160 research outputs found
Beam-Beam Effects
One of the most severe limitations in high-intensity particle colliders is
the beam-beam interaction, i.e. the perturbation of the beams as they cross the
opposing beams. This introduction to beam-beam effects concentrates on a
description of the phenomena that are present in modern colliding beam
facilities.Comment: 29 pages, contribution to the CAS - CERN Accelerator School: Advanced
Accelerator Physics Course, Trondheim, Norway, 18-29 Aug 201
Operational considerations on the stability of colliding beams
While well studied in the absence of beam-beam and while colliding head-on,
the stability of the LHC beams can be very critical in intermediate steps.
During the squeeze, the long-range beam-beam interaction becomes a critical
component of the beam's dynamics. Also, while the transverse separation at the
interaction points is collapsed, the beam-beam forces change drastically,
possibly deteriorating the beam's stability. Finally, during luminosity
production, the configuration of the LHC in 2012 included few bunches without
head-on collision in any of the interaction points having different stability
properties. Stability diagrams are being evaluated numerically in these
configurations in an attempt to explain instabilities observed in these phases
during the 2012 proton run of the LHC.Comment: 5 pages, contribution to the ICFA Mini-Workshop on Beam-Beam Effects
in Hadron Colliders, CERN, Geneva, Switzerland, 18-22 Mar 201
Stability diagram of colliding beams
The effect of the beam-beam interactions on the stability of impedance mode
is discussed. The detuning is evaluated by the means of single particle
tracking in arbitrarily complex collision configurations, including lattice
non-linearities, and used to numerically evaluate the dispersion integral. This
approach also allows the effect of non-Gaussian distributions to be considered.
Distributions modified by the action of external noise are discussed.Comment: 5 pages, contribution to the ICFA Mini-Workshop on Beam-Beam Effects
in Hadron Colliders, CERN, Geneva, Switzerland, 18-22 Mar 201
Luminosity levelling techniques for the LHC
We present the possibilities for doing luminosity levelling at the LHC. We
explore the merits and drawbacks of each option and briefly discuss the
operational implications. The simplest option is levelling with an offset
between the two beams. Crab cavities may also be used for levelling, as may a
squeezing of the beam. There is also the possibility of using the crossing
angle in order to do luminosity levelling. All of these options are explored,
for the LHC and other possible new projects, together with their benefits and
drawbacks.Comment: 5 pages, contribution to the ICFA Mini-Workshop on Beam-Beam Effects
in Hadron Colliders, CERN, Geneva, Switzerland, 18-22 Mar 201
Models to study multi bunch coupling through head-on and long-range beam-beam interactions
In the LHC almost 6000 bunches will collide in four interaction regions where they experience head-on as well as clustered long range interactions. These lead to a coupling between all bunches and coherent beam-beam effects. For two colliding bunches this is well understood. However, for a larger number of bunches colliding with different collision patterns, it results in a complex spectrum of oscillation frequencieswith consequences for beam measurements and Landau damping. To study the coherent beam-beam modes, three complementary models have been developped and will be described in this report. Two of these methods rely on self-consistent multi-bunch and multi-particle tracking while the third is an analytic model based on a complex matrix algorithms. The three methods together provide useful information about the beambeam coupling of multi bunch beams and together provide a deeper insight into the underlying physics
Observations of beam-beam effects at the LHC
This paper introduces a list of observations related to the beam-beam
interaction that were collected over the first years of LHC proton physics
operation (2010-12). Beam-beam related effects not only have been extensively
observed and recorded, but have also shaped the operation of the LHC for
high-intensity proton running in a number of ways: the construction of the
filling scheme, the choice of luminosity levelling techniques, measures to
mitigate instabilities, and the choice of settings for improving performance
(e.g. to reduce losses), among others.Comment: Presented at the ICFA Mini-Workshop on Beam-Beam in Hadron Colliders,
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland, 18-22 March 201
Self-Consistent parallel multi bunch beam-beam simulation using a grid-multipole method
The simulation code COMBI has been developed to enable the study of coherent beam-beam effects in the full collision scenario of the LHC, with multiple bunches interacting at multiple crossing points over many turns. The parallel version of COMBI was first implemented using a soft-Gaussian collision model which entails minimal communication between worker processes. Recently we have extended the code to a fully self-consistent collision model using a Grid-Multipole method, which allows worker processes to exchange charge and field information in a compact form which minimizes communication overhead. In this paper we describe the Grid-Multipole technique and its adaptation to the parallel environment through pre- and post-processing of charge and grid data. Performance measurements in a Myrinet cluster environment will be given
LHC bunch filling schemes for commissioning and initial luminosity optimization
In this note we explore the high degree of exibility of the LHC bunch filling scheme to propose bunch configurations which allow to optimize the luminosity requirements in the four experiments for the commissioning and early running of the LHC
Emittance growth due to beam-beam effects with a static offset in collision in the LHC
Under nominal operational conditions, the LHC bunches experience small unavoidable offset at the collision points caused by long range beam-beam interactions. Although the geometrical loss of luminosity is small, one may have to consider an increase of the beam transverse emittance, leading to a deterioration of the experimental conditions. In this work we evaluate and understand the dynamics of beam-beam interactions with static offsets at the collision point. A study of the emittance growth as a function of the offset amplitude in collisions is presented. Moreover, we address the effects coming from the beam parameters such as the initial transverse beam size, bunch intensity and tune
Long Range Beam-beam Effects in the LHC
We report on the experience with long-range beam--beam effects in the LHC, in
dedicated studies as well as the experience from operation. Where possible, we
compare the observations with the expectations.Comment: Presented at the ICFA Mini-Workshop on Beam-Beam in Hadron Colliders,
CERN, Geneva, Switzerland, 18-22 March 201
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