-Boosters of Different Circumference for an Electron Ion Collider at JLab | booster, ion, electron, dipole | 1954 |
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The Medium-Energy Electron Ion Collider (MEIC) at JLab comprises a figure-8 shaped pre–booster ring as one of the main components. As it performs for both the accumulation of protons and ions it must have a circumference long enough to accommodate components such as RF cavities, cooling devices, collimation, injection and extraction. The length of the large booster ring in MEIC is suggested to be in the range 1.0-1.2km. Based on preliminary design work, the minimum viable length of the pre-booster in MEIC was identified as 200m. It is clear that the integer multiple of the length of the designed pre-booster should match with that of the large booster in MEIC. In order to cater future requirements of the EIC, the pre-booster in MEIC needs to be designed in different versions featured by different lengths. Thus, three different pre-boosters of lengths 200m, 250m and 300m are designed with various cell structures. This paper summarizes the three variants of the lattice. | |||
THOAS4 | Enhancement of RF Breakdown Threshold of Microwave Cavities by Magnetic Insulation | cavity, electron, lattice, emittance | 2053 |
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Funding: This work is funded by US Dept. of Energy grant number DE AC02-98CH10886. Limitations on the maximum achievable accelerating gradient of microwave cavities can influence the performance, length, and cost of particle accelerators. Gradient limitations are widely believed to be initiated by electron emission from the cavity surfaces. Here, we show that field emission is effectively suppressed by applying a tangential magnetic field to the cavity walls, so higher gradients can be achieved. Numerical simulations indicate that the magnetic field prevents electrons leaving these surfaces and subsequently picking up energy from the electric field. Implementation of the proposed concept into prospective particle accelerator applications is studied by two specific examples - a multi TeV lepton-antilepton collider and a linear muon accelerator driver for an intense neutrino source. |
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Slides THOAS4 [1.441 MB] | ||
THOBN1 | R&D Toward a Neutrino Factory and Muon Collider | factory, cavity, simulation, target | 2056 |
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Funding: Work supported by U.S. Dept. of Energy, Office of High Energy Physics, under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231. Significant progress has been made in recent years in R&D towards a neutrino factory and muon collider. The U.S. Muon Accelerator Program (MAP) has been formed recently to expedite the R&D efforts. This talk will review the US MAP R&D programs for a neutrino factory and muon collider. Muon ionization cooling research is the key element of the program. The first muon ionization cooling demonstration experiment, MICE (Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment) is under construction now at RAL (Rutherford Appleton Laboratory) in UK. Status of MICE as well as the U.S. contribution to MICE will be presented. |
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Slides THOBN1 [1.987 MB] | ||
THP050 | Normal Conducting Radio Frequency X-band Deflecting Cavity Fabrication and Validation | cavity, alignment, electron, linear-collider | 2211 |
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An X-band Traveling wave Deflector mode cavity (XTD) has been developed at Radiabeam Technologies to perform longitudinal characterization of the sub-picosecond ultra-relativistic electron beams. The device is optimized for the 100 MeV electron beam parameters at the Accelerator Test Facility (ATF) at Brookhaven National Laboratory, and is scalable to higher energies. The XTD is designed to operate at 11.424 GHz, and features short filling time, femtosecond resolution, and a small footprint. RF design, fabrication and RF validation and tuning will be presented. | |||
THP065 | Advances in High-Order Interaction Region Nonlinear Optics Correction at RHIC | sextupole, octupole, coupling, interaction-region | 2252 |
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Funding: Work supported by Brookhaven Science Associates, LLC under Contract No. DE-AC02-98CH10886 with the U.S. Department of Energy. A method to indirectly measure and deterministically correct the higher order magnetic errors of the final focusing magnets in the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider has been in place for several years at BNL. This method yields control over the effects of multi-pole errors through application of closed orbit bumps followed by analysis and correction of the resulting betatron tune shifts using multi-pole correctors. The process has recently been automated in order to provide more efficient and effective corrections. The tune resolution along with the reliability of tune measurements has also been improved significantly due to advances/upgrades in the betatron tune measurement system employed at RHIC (BBQ). Here we describe the foundation of the IR bump method, followed by recent improvements along with experimental data. |
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THP073 | Simulations of Emittance Measurement at CLIC | emittance, laser, simulation, quadrupole | 2270 |
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A proposal for a CLIC emittance measurement line using laser-wire beam profile monitors is presented. Results of simulations and optimizations are given. Estimates of the impact of beam size as well as statistical and machine-related errors on the measurement accuracy are discussed. | |||
