Paper |
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MOOCB01 |
Beam-induced Quench Tests of LHC Magnets |
52 |
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- M. Sapinski, B. Auchmann, T. Bär, W. Bartmann, M. Bednarek, S. Bozyigit, C. Bracco, R. Bruce, F. Cerutti, V. Chetvertkova, K. Dahlerup-Petersen, B. Dehning, E. Effinger, J. Emery, A. Guerrero, E.B. Holzer, W. Höfle, A. Lechner, A. Priebe, S. Redaelli, B. Salvachua, R. Schmidt, N.V. Shetty, A.P. Siemko, E. Skordis, M. Solfaroli Camillocci, J. Steckert, J.A. Uythoven, D. Valuch, A.P. Verweij, J. Wenninger, D. Wollmann, M. Zerlauth, E.N. del Busto
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
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At the end of the LHC Run1 a 48-hour quench-test campaign took place to investigate the quench levels of superconducting magnets for loss durations from nanoseconds to tens of seconds. The longitudinal losses produced extended from one meter to hundreds of meters and the number of lost protons varied from 108 to 1013. The results of these and other, previously conducted quench experiments, allow the quench levels of several types of LHC magnets under various loss conditions to be assessed. The quench levels are expected to limit LHC performance in the case of steady-state losses in the interaction regions and also in the case of fast losses initiated by dust particles all around the ring. It is therefore required to accurately adjust beam loss abort thresholds in order to maximize the operation time. A detailed discussion of these quench test results and a proposal for additional tests after the LHC restart is presented.
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Slides MOOCB01 [2.737 MB]
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※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2014-MOOCB01
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MOPRO020 |
FLUKA Simulation of Particle Fluences to ALICE due to LHC Injection Kicker Failures |
109 |
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- N.V. Shetty, C. Bracco, A. Di Mauro, A. Lechner, E. Leogrande, J.A. Uythoven
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
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The counter-rotating beams of the LHC are injected in insertion regions which also accommodate the ALICE and LHCb experiments. An assembly of beam absorbers ensures the protection of machine elements in case of injection kicker failures, which can affect either the injected or the stored beam. In the first years of LHC operation, secondary particle showers due to beam impact on the injection beam stopper caused damage to the MOS injectors of the ALICE silicon drift detector as well as high-voltage trips in other ALICE subdetectors. In this study, we present FLUKA simulations of particle fluences to the ALICE cavern for injection failures encountered during operation. Two different cases are reported, one where the miskicked beam is fully intercepted and one where the beam grazes the beam stopper.
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※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2014-MOPRO020
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MOPRO039 |
Integrated Simulation Tools for Collimation Cleaning in HL-LHC |
160 |
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- R. Bruce, C. Bracco, F. Cerutti, A. Ferrari, A. Lechner, A. Marsili, A. Mereghetti, D. Mirarchi, P.G. Ortega, D. Pastor Sinuela, S. Redaelli, A. Rossi, B. Salvachua, V. Vlachoudis
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
- R. Appleby, J. Molson, M. Serluca
UMAN, Manchester, United Kingdom
- R.W. Aßmann
DESY, Hamburg, Germany
- R.J. Barlow, H. Rafique, A.M. Toader
University of Huddersfield, Huddersfield, United Kingdom
- S.M. Gibson, L.J. Nevay
Royal Holloway, University of London, Surrey, United Kingdom
- L. Lari
IFIC, Valencia, Spain
- C. Tambasco
University of Rome La Sapienza, Rome, Italy
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The Large Hadron Collider is designed to accommodate an unprecedented stored beam energy of 362~MJ in the nominal configuration and about the double in the high-luminosity upgrade HL-LHC that is presently under study. This requires an efficient collimation system to protect the superconducting magnets from quenches. During the design, it is therefore very important to accurately predict the expected beam loss distributions and cleaning efficiency. For this purpose, there are several ongoing efforts in improving the existing simulation tools or developing new ones. This paper gives a brief overview and status of the different available codes.
