Paper | Title | Page |
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MOYBA01 | Present Status of the ILC Project and Developments | 16 |
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Funding: FNAL is operated by Fermi Research Alliance, LLC under Contract No. DE-AC02-07CH11359 with the United States Department of Energy. The Technical Design of the ILC Project will be finished in late 2012. The Technical Design Report will include a description of the updated design, with a cost estimate and a project plan, and the results of R & D done in support of the ILC. Results from directed ILC R & D are used to reduce the cost and risk associated with the ILC design. We present a summary of key challenges and show how the global R & D effort has addressed them. The most important activity has been in pursuit of very high gradient superconducting RF linac technology. There has been excellent progress toward the goal of practical industrial production of niobium sheet-metal cavities with gradient performance in excess of 35 MV/m. In addition, three purpose-built beam test facilities have been constructed and used to study and demonstrate high current linac performance, electron-cloud beam dynamics and precision beam control. The report also includes a summary of component design studies and conventional facilities cost optimization design studies. |
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Slides MOYBA01 [9.755 MB] | |
MOODA02 | S1-Global Module Tests at STF/KEK | 38 |
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S1-Global collaborative effort of INFN, DESY, FNAL, SLAC and KEK, recently successfully finished at KEK as a part of ILC GDE, is an important milestone for the ILC. International collaboration of three regions, Asia, North America and Europe, proved to be efficient on the construction and cold tests of the accelerating module consisting of 8 SRF cavities; 2 from FNAL, 2 from DESY and 4 from KEK. Three different cavity tuning systems were tested together with two types of high power couplers. The module was cooled down three times which enabled extensive high power tests with cavities, performance limits investigation, Lorentz force detuning tests, simultaneous multiple cavities operation and other activities such as an operation test of distributed RF scheme with low level RF feedback. The results of this S1-Global module test are presented and discussed. | ||
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Slides MOODA02 [2.982 MB] | |
TUPC004 | The Luminosity for the ILC Travelling Focus Regime with Offsets and Angle Scans* | 991 |
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One of the crucial challenges of a future linear collider is to provide high luminosity. In the current ILC design a luminosity of 2x1034 is foreseen. In order to enhance the luminosity, use of the “travelling focus” scheme is under discussion. Within this regime the hourglass effect at the interaction point can be effectively overcome by judiciously arranging for the head and tail of the bunches to be focused at a proportionally displaced longitudinal position. The effect is further enhanced by the strong beam-beam interaction which continuously focuses the bunches during collision. In principle travelling focus could provide an additional 30% luminosity. Nevertheless the regime is highly sensitive to beam-beam transverse and angular offsets at the collision point. The study of the luminosity stability for various ILC parameters using traveling focus will be presented. | ||
TUPS055 | Organizing the ILC Technical Design Documentation | 1656 |
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The Global Design Effort (GDE) for the International Linear Collider (ILC) is currently preparing the Technical Design Report (TDR), which will be released at the end of 2012 and will serve as the basis for a decision process. The TDR will be written based on the Technical Design Documentation (TDD), which captures the entire design efforts, results and rationale, including e. g. parameter lists, specifications, CAD models and drawings, cost estimation, simulations and calculations, and summary reports. Formal review meetings help making the documentation complete, correct and consistent. The TDD is stored in an Engineering Data Management System (EDMS), which ensures that it remains accessible beyond the GDE in an organized way and at a well-defined location. The EDMS provides traceability (e. g. from design decisions to corresponding cost estimates), version management and change control. The poster presents the process and tools that were established for the organization of the TDD and provides an overview of the emerging documentation. | ||
WEPO035 | Thermal Performance of the S1-Global Cryomodule for ILC | 2472 |
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The S1-Global program is the international research collaboration among INFN, FNAL, DESY, SLAC and KEK as one of the GDE R&D for construction of ILC. The S1-Global cryomodule consists of two half-size cryomodules of 6 meter. One was designed by IFNF, and it contained two FNAL cavities and two DESY cavities. The associated components, like input couplers and RF cables, were same as the TTF-III cryomodule. The other was designed by KEK, and the thermal design was based on the TTF-III cryomodule. This cryomodule contains four KEK cavities with the associated components which were designed by KEK. For characterizing the thermal performances of two cryomodules, the static heat load and the temperature profiles of the cold components were measured. The temperature profiles of the components were compared between two cryomodules and the static heat load was evaluated with the design values of the cryomodules. The dynamic losses of the DESY, FNAL and two KEK cavities at their maximum operative gradients were measured and, with the measured losses, Q values were calculated. In this paper, we will make the summary of the thermal measurements of the S1-Global cryomodule. | ||