888 research outputs found
LEP3: a low-cost, high-luminosity Higgs factory
The discovery of a relatively light Higgs opens up the possibility of
circular e+e- Higgs factories. LEP3 is such a machine with emphasis on low
cost, since it re-uses most of the LHC infrastructure, including the tunnel,
cryogenics, and the two general-purpose LHC experiments Atlas and CMS, with
some modifications. The energy reach of LEP3 is 240GeV in the centre of mass,
close to the ZH production maximum. Alternative tunnel diameters and locations
are possible, including a Higgs factory housed in the UNK tunnel, UNK-L, and a
machine located in a new 80 km tunnel in the Geneva region, TLEP, than can
further house a very high energy pp collider. The design merits further
consideration and a detailed study should be performed, so that LEP3 can be one
more option available to the community for the next step in High Energy
Physics.Comment: presented on conference "LHC on the March", 20-22 November 2012,
IHEP, Protvino, Russi
FCC-ee accelerator parameters, performance and limitations
CERN has recently launched the Future Circular Collider (FCC) study to deal
with all aspects of an ambitious post-LHC possible programme. The emphasis of
the study is on a 100 TeV proton collider to be housed in a 80-100 km new ring
in the Geneva region. An electron machine will also be considered as a possible
intermediate first step (FCC-ee). The study benefits from earlier work done in
the context of TLEP and has already published a parameter table, to serve as
the basis for the work to be done. The study aims to publish a conceptual
design report at around 2018. The recent discovery of a light Higgs boson has
opened up considerable interest in circular e+e- Higgs factories around the
world. FCC-ee is capable of very high luminosities in a wide centre-of-mass
(ECM) spectrum from 90 to 350 GeV. This allows the very precise study of the Z,
W and H bosons as well as the top quark, allowing for meaningful precision
tests of the closure of the Standard Model.Comment: presented at conference ICHEP2014, 37th conference on High Energy
Physics, Valencia, 2-9 July 201
Performance limitations of circular colliders: head-on collisions
We review the different performance limitations of circular colliders, namely
the limitations of energy reach, maximum attainable luminosity and beam
lifetime. This paper considers only head-on collisions. We consider the range
of beam energies from 45GeV to 250 GeV and collider circumferences from 20 to
100kms
Mitigating performance limitations of single beam-pipe circular e+e- colliders
Renewed interest in circular e+e- colliders has spurred designs of single
beam-pipe machines, like the CEPC in China, and double beam pipe ones, such as
the FCC-ee effort at CERN. Single beam-pipe designs profit from lower costs but
are limited by the number of bunches that can be accommodated in the machine.
We analyse these performance limitations and propose a solution that can
accommodate O(1000) bunches while keeping more than 90% of the ring with a
single beam pipe.Comment: Poster presented at IPAC'15, Richmond, VA, USA, May 201
A Method for Greatly Reduced Edge Effects and Crosstalk in CCT Magnets
Iron-free CCT magnet design offers many advantages, one being the excellent
field quality and the absence of multipole components. However, edge effects
are present, although they tend to integrate out over the length of the magnet.
Many modern accelerator applications, however, require that these magnets are
placed in an area of rapidly varying optics parameters, so magnets with greatly
reduced edge effects have an advantage. We have designed such a magnet (a
quadrupole) by adding multipole components of the opposite sign to the edge
distortions of the magnet. A possible application could be the final focus
magnets of the FCC-ee, where beam sizes at the entry and exit point of the
magnets vary by large factors. We have then used this technique to effectively
eliminate cross talk between adjacent final focus quadrupoles for the incoming
and outgoing beams.Comment: Poster presented at MT25,25th International Conference on Magnet
Technology, Amsterdam, August 27 - September 1, 201
TLEP, first step in a long-term vision for HEP
The discovery of H(126) has renewed interest in circular e+e- colliders that
can operate as Higgs factories, which benefit from three unique
characteristics: i) high luminosity and reliability, ii) the availability of
several interaction points, iii) superior beam energy accuracy. TLEP is an e+e-
storage ring of 80-km circumference that can operate with very high luminosity
from the Z peak (90 GeV) to the top quark pair threshold (350 GeV). It can
achieve transverse beam polarization at the Z peak and WW threshold, giving it
unparalleled accuracy on the beam energy. A preliminary study indicates that an
80 km tunnel could be constructed around CERN. Such a tunnel would allow a 100
TeV proton-proton collider to be established in the same ring (VHE-LHC),
offering a long term vision.Comment: This is a contribution to the the Snowmass process 2013: Frontier
Capabilitie
Comments on "Wall-plug (AC) power consumption of a very high energy e+/e- storage ring collider" by Marc Ross
The paper arXiv:1308.0735 questions some of the technical assumptions made by
the TLEP Steering Group when estimating in arXiv:1305.6498 the power
requirement for the very high energy e+e- storage ring collider TLEP. We show
that our assumptions are based solidly on CERN experience with LEP and the LHC,
as well accelerators elsewhere, and confirm our earlier baseline estimate of
the TLEP power consumption.Comment: 6 page
The FCC-ee Interaction Region Magnet Design
The design of the region close to the interaction point of the FCC-ee
experiments is especially challenging. The beams collide at an angle (+-15
mrad) in the high-field region of the detector solenoid. Moreover, the very low
vertical beta_y* of the machine necessitates that the final focusing
quadrupoles have a distance from the IP (L*) of around 2 m and therefore are
inside the main detector solenoid. The beams should be screened from the effect
of the detector magnetic field, and the emittance blow-up due to vertical
dispersion in the interaction region should be minimized, while leaving enough
space for detector components. Crosstalk between the two final focus
quadrupoles, only about 6 cm apart at the tip, should also be minimized.Comment: Poster presented at IPAC16, May 8-13, Busan, Kore
TLEP: A High-Performance Circular e+e- Collider to Study the Higgs Boson
The recent discovery of a light Higgs boson has opened up considerable
interest in circular e+e- Higgs factories around the world. We report on the
progress of the TLEP concept since last year. TLEP is an e+e- circular collider
capable of very high luminosities in a wide centre-of-mass (ECM) spectrum from
90 to 350 GeV. TLEP could be housed in a new 80 to 100 km tunnel in the Geneva
region. The design can be adapted to different ring circumference (e.g. LEP3 in
the 27 km LHC tunnel). TLEP is an ideal complementary machine to the LHC thanks
to high luminosity, exquisite determination of ECM and the possibility of four
interaction points, both for precision measurements of the Higgs boson
properties and for precision tests of the closure of the Standard Model from
the Z pole to the top threshold.Comment: Contribution to IPAC13, 12-17 May 2013, Shanghai, Chin
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