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※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2014-MOPRO039
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MOPRI005 |
The AWAKE Experimental Facility at CERN |
582 |
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- E. Gschwendtner, T. Bohl, C. Bracco, A.C. Butterworth, S. Cipiccia, S. Döbert, V. Fedosseev, E. Feldbaumer, C. Heßler, W. Höfle, M. Martyanov, M. Meddahi, J.A. Osborne, A. Pardons, A.V. Petrenko, H. Vincke
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
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AWAKE, an Advanced Wakefield Experiment is launched at CERN to verify the proton driven plasma wakefield acceleration concept. Proton bunches at 400 GeV/c will be extracted from the CERN SPS and sent along a 750m long proton line to the plasma cell, a Rubidium vapour source, where the proton beam drives wakefields reaching accelerating gradients at the order of gigavolt per meter. A high power laser pulse will co-propagate within the proton bunch creating the plasma by ionizing the (initially) neutral gas. An electron beam will be injected into the plasma cell to probe the accelerating wakefield. The AWAKE experiment will be installed in the CNGS facility. First proton beam to the plasma cell is expected by end 2016. The design of the experimental area and the integration of the new beam-lines as well as the experimental equipment will be shown. The needed modifications of the infrastructure in the facility will be presented.
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※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2014-MOPRI005
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MOPRI096 |
The New Transfer Line Collimation System for the LHC High Luminosity Era |
839 |
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- V. Kain, C. Bracco, B. Goddard, F.L. Maciariello, M. Meddahi, A. Mereghetti, G.E. Steele, F.M. Velotti
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
- E. Gianfelice-Wendt
Fermilab, Batavia, Illinois, USA
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A set of passive absorbers is located at the end of each of the 3 km long injection lines to protect the LHC in case of failures during the extraction process from the LHC’s last pre-injector or the beam transfer itself. In case of an erroneous extraction, the absorbers have to attenuate the beam to a safe level and be robust enough themselves to survive the impact. These requirements are difficult to fulfil with the very bright and intense beams produced by the LHC injectors for the high luminosity era. This paper revisits the requirements for the SPS-to-LHC transfer line collimation system and the adapted strategy to fulfill these for the LHC high luminosity operation. A possible solution for the new transfer line collimation system is presented.
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※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2014-MOPRI096
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MOPRI097 |
Feasibility Studies for the Extraction of both LHC Beams from CERN SPS using a Common Kicker |
842 |
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- F.M. Velotti, W. Bartmann, C. Bracco, E. Carlier, K. Cornelis, B. Goddard, V. Kain, M. Meddahi
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
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The CERN Super Proton Synchrotron has to fulfil the demanding intensity specifications for the High Luminosity LHC (HL-LHC) era, with a doubling of the presently achieved operational beam intensity. One of the main problems to be addressed is given by impedance-driven beam instabilities. About 40 % of the total measured SPS impedance is due to the kickers, of which the extraction kickers in two of the SPS straight sections are the largest systems. A potential upgrade is explored which would strongly reduce the number of extraction kickers required in the SPS, by performing non-local extraction. In this scenario LHC Beam 1 would be kicked by the extraction kicker in SPS Long Straight Section 4 (LSS4), normally only used for Beam 2, to be extracted in LSS6. The concept and the expected performance of such a scheme are presented along with detailed simulation results.
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DOI • |
reference for this paper
※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2014-MOPRI097
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MOPRI098 |
Design Studies of the Upgraded Collimation System in the SPS-to-LHC Transfer Lines |
845 |
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- A. Mereghetti, C. Bracco, F. Cerutti, B. Goddard, J. Hrivnak, V. Kain, F.L. Maciariello, M. Meddahi, G.E. Steele
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
- R. Appleby
UMAN, Manchester, United Kingdom
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In the framework of the LHC Injectors Upgrade (LIU) Project, the collimators in the SPS-to-LHC transfer lines are presently under re-design, in order to cope with the unprecedented beam intensities and emittances required by the High Luminosity LHC (HL-LHC). Factors ruling the design phase are the robustness of the jaws on one side and, on the other side, the proton absorption and the emittance blow-up, essential for an effective protection of the equipment in the LHC injection regions and the LHC machine. In view of the new design, based on the one of the currently installed TCDI collimators and past investigations, the FLUKA Monte Carlo code is used to address these two factors. The present studies are intended to give essential feedback to the identification of viable solutions.
