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Zisman, M.S.

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MO6PFP070 Progress on the Fabrication and Testing of the MICE Spectrometer Solenoids 292
 
  • S.P. Virostek, M.A. Green, D. Li, M.S. Zisman
    LBNL, Berkeley, California
 
 

Funding: This work is supported by the Office of Science, United States Department of Energy under DOE contract DE-AC02-05CH11231.


The Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment (MICE) is an international collaboration that will demonstrate ionization cooling in a section of a realistic cooling channel using a muon beam at Rutherford Appleton Laboratory (RAL) in the UK. At each end of the cooling channel a spectrometer solenoid magnet consisting of five superconducting coils will provide a 4 tesla uniform field region. The scintillating fiber tracker within the magnet bore tubes will measure the emittance of the muon beam as it enters and exits the cooling channel. The 400 mm diameter warm bore, 3 meter long magnets incorporate a cold mass consisting of two coil sections wound on a single aluminum mandrel: a three-coil spectrometer magnet and a two-coil section that matches the solenoid uniform field into the MICE cooling channel. The fabrication of the spectrometer solenoids has been completed, and preliminary testing and field mapping of the magnets is nearly complete. The key design features of the spectrometer solenoid magnets are presented along with a summary of the progress on the testing and magnetic measurements.

 
MO6PFP069 Progress on the MuCOOL and MICE Coupling Coils 289
 
  • M.A. Green, D. Li, S.P. Virostek, M.S. Zisman
    LBNL, Berkeley, California
  • A.B. Chen, X.L. Guo, X.K. Liu, H. Pan, L. Wang, H. Wu, F.Y. Xu, S.X. Zheng
    ICST, Harbin
  • D.J. Summers
    UMiss, University, Mississippi
 
 

Funding: This work is supported by funds under the “985-2” plan of HIT. This work is also supported by the Office of Science, US-DOE under DOE contract DE-AC02-05CH11231 and by NSF through NSF-MRI-0722656.


The superconducting coupling solenoid for MuCOOL and MICE will have an inside radius of 750 mm, and a coil length of 285 mm. The MuCOOL coupling coil is identical to the MICE coupling coils. The MICE coupling magnet will have a self inductance of 592 H. When operated at it maximum design current of 210 A (the highest momentum operation of MICE), the magnet stored energy will be about 13 MJ. These magnets will be kept cold using a pair of pulse tube cryocoolers that deliver 1.5 W at 4.2 K and 55 W at 60 K. This report describes the progress on the MuCOOL and MICE coupling magnet design and engineering. The progress on the construction of the first coupling coil will also be presented.

 
TU1GRI02 R&D toward a Neutrino Factory and Muon Collider 647
 
  • M.S. Zisman
    LBNL, Berkeley, California
 
 

Funding: This work was supported by the Office of Science, U. S. Department of Energy, under Contract No. DE-AC02-05CH11231.


There is considerable interest in the use of muon beams to create either an intense source of decay neutrinos aimed at a detector located 3000-7500 km away (a Neutrino Factory), or a Muon Collider that produces high-luminosity collisions at the energy frontier. R&D aimed at producing these facilities has been under way for more than 10 years. This paper will review experimental results from MuCool, MERIT, and MICE and indicate the extent to which they will provide proof-of-principle demonstrations of the key technologies required for a Neutrino Factory or Muon Collider. Progress in constructing components for the MICE experiment will be described.

 

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TU5PFP032 RF Studies at Fermilab MuCool Test Area 888
 
  • D. Huang, Y. Torun
    IIT, Chicago, Illinois
  • A.D. Bross, A. Moretti, Z. Qian
    Fermilab, Batavia
  • D. Li, M.S. Zisman
    LBNL, Berkeley, California
  • J. Norem
    ANL, Argonne
 
 

Funding: The United States Department of Energy


The accelerating gradient in a RF cavity is limited by many factors such as the surface material properties, RF frequency, the external magnetic field and the gas pressure inside the cavity. In the MuCool Program, RF cavities are studied with the aim of understanding these basic mechanisms and improving their maximum stable accelerating gradient. These cavities are being developed for muon ionization cooling channel for a Neutrino Factory or Muon Collider. We report studies using the 805 MHz and 201 MHz RF cavities in the MuCool Test Area (MTA) at Fermilab. New results include data from buttons of different materials mounted in the 805 MHz cavity, study of the accelerating gradient in the 201 MHz cavity and X-ray background radiation from the cavities due to Bremsstrahlung. The 201 MHz cavity has been shown to be stable at 19 MV/m at zero magnetic field, well in excess of its 16 MV/m design gradient. We will also discuss results from the 201 MHz cavity study in magnetic field and introduce the test of E × B effects with the 805 MHz box cavity.