THP078 | Study of a TeV Level Linear Collider Using Short rf Pulse (~20ns) Two Beam Accelerator Concept | linear-collider, linac, wakefield, klystron | 2279 |
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Funding: Work is supported by DOE SBIR grant under contract No. DE-SC0004320. In a general sense, a high gradient is desirable for a TeV level linear collider design because it can reduce the total linac length. More importantly, the efficiency and the cost to sustain such a gradient should be considered as well in the optimization process of an overall design. We propose a high energy linear collider based on a short rf pulse (~22ns flat top), high gradient (~267MV/m loaded gradient), high frequency (26GHz) dielectric two beam accelerator scheme. This scheme is a modular design and its unique locally repetitive drive beam structure allows a flexible configuration to meet different needs. Major parameters of a conceptual 3-TeV linear collider are presented. This preliminary study shows an efficient (~7% overall ) short pulse collider may be achievable. As the first step, a dielectric based broadband accelerating structure is under development. |
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THP081 | Beam Lifetime and Limitations during Low-Energy RHIC Operation | space-charge, emittance, ion, luminosity | 2285 |
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Funding: Work performed under contract No. DE-AC02-98CH10886 with the auspices of the DoE of United States. The low-energy physics program at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), motivated by a search for the QCD phase transition critical point, requires operation at low energies. At these energies, large nonlinear magnetic field errors and large beam sizes produce low beam lifetimes. A variety of beam dynamics effects such as Intrabeam Scattering (IBS), space charge and beam-beam forces also contribute. All these effects are important to understand beam lifetime limitations in RHIC at low energies. During the low-energy RHIC physics run in May-June 2010 at beam γ=6.1 and γ=4.1, gold beam lifetimes were measured for various values of space-charge tune shifts, transverse acceptance limitation by collimators, synchrotron tunes and RF voltage. This paper summarizes our observations and initial findings. |
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THP085 | Radiation Effects in a Muon Collider Ring and Dipole Magnet Protection | dipole, quadrupole, radiation, lattice | 2294 |
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Funding: Work is supported by Fermi Research Alliance, LLC, under contract No. DE-AC02-07CH11359 with the U.S. Department of Energy. Requirements and operating conditions for a Muon Collider Ring (MCR) pose significant challenges to superconducting magnets. The dipole magnets should provide a high magnetic field to reduce the ring circumference and thus maximize the number of muon collisions during their lifetime. One third of the beam energy is continuously deposited along the lattice by the decay electrons at the rate of 0.5 kW/m for a 1.5-TeV c.o.m. MCR. Unlike dipoles in proton machines, the MCR dipoles should allow this dynamic heat load to escape the magnet helium volume in horizontal plane predominantly towards the ring center. Two alternative designs, one based on the open mid-plane approach with block type coils and absorber outside the coils, and another based on the traditional large-aperture cos-theta approach with a shifted beam pipe and absorber inside the coil aperture were developed for the MCR designed for a luminosity of 1034 cm-2s−1. This paper presents the analysis and comparison of radiation effects in MCR based on the two dipole magnets. Tungsten masks in the interconnect regions are used in both cases to mitigate the unprecedented dynamic heat deposition and radiation in the magnet coils. |
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THP087 | G4Beamline and MARS Comparison for Muon Collider Backgrounds | background, electron, simulation, neutron | 2297 |
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Funding: Supported in part by SBIR Grant DE-SC0005447 Technological innovations in recent years have revived interest in muon colliders as the next generation energy frontier machine. The biggest challenge for muon colliders is that muons decay. Advances in muon cooling technology will make the focussing and acceleration of muons to TeV energies possible. The challenge for the detectors in such machines is overcoming the large backgrounds from muon decays in the colliding ring lattice that will inundate the interaction region (IR) and will make triggering and data reconstruction a challenge. Developing simulation tools that can reliably model the environment of the muon collider IR will be critical to physics analyses. We will need to expand the capabilities of current programs and use them to benchmark and verify results against each other. Here we are comparing an emerging capabiligy of G4beamline, an interface for physicists to GEANT4 code, with MARS, a mature program for particle fluences, in developing code for muon collider background studies |
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THP088 | Beam Induced Detector Backgrounds at a Muon Collider | background, shielding, electron, neutron | 2300 |
