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WE1GRC05 | Crystal Collimation Studies at the Tevatron (T-980) | 1836 |
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Funding: Work supported by Fermi Research Alliance, LLC, under contract No. DE-AC02-07CH11359 with the U.S. Department of Energy. Bent-crystal channeling is a technique with a potential to increase the beam-halo collimation efficiency at high-energy colliders. First measurements at the Tevatron in 2005 have shown that using a 5-mm silicon crystal to deflect the proton beam halo onto a secondary collimator improves the system performance by reducing the machine impedance, beam losses in the collider detectors and irradiation of the superconducting magnets, all in agreement with simulations. Recent results, obtained with substantially improved goniometer and enhanced beam diagnostics, are reported showing channeling collimation of the ~1-TeV circulating proton beam halo at the Tevatron collider. Comprehensive results of computer modeling are presented which allow further developments of the T-980 experiment towards a robust system compatible with requirements to high-efficient collimation at the Tevatron and LHC hadron colliders. |
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TH5PFP007 | Diffusion in Tevatron Using Flying Wire | 3199 |
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Understanding beam loss in an accelerator is crucial to accelerator design and operation. Losses contribute to a shorter lifetime of a circulating beam, higher radiation doses to accelerator components, and backgrounds in experiments which use the beam. One source of beam loss is diffusion caused by effects such as beam scattering with residual gas in vacuum chamber, noise in the radio frequency acceleration system and power supplies, and beam-beam collisions. We measure the diffusion rate in the Fermilab Tevatron using the flying wire beam profile monitor. We have developed a new technique for interpreting the flying wire data. Using this technique, we measure the proton horizontal diffusion rate for ten stores in the Tevatron during colliding beam operation. |