Paper | Title | Other Keywords | Page |
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MOODN6 | Muon Collider Interaction Region and Machine-detector Interface Design | quadrupole, dipole, collider, background | 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] | ||
MOP007 | The Development Status of Compact Linear Accelerator in Korea | plasma, ECRIS, ECR, ion | 112 |
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Funding: This work was supported by KBSI D30300 to M.S Won The establishment of a compact linear accelerator is in progress by Korea Basic Science Institute. The main capability of this facility is the production of multiply ionized metal clusters and the generation of intense beams of highly charged ions for material, medical and nuclear physical research. To generate the intense beam of highly charged ions, we will develop an Electron Cyclotron Resonance Ion Source (ECRIS) using 28GHz microwaves. For this ECRIS, the designing of a superconducting magnet, microwave inlet, beam extraction, and plasma chamber were in progress. A superconducting magnet system have also being developed. In this presentation, I report the current status of our compact linear accelerator development and future plan. |
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MOP234 | Beam Position and Phase Monitors for the LANSCE Linac | linac, controls, monitoring, instrumentation | 548 |
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Funding: This work is supported by the US Department of Energy under contract DE-AC52-06NA25396 New beam-position and phase monitors are under development for the linac at the Los Alamos Neutron Science Center. Transducers have been designed and are being fabricated. We are considering many options for the electronic instrumentation to process the signals and provide position and phase data with the necessary precision and flexibility to serve the various required functions. We’ll present the requirements of the system and the various options under consideration for instrumentation along with the advantages and shortcomings of these options. |
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MOP256 | Upgrading the Data Acquisition and Control System of the LANSCE LINAC | controls, linac, EPICS, proton | 588 |
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Funding: This work has benefited from the use of the LANSCE at LANL. This facility is funded by the US DOE and operated by LANS for NSSA under Contract DE-AC52-06NA25396. Los Alamos National Laboratory LANL is in the process of upgrading the control system for the Los Alamos Neutron Science Center (LANSCE) linear accelerator. The 38 year-old data acquisition and control equipment is being replaced with COTS hardware. An overview of the current system requirements and how the National Instruments cRIO system meets these requirements will be given, as well as an update on the installation and operation of a prototype system in the LANSCE LINAC. LANL Release Number: LA-UR 10-06605 |
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MOP272 | Radiation Dose Level in the SSRF during Normal Operation | radiation, monitoring, storage-ring, injection | 615 |
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Shanghai Synchrotron Radiation Facility (SSRF) has been commissioned since December 2007, and has been formally operated since May 2009. In order to ensure the radiation safety for staff members and publics, the radiation levels of the workplace, the environment and the staff are monitored through a real-time network of gamma and neutron monitors as well as through TLD passive dosimeters. This paper reports the results of the radiation monitoring. From these results, we found that the annual dose equivalents were good to meet the management values of SSRF. | |||
MOP288 | Progress Report on Development of the RING Cavity for Laser-based Charge Stripping of Hydrogen Ions | laser, radiation, ion, recirculation | 657 |
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Charge stripping of hydrogen ions is the first stage of any high intensity proton accelerator. To achieve higher-charge proton sources, the stripping efficiency must be improved, especially in the context of the Spallation Neutron Source at Oak Ridge National Laboratory. A method based on laser-ion interaction has a great potential for increasing efficiency. The approach of this proposed project is to design a laser cavity based on the Recirculation Injection by Nonlinear Gating (RING) technique. This paper reports on the progress of the development of the RING cavity. | |||
TUP003 | Beam Stop of Spiral2 Facility: Activation and Residual Dose Rate Calculations | simulation, photon, factory, shielding | 811 |