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※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2014-MOPRI098
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MOPRI099 |
Feasibility Studies for 100 GeV Beam Transfer Lines for a CERN Neutrino Facility |
849 |
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- M. Kowalska, W. Bartmann, C. Bracco, B. Goddard, M. Nessi, R. Steerenberg, F.M. Velotti
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
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For a potential future CERN neutrino facility it is considered to extract a 100 GeV proton beam from the second long straight section in the SPS into the existing TT20 transfer line leading to the North Area. Two transfer line design options were developed simultaneously: early-branching from TT20 using existing, recuperated ‘experimental area’ DC dipoles and alternatively late-branching close to the target area, which requires superconducting magnets. This paper describes the feasibility of the two concepts in addition to the detailed study of the early-branching option. Optics and line geometry optimization are discussed and orbit correction is presented.
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※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2014-MOPRI099
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MOPRI100 |
Investigations of SPS Orbit Drifts |
852 |
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- L.N. Drøsdal, C. Bracco, K. Cornelis, B. Goddard, V. Kain, M. Meddahi, J. Wenninger
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
- E. Gianfelice-Wendt
Fermilab, Batavia, Illinois, USA
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The LHC is filled from the last pre-injector, the Super Proton Synchrotron (SPS), via two 3 km long transfer lines, TI 2 and TI 8. Over the LHC injection processes, a drift of the beam trajectories has been observed in TI 2 and TI 8, requiring regular correction of the trajectories, in order to ensure clean injection into the LHC. Investigations of the trajectory variations in the transfer lines showed that the main source of short term trajectory drifts are current variations of the SPS extraction septa (MSE). The stability of the power converters has been improved, but the variations are still present and further improvements are being investigated. The stability over a longer period of time cannot be explained by this source alone. The analysis of trajectory variations shows that there are also slow variations in the SPS closed orbit at extraction. A set of SPS orbit measurements has been saved and analysed. These observations will be used together with simulations and observed field errors to locate the second source of variations.
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※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2014-MOPRI100
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TUOBA02 |
Design Study of an ERL Test Facility at CERN |
921 |
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- E. Jensen, C. Bracco, O.S. Brüning, R. Calaga, N. Catalán Lasheras, B. Goddard, R. Torres-Sanchez, A. Valloni
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
- M. Klein
The University of Liverpool, Liverpool, United Kingdom
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The modern concept of an Energy Recovery Linac allows providing large electron currents at large beam energy with low power consumption. This concept is used in FEL’s, electron-ion colliders and electron coolers. CERN has started a Design Study of an ERL Test Facility with the purpose of 1) studying the ERL principle, its specific beam dynamics and operational issues, as relevant for LHeC, 2) providing a test bed for superconducting cavity modules, cryogenics and integration, 3) studying beam induced quenches in superconducting magnets and protection methods, 4) providing test beams for detector R&D and other applications. It will be complementary to existing or planned facilities and is fostering international collaboration. The operating frequency of 802 MHz was chosen for performance and for optimum synergy with SPS and LHC; the design of the cryomodule has started. The ERL Test Facility can be constructed in stages from initially 150 MeV to ultimately 1 GeV in 3 passes, with beam currents of up to 80 mA. Parameters to serve the above-mentioned purposes are well defined and possible lattice designs have well advanced.
