368 research outputs found

    Beam Dynamics at LEP

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    LEP has proved to be one of the most flexible e+e- colliders built to date. It has operated at various energies, in several modes, with ever increasing demands for luminosity in clean and precisely known beam conditions. Together with some unique features, LEP therefore has much in common with future e+e- factories. Beam-dynamical phenomena have been among the crucial determinants of LEP's performance. These include single-particle dynamics (optics design, dynamic aperture, radiation effects, etc.), a variety of beam-beam effects and collective instabilities. The strategies adopted to overcome these effects and maximise performance will be described with emphasis on those relevant to the design and operation of e+e- factories

    LHC operation for heavy ions

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    Facilities for the Energy Frontier of Nuclear Physics

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    The Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider at BNL has been exploring the energy frontier of nuclear physics since 2001. Its performance, flexibility and continued innovative upgrading can sustain its physics output for years to come. Now, the Large Hadron Collider at CERN is about to extend the frontier energy of laboratory nuclear collisions by more than an order of magnitude. In the coming years, its physics reach will evolve towards still higher energy, luminosity and varying collision species, within performance bounds set by accelerator technology and by nuclear physics itself. Complementary high-energy facilities will include fixed-target collisions at the CERN SPS, the FAIR complex at GSI and possible electron-ion colliders based on CEBAF at JLAB, RHIC at BNL or the LHC at CERN.Comment: Invited talk at the International Nuclear Physics Conference, Vancouver, Canada, 4-9 July 2010, to be published in Journal of Physics: Conference Series. http://inpc2010.triumf.ca

    The LHC as a Proton-Nucleus Collider

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    Following its initial operation as a proton-proton (p-p) and heavy-ion (208Pb82+-208Pb82+) collider, the LHC is expected to operate as a p-Pb collider. Later it may collide protons with other lighter nuclei such as 40Ar18+ or 16O8+. We show how the existing proton and lead-ion injector chains may be efficiently operated in tandem to provide these hybrid collisions. The two-in-one magnet design of the LHC main rings imposes different revolution frequencies for the two beams in part of the magnetic cycle. We discuss and evaluate the consequences for beam dynamics and estimate the potential performance of the LHC as a proton-nucleus collider

    ICFA Beam Dynamics Newsletter, no 18

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    Damping rings for CLIC

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    The Compact Linear Colider (CLIC) is designed to operate at 3 TeV centre-of-mass energy with a total luminosity of 10^35 cm^-2 s^-1. The overall system design leads to extremely demanding requirements on the bunch trains injected into the main libac at frequency of 100 Hz. In particular, the emittances of the intense bunches have to be about an order of magnitude smaller than presently achieved. We describe our approach to finding a damping ring design capable of meeting these requirements. Besides lattice design, emittance and damping rate considerations, a number of scattering and instability effects have to be incorporated into the optimisation of parameters. Among these, intra-bem scattering and the electron cloud effect are two of the most significant

    MAD Version 9

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    The program MAD is widely used for accelerator design and beam dynamics studies. For many years, its input language has been the nearest thing to a world-wide standard for describing accelerator structures. The new Version 9 is a complete rewrite using a systematic object-oriented methodology based on the CLASSIC classes [2] for accelerator physics. It provides many improvements over the previous MAD Version 8. These include: (i) support for multiple beam-lines simultaneously, facilitating, for example, matching constraints that couple the two rings of a two-ring collider, (ii) much improved Lie-algebraic map calculations, (iii) a uniform method and format for exchanging many kinds of structured data with other programs, (iv) an improved and more consistent input language. In addition, we report on a parallel 3D Poisson field solver for space charge calculations in high intensity particle beams. Applied to the PSI injector cyclotron, this shows the general nature of MAD Version 9 as a state-of- the-art problem-solving environment. We describe the current status of the program and how to get it, outline future plans and illustrate some of the new features

    A Candidate Low Emittance Lattice for LEP at its Highest Energies

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    Several low emittance lattices have been proposed for LEP at its highest energies in order to reduce the horizontal beam size and bring the beam-beam limit within reach. However, optics with high phase advance per cell tend to have strong tune dependence on amplitude that can reduce the dynamic aperture and the beam lifetime, possibly limiting the maximum beam energy or creating operational difficulties. Recently an optics with a phase advance of 17p/30 in the horizontal and p/2 in the vertical plane was developed. This optics has a significantly smaller detuning with amplitude. The results of experiments on this optics are compared with expectations and some details of the first operational experience with this lattice are presented. The potential performance at maximum energy is discussed
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