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Funding: *SPIRAL 2 Preparatory Phase. European Strategy Forum on Research Infrastructures. Seventh Framework Programme Ref 212692 **The Spanish Ministery of Science and Innovation. Project ENE2009-07572 SPIRAL2 facility is expected to produce 5mA of deuterons at 40 MeV. A beam dump device (BD) has been designed to stop the beam. In this paper we assess the residual dose rates (RDR) in the BD room during beam-off phases. MCNPX was used to deal with deuterons transport and production and transport of secondary neutrons. Deuteron and neutron induced activation were computed using ACAB* and EAF2007. Decay gammas were transported using MCNPX to compute RDR. Dose rates at cooling times up to one year are presented, showing that it is mainly due to BD copper induced activation. The uncertainties in the results can be attributed to: i) the reliability of the d-Cu activation cross sections reactions, ii) the computational approach used to assess the neutron source. The troublesome radioisotopes from d-Cu and their formation reactions were identified. EAF2007 cross sections for these reactions were compared with the available experimental data. Regarding the computational approach to determine the neutron source from d-Cu interactions two options were used: i) built-in nuclear models of MCNPX, ii) TENDL** and MCUNED***. The available experimental data were used for benchmarking. * J. Sanz et al. ACAB. User’s manual NEA-1839 (2009) ** A.J. Koning et al. TENDL2008 http://www.talys.eu/tendl-2008/ *** P.Sauvan et al. Nucl. Instr.and Meth. A 614 (2010)3 323-330. |
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TUP004 | GEANT4 Modelling of Heat Deposition into the ISIS Muon Target | target, proton, ion, simulation | 814 |
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The energy deposition on the ISIS muon target and the temperature profiles are analysed in this paper. The thermal modelling is performed using the GEANT4 Monte Carlo code. Heat deposition patterns are also simulated for alternative target geometries. Energy deposition in the collimators is also discussed. | |||
TUP146 | Large Aperture Quadrupole Magnets for ISIS TS-1 and TS-2 | quadrupole, dipole, target, proton | 1103 |
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The ISIS pulsed neutron and muon source at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory has two target stations TS-1 and TS-2. Budker Institute of Nuclear Physics developed, produced and delivered seven type Q13 quadrupole magnets with an aperture diameter of 310 mm for TS-2 beam transfer line. Later an additional three quadrupoles with integrated dipole coils were developed and delivered to ISIS TS1. To improve the field quality across the full current range a special pole profile and end chamfer were designed using the MERMAID code. The magnetic field map was measured by a set of Hall probes. Moreover, BINP produced a rotating coil with radius 120 mm for field quality measurements. | |||
TUP179 | Energy Deposition within Superconducting Coils of a 4 MW Target Station | target, shielding, simulation, factory | 1166 |
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Funding: Work Supported by the United States Department of Energy, Contract No. DE-AC02-98CH10886. A study of energy deposition within superconducting coils of a 4 MW target station for a neutrino factory or muon collider is presented. Using the MARS code, we simulate the energy deposition within the environment surrounding the target. The radiation is produced by interactions of intense proton beams with a free liquid mercury jet. We study the influence of different shielding materials and shielding configurations on the energy deposition in the superconducting coils of the target/capture system. We also examine energy depositions for alternative configurations that allow more space for shielding, thus providing more protection for the superconducting coils. |
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TUP275 | SNS Linac Modulator Operational History and Performance | linac, high-voltage, klystron, monitoring | 1340 |
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Fourteen High Voltage Converter Modulators (HVCM) were initially installed at the Spallation Neutron Source Linear Accelerator (SNS Linac) at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory in 2005. A fifteenth HVCM was added in 2009. Each modulator provides a pulse of up to 140 kV at a maximum width of 1.35 msec. Peak power level is 11 MW with an 8% duty factor. The HVCM system must be available for neutron production (NP) 24/7 with the exception being two, 6-week maintenance periods per year. HVCM reliability is one of the most important factors to maximize Linac availability and achieve SNS performance goals. During the last few years several modifications have been implemented to improve the overall system reliability. This paper presents operational history of the HVCM systems and examines failure mode statistical data since the modulators began operating at 60 Hz. System enhancements and upgrades aimed at providing long term reliable operation with minimal down time are also discussed in the paper. | |||
WEODS2 | High-Power Targets: Experience and R&D for 2 MW | target, radiation, proton, simulation | 1496 |