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Slides TUOBA02 [14.419 MB]
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※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2014-TUOBA02
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TUPME077 |
The Challenge of Interfacing the Primary Beam Lines for the AWAKE Project at CERN |
1534 |
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- C. Bracco, B. Goddard, E. Gschwendtner, M. Meddahi, A.V. Petrenko
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
- P. Muggli
MPI, Muenchen, Germany
- F.M. Velotti
EPFL, Lausanne, Switzerland
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The Proton Driven Plasma Wakefield Acceleration Experiment (AWAKE) at CERN foresees the simultaneous operation of a proton, a laser and an electron beam. The first stage of the experiment will consist in proving the self-modulation, in the plasma, of a long proton bunch into micro-bunches. The success of this experiment requires an almost perfect concentricity of the proton and laser beams, over the full length of the plasma cell. The complexity of integrating the laser into the proton beam line and fulfilling the strict requirements in terms of pointing precision of the proton beam at the plasma cell are described. The second stage of the experiment foresees also the injection of electron bunches to probe the accelerating wakefields driven by the proton beam. Studies were performed to evaluate the possibility of injecting the electron beam parallel and with an offset to the proton beam axis. This option would imply that protons and electrons will have to share the last few meters of a common beam line. Issues and possible solutions for this case are presented.
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※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2014-TUPME077
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TUPME078 |
Electron Injection Studies for the AWAKE Experiment at CERN |
1537 |
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- A.V. Petrenko, C. Bracco, E. Gschwendtner
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
- K.V. Lotov
NSU, Novosibirsk, Russia
- K.V. Lotov
BINP SB RAS, Novosibirsk, Russia
- P. Muggli
MPI, Muenchen, Germany
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The AWAKE experiment recently approved at CERN will use the self-modulation instability (SMI) of long (12 cm), relativistic (400 GeV/c) proton bunches in dense plasmas to drive wakefields with accelerating gradients at the GV/m level. These accelerating gradients will be probed by externally injected electrons. In order to preserve the plasma uniformity required for the SMI the first experiments will use on-axis injection of a low energy 10-20 MeV electron beam collinearly with the proton beam. In this article we describe the physics of electron injection into the proton driven SMI wakefields. Requirements on the injected electron beam are determined and the final accelerated beam parameters are obtained via numerical simulations.
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※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2014-TUPME078
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WEPRI092 |
Test and Simulation Results for Quenches Induced by Fast Losses on a LHC Quadrupole |
2706 |
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- C. Bracco, B. Auchmann, W. Bartmann, M. Bednarek, A. Lechner, M. Sapinski, R. Schmidt, N.V. Shetty, M. Solfaroli Camillocci, A.P. Verweij
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
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A test program for beam induced quenches was started in the LHC in 2011 in order to reduce as much as possible BLM-triggered beam dumps, without jeopardizing the safety of the superconducting magnets. A first measurement was performed to assess the quench level of a quadrupole located in the LHC injection region in case of fast (ns) losses. It consisted in dumping single bunches onto an injection protection collimator located right upstream of the quadrupole, varying the bunch intensity up to 3·1010 protons and ramping the quadrupole current up to 2200 A. No quench was recorded at that time. The test was repeated in 2013 with increased bunch intensity (6·1010 protons); a quench occurred when powering the magnet at 2500 A. The comparison between measurements during beam induced and quench heaters induced quenches is shown. Results of FLUKA simulations on energy deposition, calculations on quench behaviour using QP3 and the respective estimates of quench levels are also presented.
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※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2014-WEPRI092
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THPME069 |
Performance Studies of the SPS Beam Dump System for HL-LHC Beams |
3394 |
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- F.M. Velotti, O. Aberle, C. Bracco, E. Carlier, F. Cerutti, K. Cornelis, L. Ducimetière, B. Goddard, V. Kain, R. Losito, C. Maglioni, M. Meddahi, F. Pasdeloup, V. Senaj, G.E. Steele
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland
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The Super Proton Synchrotron (SPS) beam dump system is a concern for the planned High Luminosity LHC (HL-LHC) operation. The system has initially been designed for very different beam parameters compared to those which will reign after the completion of the LHC injectors upgrade, when the SPS will have to operate with unprecedented beam brightness. This paper describes the relevant operational and failure modes of the dump system together with the expected beam loading levels. Tracking studies are presented, considering both normal operation and failure scenarios, with particular attention on the location and level of proton losses. First FLUKA investigations and thermo-mechanical analysis of the high-energy absorber block are described
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※ https://doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2014-THPME069
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