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Funding: Supported in part by SBIR Grant DE-SC0005447 Muon colliders are considered to be an important future energy frontier accelerator. It is possible to build a large muon collider as a circular machine, even at multi-TeV energies, due to the greatly reduced synchrotron radiation expected from muons. In addition to the same physics processes present in an electron collider, a muon collider will have the potential to produce s-channel resonances such as the various Higgs states at an enhanced rate. For a muon collider with 750 GeV/c mu+ and mu- with 1012 mu per bunch we would expect 4.3x105 muon decays per meter. These muon decays will produce very energetic off momentum electrons that can produce detector backgrounds that can affect the physics. These backgrounds include electrons from muon decays, synchrotron radiation from the decay electrons, hadrons produced by photo-nuclear interactions, coherent and incoherent beam-beam pair production and Bethe-Heitler muon production. In this paper we will discuss these processes and calculate particle fluxes into the detector volume from these background processes. |
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THP090 | Physics Validation of Monte Carlo Simulations for Detector Backgrounds at a Muon Collider | simulation, neutron, electron, background | 2303 |
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Muon colliders are considered to be an important future energy-frontier accelerator. A muon collider could be built as a circular accelerator into the TeV energy range as a result of the reduced synchrotron radiation expected from the larger rest mass of muons. For a muon collider with 750 GeV μ+ and μ- with 1012 μ per bunch, it can be expected that there would be 4.3×105 muon decays per meter per beam. These decays will produce very energetic off-momentum electrons that can produce detector backgrounds that can affect the physics. The main backgrounds include electrons from muon decays, synchrotron radiation from the decay electrons, hadrons produced by photonuclear interactions, coherent and incoherent beam-beam pair-production, and Bethe-Heitler muon production. In this paper we will discuss the simulation results in terms of observed physics processes in G4Beamline. | |||
THP093 | Design Status of MEIC at JLab | ion, electron, booster, luminosity | 2306 |
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Funding: Authored by Jefferson Science Associates, LLC under U.S. DOE Contract No. DE-AC05-06OR23177. An electron-ion collider (MEIC) is envisioned as the primary future of the JLab nuclear science program beyond the 12 GeV upgraded CEBAF. The present MEIC design selects a ring-ring collider option and covers a CM energy range up to 51 GeV for both polarized light ions and un-polarized heavy ions, while higher CM energies could be reached by a future upgrade. The MEIC stored colliding ion beams, which will be generated, accumulated and accelerated in a green field ion complex, are designed to match the stored electron beam injected at full energy from the CEBAF in terms of emittance, bunch length, charge and repetition frequency. This design strategy ensures a high luminosity above 1034 s−1cm-2. A unique figure-8 shape collider ring is adopted for advantages of preserving ion polarization during acceleration and accommodation of a polarized deuteron beam for collisions. Our recent effort has been focused on completing this conceptual design as well as design optimization of major components. Significant progress has also been made in accelerator R&D including chromatic correction and dynamical aperture, beam-beam, high energy electron cooling and polarization tracking. |
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THP109 | Dielectric Collimators for Linear Collider Beam Delivery System | wakefield, collimation, impedance, linear-collider | 2330 |
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Funding: US Department of Energy The current status of ILC and CLIC concepts require additional research on wakefield reduction in the collimator sections. New materials and new geometries have been considered recently*. Dielectric collimators for the CLIC Beam Delivery System have been discussed with a view to minimize the BDS collimation wakefields**. Dielectric collimator concepts for the linear collider are presented in this paper; cylindrical and planar collimators for the CLIC parameters have been considered, and simulations to minimize the beam impedance have been performed. The prototype collimator system is planned to be fabricated and experimentally tested at Facilities for Accelerator Science and Experimental Test Beams (FACET) at SLAC. *J.R.Lopez. ILC-CLIC Beam Dynamics Workshop. CERN, Geneva, 23-25 June, 2009. **R. Tomas. ILC-CLIC Beam Dynamics Workshop. CERN, Geneva, 23-25 June, 2009. |
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FROBN3 | Project X - New Multi Megawatt Proton Source at Fermilab | linac, proton, injection, cavity | 2566 |
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Fermilab plans to replace its present injection complex consisting of a pulsed linac and 15 Hz Booster with a new injection complex based on a superconducting CW linac. This new proton source should boost the power of the Main Injector to 2 MW and enable new experiments with a high power proton beam in the range of 1-3 GeV. The speaker will present recent developments from the Fermilab Project X R&D. | |||
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Slides FROBN3 [2.018 MB] | ||
FROCB1 | Understanding Nuclear Physics with Accelerators | hadron, electron, scattering, ion | 2592 |
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There is substantial international interest in construction of an Electron Ion Collider. Such a collider could explore physics ranging from discovery of a new state of matter in QCD to probing physics beyond the standard model. The speaker will review the physics goals for a proposed Electron Ion Collider, and review relevant performance of existing proposals for such a facility. | |||
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Slides FROCB1 [15.321 MB] | ||