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High-power particle production targets are crucial elements of future neutrino and other rare particle beams. Fermilab plans to produce a beam of neutrinos (LBNE) with a 2.3 MW proton beam (Project X). Any solid target is unlikely to survive for an extended period in such an environment - many materials would not survive a single beam pulse. We are using our experience with previous neutrino and antiproton production targets, along with a new series of R&D tests, to design a target that has adequate survivability for this beamline. The issues considered are thermal shock (stress waves), heat removal, radiation damage, radiation accelerated corrosion effects, physics/geometry optimization and residual radiation. | |||
WEP010 | Design of the Bilbao Accelerator Low Energy Extraction Lines | quadrupole, linac, dipole, DTL | 1519 |
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Funding: European Spallation Source - Bilbao The ESS-Bilbao linac will accelerate H+ and H− beams up to 50 MeV, which need to be transported to three laboratories, where different types of experiments will be conducted. This paper reports on the preliminary design of the transfer line, which is mainly performed based on beam dynamics simulations. |
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WEP224 | Operational Status and Life Extension Plans for the Los Alamos Neutron Science Center (LANSCE) | proton, linac, target, scattering | 1906 |
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Funding: Work supported by the U. S. Department of Energy, National Nuclear Security Administration, Contract No. DE-AC52-06NA25396 – Publication Release LA-UR- 10-06556 The Los Alamos Neutron Science Center (LANSCE) accelerator and beam delivery complex generates the proton beams that serve three neutron production sources, a proton radiography facility and a medical and research isotope production facility. The recent operating history of the facility, including both achievements and challenges, will be reviewed. Plans for performance improvement will be discussed, together with the underlying drivers for the ongoing LANSCE Linac Risk Mitigation project. The details of this latter project will be discussed. The status of accelerator-related plans for the MaRIE Project (Matter-Radiation Interactions in Extremes Experimental Project) will also be discussed. Taken together, the LANSCE Linac Risk Mitigation Project and the MaRIE initiative demonstrate a commitment to investment in the ongoing operation and improvement of the facility, and a resurgent interest in the spectrum of science accessible at LANSCE. These plans will assure continued facility operational and scientific vitality well beyond 2020. |
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WEP271 | Development of a Permanent-Magnet Microwave Ion Source for a Sealed-Tube Neutron Generator | ion, ion-source, plasma, ECR | 1984 |
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Funding: Supported by the U.S. Department of Energy under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231. A microwave ion source has been designed and constructed for use with a sealed-tube, high-yield neutron generator. When operated with a tritium-deuterium gas mixture the generator will be capable of producing 5 · 1011 n/s in non-proliferation applications. Microwave ion sources are well suited for such a device because they can produce high extracted beam currents with a high atomic fraction at low gas pressures of 0.2 − 0.3 Pa required for sealed tube operation. The magnetic field strength for achieving electron cyclotron resonance (ECR) condition, 87.5 mT at 2.45 GHz microwave frequency, was generated and shaped with permanent magnets surrounding the plasma chamber and a ferromagnetic plasma electrode. This approach resulted in a compact ion source that matches the neutron generator requirements. The needed proton-equivalent extracted beam current density of 40 mA/cm2 was obtained at moderate microwave power levels of ∼ 400W. Results on magnetic field design, pressure dependency and atomic fraction measured for different wall materials are presented. |
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THOAS3 | Status of the Oak Ridge Spallation Neutron Source (SNS) RF Systems | klystron, controls, linac, rfq | 2050 |
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The SNS has been delivering production neutrons for five years with first beam delivered to the neutron target at the end of April 2006. On September 18, 2009 SNS officially reached 1 megawatt of beam on target marking the achievement of a decades-old dream of providing a U.S. megawatt class pulsed spallation source. The SNS is now routinely delivering 1 megawatt of beam power to the neutron target at over 85 percent of the scheduled beam time. The present effort is aimed at increasing availability eventually to 95 percent and gradually increasing the intensity to the 1.4 megawatt design level. While the RF systems have performed well since initial installation some improvements have been implemented. This paper provides a review of the SNS RF Systems, an overview of the performance of the various components and a detailed review of RF related issues addressed over the past several years. | |||
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Slides THOAS3 [2.759 MB] | ||
THOCN4 | High-Power Options for LANSCE | DTL, linac, proton, klystron | 2107 |
