117 research outputs found
Optimization of the LHC Beam Cleaning System With Respect to Beam Losses in the High Luminosity Insertions
The LHC design performance is achievable only with a dedicated beam cleaning embedded in the lattice. The effect of the system on the beam loss distribution in the entire machine is studied with emphasis on the two high luminosity insertions. Realistic Monte-Carlo simulations are described, which include a model for beam halo interactions with collimators and other components, multi-turn particle tracking in the lattice, hadronic and electromagnetic shower simulations, and thermal and stress analyses. Methods to mitigate beam-induced effects in the interactions regions at operational and accidental beam loss are proposed, both for injection and collision conditions
Development of hollow electron beams for proton and ion collimation
Magnetically confined hollow electron beams for controlled halo removal in
high-energy colliders such as the Tevatron or the LHC may extend traditional
collimation systems beyond the intensity limits imposed by tolerable material
damage. They may also improve collimation performance by suppressing loss
spikes due to beam jitter and by increasing capture efficiency. A hollow
electron gun was designed and built. Its performance and stability were
measured at the Fermilab test stand. The gun will be installed in one of the
existing Tevatron electron lenses for preliminary tests of the hollow-beam
collimator concept, addressing critical issues such as alignment and
instabilities of the overlapping proton and electron beams.Comment: 3 pp. 1st International Particle Accelerator Conference: IPAC'10,
23-28 May 2010: Kyoto, Japa
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