123 research outputs found
Beam cooling
Beam cooling is the technique of reducing the momentum spread and increasing the phase-space density of stored particle beams. This paper gives an introduction to beam cooling and Liouville’s theorem, and then it describes the three methods of active beam cooling that have been proven to work so far, namely electron cooling, stochastic cooling, and laser cooling. Ionization cooling is also mentioned briefly
GEANT4 Studies of Magnets Activation in the HEBT Line for the European Spallation Source
The High Energy Beam Transport (HEBT) line for the European Spallation Source is designed to transport the beam from the underground linac to the target at the surface level while keeping the beam losses small and providing the requested beam footprint and profile on the target. This paper presents activation studies of the magnets in the HEBT line due to backscattered neutrons from the target and beam interactions inside the collimators producing unstable isotopes
Experimental N V and Ne VIII low-temperature dielectronic recombination rate coefficients
The dielectronic recombination rate coefficients of N V and Ne VIII ions have
been measured at a heavy-ion storage ring. The investigated energy ranges
covered all dielectronic recombination resonances attached to 2s -> 2p (Delta
n=0) core excitations. The rate coefficients in a plasma are derived and
parameterized by using a convenient fit formula. The experimentally derived
rate coefficients are compared with theoretical data by Colgan et al. (2004,
A&A, 417, 1183) and Nahar & Pradhan (1997, ApJ, 111, 339) as well as with the
recommended rate coefficients by Mazzotta et al. (1998, A&A, 133, 403). The
data of Colgan et al. and Nahar & Pradhan reproduce the experiment very well
over the temperature ranges where N V and Ne VIII are expected to exist in
photoionized as well as in collisionally ionized plasmas. In contrast, the
recommendation of Mazzotta et al. agrees with the experimental rate coefficient
only in the temperature range of collisional ionization. At lower temperatures
it deviates from the measured rate coefficient by orders of magnitude. In
addition the influence of external electric fields with field strengths up to
1300 V/cm on the dielectronic recombination rate coefficient has been
investigated.Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures, to be published in Astronomy & Astrophysic
Induced activation in accelerator components
The residual activity induced in particle accelerators is a serious issue from the point of view of radiation safety as the long-lived radionuclides produced by fast or moderated neutrons and impact protons cause problems of radiation exposure for staff involved in the maintenance work and when decommissioning the facility. This paper presents activation studies of the magnets and collimators in the High Energy Beam Transport line of the European Spallation Source due to the backscattered neutrons from the target and also due to the direct proton interactions and their secondaries. An estimate of the radionuclide inventory and induced activation are predicted using the GEANT4 code
THE ESS LINAC DESIGN
Abstract The European Spallation Source (ESS) is a 5 MW, 2.5 MeV long pulse proton machine. It represents a big jump in power compare to the existing spallation facilities. The design phase is well under way, with the delivery of a Conceptual Design Report published in the beginning of 2012, and a Technical Design Report in December 2012. Why and how the 5 MW goal influences the parameter choices will be described
Diagnostic criterion for crystallized beams
Small ion crystals in a Paul trap are stable even in the absence of laser
cooling. Based on this theoretically and experimentally well-established fact
we propose the following diagnostic criterion for establishing the presence of
a crystallized beam: Absence of heating following the shut-down of all cooling
devices. The validity of the criterion is checked with the help of detailed
numerical simulations.Comment: REVTeX, 11 pages, 4 figures; submitted to PR
A Very Intense Neutrino Super Beam Experiment for Leptonic CP Violation Discovery based on the European Spallation Source Linac: A Snowmass 2013 White Paper
Very intense neutrino beams and large neutrino detectors will be needed in
order to enable the discovery of CP violation in the leptonic sector. We
propose to use the proton linac of the European Spallation Source currently
under construction in Lund, Sweden to deliver, in parallel with the spallation
neutron production, a very intense, cost effective and high performance
neutrino beam. The baseline program for the European Spallation Source linac is
that it will be fully operational at 5 MW average power by 2022, producing 2
GeV 2.86 ms long proton pulses at a rate of 14 Hz. Our proposal is to upgrade
the linac to 10 MW average power and 28 Hz, producing 14 pulses/s for neutron
production and 14 pulses/s for neutrino production. Furthermore, because of the
high current required in the pulsed neutrino horn, the length of the pulses
used for neutrino production needs to be compressed to a few s with the
aid of an accumulator ring. A long baseline experiment using this Super Beam
and a megaton underground Water Cherenkov detector located in existing mines
300-600 km from Lund will make it possible to discover leptonic CP violation at
5 significance level in up to 50% of the leptonic Dirac CP-violating
phase range. This experiment could also determine the neutrino mass hierarchy
at a significance level of more than 3 if this issue will not already
have been settled by other experiments by then. The mass hierarchy performance
could be increased by combining the neutrino beam results with those obtained
from atmospheric neutrinos detected by the same large volume detector. This
detector will also be used to measure the proton lifetime, detect cosmological
neutrinos and neutrinos from supernova explosions. Results on the sensitivity
to leptonic CP violation and the neutrino mass hierarchy are presented.Comment: 28 page
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