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Funding: This work is supported by the U. S. Department of Energy Contract DE-AC52-06NA25396. The LANSCE linear accelerator at Los Alamos National Laboratory has a long history of successful beam operations at 800 kW. We have recently studied options for restoration of high-power operations including schemes for increasing the performance to multi-MW levels. In this paper we will discuss the results of this study including the present limitations of the existing accelerating structures at LANSCE, and the high-voltage and RF systems that drive them. Several plausible options will be discussed and a preferred option will be presented that will enable the first in a new generation of scientific facilities for the materials community. The emphasis of this new facility is "Matter-Radiation Interactions in Extremes" (MaRIE) which will be used to discover and design the advanced materials needed to meet 21st century national security and energy security challenges. |
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Slides THOCN4 [2.903 MB] | ||
THP009 | Collimator Design of 15 MeV Linear Accelerator Based Thermal Neutron Source for Radiography | target, electron, simulation, linac | 2154 |
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Neutron Radiography is a powerful non-destructive testing technique used for the analysis of objects which are widely used in security, medical, nuclear and industrial applications. Optimization of the thermal neutron radiography facility has been carried out using 15 MeV LINAC based neutron source. In this case, a neutron collimator has been designed along with g-n target, moderator, reflector and shielding. The g-n target has been optimized based on their photonuclear threshold. The moderating properties have been studied for few light elements to optimize best suitable moderator for radiography system. The major part of the design was to optimize the collimator for neutron beam which decides quality of the image given. To get best values of collimator parameters such as collimation ratio, gamma content, neuron flux, cadmium ratio, beam uniformity, etc. a FLUKA simulation was carried out. The collimator has been optimized with cadmium lining square cone to capture the scattered thermal neutrons and the collimation ratio to L/D=18. The neutron flux of the optimized facility obtained at the object plane is 1.0·10+5 n/(cm2-sec1) and neutron to gamma ratio is 1.0·10+5 n/(cm2-mR1). | |||
THP029 | Temperature and Optimize Design of Beam Window in the Accelerator | proton, target, vacuum, radiation | 2175 |
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Careful evaluation of the heat-transfer and corresponding problems is important in the beam window in the design and operation of Accelerator Driven sub-critical System (ADS). Using the Monte-Carlo code Fluka, we studied the energy deposition of the beam window in high power proton accelerator. The temperature distribution of the beam window is calculated in presence of the coolant. The process of computation for various materials will be introduced, and an optimized design scheme is given. The results suggest that some measures could be used to reduce the damage to the beam window, such as dividing current into branch currents, expanding the bunch or using beryllium as the material of the beam window, et al. | |||
THP030 | GEANT4 Studies of the Thorium Fuel Cycle | proton, simulation, target, scattering | 2178 |
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Thorium “fuel” has been proposed as an alternative to uranium fuel in nuclear reactors. New GEANT4 developments allow the Monte Carlo code to be used for the first time in order to simulate the time evolution of the concentration of isotopes present in the Thorium fuel cycle. A full study is performed in order to optimise the production of Uranium-233 starting with "pure" Thorium fuels, leading to levels of Uranium-233 which ensure the operation of the nuclear reactor in a regime close to criticality. | |||
THP034 | Accelerators for Subcritical Molten Salt Reactors | target, linac, proton, SRF | 2181 |
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Funding: Supported in part by Accelerator Technologies Inc. Accelerator parameters for subcritical reactors that have been considered in recent studies * are based on using solid nuclear fuel much like that used in all operating critical reactors as well as the thorium-burning accelerator-driven energy amplifier ** proposed by Rubbia et al. An attractive alternative reactor design that used molten salts was experimentally studied at ORNL in the 1960s, where a critical molten salt reactor was successfully operated using enriched U235 or U233 tetrafluoride fuels ***. These experiments give confidence that an accelerator-driven subcritical molten salt reactor will work as well or better than conventional reactors, having better efficiency due to their higher operating temperature and having the inherent safety of subcritical operation. Moreover, the requirements to drive a molten salt reactor are considerably relaxed compared to a solid fuel reactor, especially regarding accelerator reliability and spallation neutron targetry, to the point that the required technology exists today. * http://www.er.doe.gov/hep/files/pdfs/ADSWhitePaperFinal.pdf ** http://wikipedia.org/wiki/Energy_amplifier *** Paul N. Haubenreich and J. R. Engel, Nuc. Apps & Tech, 8, Feb. 1970 |