 
WE5PFP005 The Normal Conducting RF Cavity for the MICE Experiment 1994
 
  • D. Li, N. Andresen, A.J. DeMello, S.P. Virostek, M.S. Zisman
    LBNL, Berkeley, California
  • R.A. Rimmer
    JLAB, Newport News, Virginia
  • D.J. Summers
    UMiss, University, Mississippi
 
 

The international muon ionization cooling experiment (MICE) requires low frequency and normal conducting RF cavities to compensate for muon beams’ longitudinal energy lost in the MICE cooling channel. Eight 201-MHz normal conducting RF cavities with conventional beam irises terminate by large and thin beryllium windows are needed. The cavity design is based on a successful prototype cavity for the US MUCOOL program. The MICE RF cavity will be operated at 8-MV/m in a few Tesla magnetic fields with 1-ms pulse length and 1-Hz repetition rate. The cavity design, fabrication, post process plans and as well as integration to the MICE cooling channel will be discussed and presented in details.

 
FR1RAI02 The Conversion and Operation of the Cornell Electron Storage Ring as a Test Accelerator (CesrTA) for Damping Rings Research and Development 4200
 
  • M.A. Palmer, J.P. Alexander, M.G. Billing, J.R. Calvey, S.S. Chapman, G.W. Codner, C.J. Conolly, J.A. Crittenden, J. Dobbins, G. Dugan, E. Fontes, M.J. Forster, R.E. Gallagher, S.W. Gray, S. Greenwald, D.L. Hartill, W.H. Hopkins, J. Kandaswamy, D.L. Kreinick, Y. Li, X. Liu, J.A. Livezey, A. Lyndaker, V. Medjidzade, R.E. Meller, S.B. Peck, D.P. Peterson, M.C. Rendina, P. Revesz, D.H. Rice, N.T. Rider, D. L. Rubin, D. Sagan, J.J. Savino, R.D. Seeley, J.W. Sexton, J.P. Shanks, J.P. Sikora, K.W. Smolenski, C.R. Strohman, A.B. Temnykh, M. Tigner, S. Vishniakou, W.S. Whitney, T. Wilksen, H.A. Williams
    CLASSE, Ithaca, New York
  • J.M. Byrd, C.M. Celata, J.N. Corlett, S. De Santis, M.A. Furman, A. Jackson, R. Kraft, D.V. Munson, G. Penn, D.W. Plate, A.W. Rawlins, M. Venturini, M.S. Zisman
    LBNL, Berkeley, California
  • J.W. Flanagan, P. Jain, K. Kanazawa, K. Ohmi, H. Sakai, K. Shibata, Y. Suetsugu
    KEK, Ibaraki
  • K.C. Harkay
    ANL, Argonne
  • Y. He, M.C. Ross, C.-Y. Tan, R.M. Zwaska
    Fermilab, Batavia
  • R. Holtzapple
    CalPoly, San Luis Obispo, CA
  • J.K. Jones
    STFC/DL/ASTeC, Daresbury, Warrington, Cheshire
  • D. Kharakh, M.T.F. Pivi, L. Wang
    SLAC, Menlo Park, California
  • E.N. Smith
    Cornell University, Ithaca, New York
  • A. Wolski
    Cockcroft Institute, Warrington, Cheshire
 
 

Funding: Support provided by the US National Science Foundation, the US Department of Energy, and the Japan/US Cooperation Program.


In March of 2008, the Cornell Electron Storage Ring (CESR) concluded twenty eight years of colliding beam operations for the CLEO high energy physics experiment. We have reconfigured CESR as an ultra low emittance damping ring for use as a test accelerator (CesrTA) for International Linear Collider (ILC) damping ring R&D. The primary goals of the CesrTA program are to achieve a beam emittance approaching that of the ILC Damping Rings with a positron beam, to investigate the interaction of the electron cloud with both low emittance positron and electron beams, to explore methods to suppress the electron cloud, and to develop suitable advanced instrumentation required for these experimental studies (in particular a fast x-ray beam size monitor capable of single pass measurements of individual bunches). We report on progress with the CESR conversion activities, the status and schedule for the experimental program, and the first experimental results that have been obtained.

 

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