Paper | Title | Page |
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WE6PFP015 | Luminosity Optimization and Calibration in the LHC | 2513 |
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We discuss luminosity monitoring, optimization and absolute calibration in the LHC. Interaction rates will be continuously monitored both by detectors on the machine side as well as by the four large LHC experiments. Horizontal and vertical separation scans will be used to optimize luminosity and to measure the beam sizes in the interaction region. An application software has been developed for this purpose. We describe the procedures which have been prepared and discuss expected systematic effects which may limit the accuracy of the measurement. |
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WE6PFP016 | Study of High Beta Optics Solution for TOTEM | 2516 |
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The TOTEM experiment requires special high beta optics solutions. We report on studies of optics for an intermediate beta* = 90 m, as well as a solutions for a very high beta* of 1540 m, which respect all known constraints. These optics are rather different from the normal physics optics and will require global tune changes or adjustments. |
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WE6PFP018 | Optimization of the LHC Separation Bumps Including Beam-Beam Effects | 2522 |
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The LHC beams will cross each other and experience perturbations as a result of the beam-beam effect at the interaction points, which can result in emittance growth and halo creation. The beam-beam force is approximately linear for small offsets and highly non-linear for larger offsets with peaks in growth close to 0.3 and 1.5 σ separation. We present a study of the process of going into collisions in the LHC and use simulations to investigate on possible emittance blow-up. We analyze how the crossing scheme can be optimized to minimize the collapsing time of the separation bumps for given hardware constraints. |
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WE6PFP036 | Tracking and Tolerances Study for the ATLAS High-Beta Optics | 2573 |
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For luminosity and total cross section measurement, the standard LHC physics optics has been modified for the ATLAS experiment in the so-called high beta optics with a beta star of 2600m. The high beta optics takes into account the whole LHC ring. Protons are, then, tracked from the Interaction Point to the detectors. Tolerances on the beta star are given and the effect of misalignment errors is checked. We show the final High beta optics used and the impact of the misalignment effect on the measurement. |
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WE6PFP085 | Halo and Tail Simulations with Application to the CLIC Drive Beam | 2700 |
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We report about generic halo and tail simulations and estimates. Previous studies were mainly focused on very high energies as relevant for the beam delivery systems of linear colliders. We have now studied, applied and extended these simulations to lower energies as relevant for the CLIC drive beam. |
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TH5PFP011 | Simulation of Beam-Gas Scattering in the LHC | 3208 |
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We report on background studies for the LHC with detailed simulations. The simulations now include generation of beam-gas scattering in combination with multiturn tracking of protons. Low beta optics and available aperture files for this configuration have been used to generate loss maps according to the pressure distribution in the LHC. |
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FR1PBC05 | The Large Hadron-Electron Collider (LHeC) at the LHC | 4233 |
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Sub-atomic physics at the energy frontier probes the structure of the fundamental quanta of the Universe. The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN opens for the first time the “terascale” (TeV energy scale) to experimental scrutiny, exposing the physics of the Universe at the sub-attometric (~10-19 m, 10-10 as) scale. The LHC will also take the science of nuclear matter to hitherto unparalleled energy densities (low-x physics). The hadron beams, protons or ions, in the LHC underpin this horizon, and also offer new experimental possibilities at this energy scale. A Large Hadron electron Collider, LHeC, in which an electron (positron) beam of energy (70 to 140 GeV) is in collision with one of the LHC hadron beams, makes possible terascale lepton-hadron physics. The LHeC is presently being evaluated in the form of two options, “ring-ring” and “linac-ring”, either of which operate simultaneously with pp or ion-ion collisions in other LHC interaction regions. Each option takes advantage of recent advances in radio-frequency, in linear acceleration, and in other associated technologies, to achieve ep luminosity as large as 1033 cm-2s-1. |
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FR5RFP047 | Analysis of the Transverse SPS Beam Coupling Impedance with Short and Long Bunches | 4640 |
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The upgrade of the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC) would require a four- to fivefold increase of the single bunch intensity presently obtained in the Super Proton Synchrotron (SPS). Operating at such high single bunch intensities requires a detailed knowledge of the sources of SPS beam coupling impedance, so that longitudinal and transverse impedance reduction campaigns can be planned and performed effectively if needed. In this paper, the transverse impedance of the SPS is studied by injecting a single long bunch into the SPS, and observing its decay without RF. This particular setup enhances the resolution of the frequency analysis of the longitudinal and transverse bunch signals acquired with strip line couplers connected to a fast data acquisition. It also gives access to the frequency content of the transverse impedance. Results from measurements with short and long bunches in the SPS performed in 2008 are compared with simulations and theoretical predictions. |