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THP037 | Design of an e-γ Converter for a 10 MeV Electron Beam | target, electron, photon, linac | 2184 |
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In the last years, the INFN-Gruppo Collegato di Messina has designed and setup an x-ray source based on the 5 MeV electron linac hosted at the Dipartimento di Fisica - Università di Messina. In the meanwhile, and in the framework of an European funding, the group has setup the Centro Ricerche at Villafranca Tirrena (Messina, Italy) which holds a 10 MeV electron linac and which is, at the moment, mainly devoted to industrial Radiation Processing applications. Nevertheless, to the aim to provide also x-ray beams, an e-g converter has been designed by means of the MCNP4C2 simulation code and optimized for a 10 MeV electron beam. A wide investigation has been performed to choose material and thickness for the e-g converter in order to provide the highest x-ray yield. Then, angular distribution and energy spectrum have been simulated to characterize the produced bremsstrahlung beam. Also the target activation has been investigated. Finally, thermal analysis has been performed using a finite element model code, Deform 2D, to choose the definitive mechanical settings of the e-g converter. | |||
THP048 | Radiation and Thermal Analysis of Production Solenoid for Mu2e Experimental Setup | solenoid, target, proton, radiation | 2208 |
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The Muon-to-Electron (Mu2e) experiment at Fermilab, will seek the evidence of direct muon to electron conversion that cannot be explained by the Standard Model. An 8 GeV 25 kW proton beam will be directed onto a gold target inside a large-bore superconducting Production Solenoid (PS) with the peak field on the axis of ~5T. The negative muons resulting from the pion decay will be captured in the PS aperture and directed by an S-shaped Transport Solenoid towards the stopping target inside the Detector Solenoid. In order for the superconducting magnets to operate reliably and with a sufficient safety margin, the peak neutron flux entering the coils must be reduced by 3 orders of magnitude that is achieved by means of a sophisticated absorber placed in the magnet aperture. The proposed absorber, consisting of W and Cu parts, is optimized for the performance and cost. Results of MARS15 of energy deposition and radiation analysis are reported. The results of the PS magnet thermal analysis, coordinated with the coil cooling scheme, are reported as well for the selected absorber design. | |||
THP053 | The New Approximation of Dose Attenuation Curve in Concrete | shielding, ion, heavy-ion, target | 2217 |
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The analytical approach in shielding calculations is simple and fast method for quick estimations. But it provides less accuracy than Monte-Carlo one. Often the exponential attenuation of dose in shielding is considered. But also it is necessary to take into account the dose increase in the first layers of shielding due to initial accumulation of neutrons. The new approximation of dose attenuation curve in concrete is offered for quick analytical estimations of shielding of hadron accelerators. It allows to make fast estimation of shielding thickness enough correctly. | |||
THP087 | G4Beamline and MARS Comparison for Muon Collider Backgrounds | collider, background, electron, simulation | 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 | collider, background, shielding, electron | 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, electron, background, collider | 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. | |||
FROAN1 | The European Spallation Source | linac, target, proton, cryomodule | 2549 |
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The European Spallation Source (ESS) is a 5 MW, 2.5 GeV long pulse proton linac, to be built and commissioned in Lund, Sweden. The Accelerator Design Update (ADU) project phase is under way, to be completed at the end of 2012 by the delivery of a Technical Design Report. Improvements to the 2003 ESS design will be summarised, and the latest design activities will be presented. | |||
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Slides FROAN1 [1.650 MB] | ||
FROCB2 | Science with Light and Neutron Sources | scattering, synchrotron, electron, photon | 2596 |
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In recent years there has been great progress in the development of accelerator-based light and neutron sources. The speaker will give an overview of the exciting new opportunities provided by the enhanced source capabilities available at present and future facilities.
Speaker Sunhil Sinha, a professor in the Physics Department of the University of California at San Diego |
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Slides FROCB2 [26.588 MB] | ||