344 research outputs found
Bunch length measurements in LEP
For many years a streak camera has been used for observing the longitudinal distribution of the particles in any LEP e+ or e- bunch (5-50 ps r.m.s. length) on a turn by turn basis, using synchrotron light. In 1996, a comparison made with the longitudinal vertex distributions of 3 LEP experiments allowed the identification and elimination of certain systematic errors in the streak camera measurements. In 1997, a new bunch length measurement technique was commissioned that uses the high frequency slope of the bunch power spectrum from a button pickup. In 1998, this new method was confronted with measurements from the streak camera and the LEP experiments. The measurements made in 1996 and 1998 are presented, with emphasis on the calibration of the two instrumental methods and their respective precision and limitations
LHC BPM design
Already in 1997, 8 years before the expected commissioning date of the LHC, the design of the detectors for the orbit system has to be completely terminated. The paper describes the BPM design highlighting the chain of arguments that have led to this particular solution
Considerations for an Ac Dipole for the LHC
Following successful experience at the BNL AGS, FNAL Tevatron, and CERN SPS,
an AC Dipole will be adopted at the LHC for rapid measurements of ring optics.
This paper describes some of the parameters of the AC dipole for the LHC,
scaling from performance of the FNAL and BNL devices.Comment: proceedings of the 2007 Particle Accelerator Conferenc
Microstructure and velocity of field-driven solid-on-solid interfaces moving under stochastic dynamics with local energy barriers
We study the microscopic structure and the stationary propagation velocity of
(1+1)-dimensional solid-on-solid interfaces in an Ising lattice-gas model,
which are driven far from equilibrium by an applied force, such as a magnetic
field or a difference in (electro)chemical potential. We use an analytic
nonlinear-response approximation [P.A. Rikvold and M. Kolesik, J. Stat. Phys.
100, 377 (2000)] together with kinetic Monte Carlo simulations. Here we
consider interfaces that move under Arrhenius dynamics, which include a
microscopic energy barrier between the allowed Ising/lattice-gas states. Two
different dynamics are studied: the standard one-step dynamic (OSD) [H.C. Kang
and W. Weinberg, J. Chem. Phys. 90, 2824 (1992)] and the two-step
transition-dynamics approximation (TDA) [T. Ala-Nissila, J. Kjoll, and S.C.
Ying, Phys. Rev. B 46, 846 (1992)]. In the OSD the effects of the applied force
and the interaction energies in the model factorize in the transition rates (a
soft dynamic), while in the TDA such factorization is not possible (a hard
dynamic). In full agreement with previous general theoretical results we find
that the local interface width under the TDA increases dramatically with the
applied force. In contrast, the interface structure with the OSD is only weakly
influenced by the force, in qualitative agreement with the theoretical
expectations. Results are also obtained for the force-dependence and anisotropy
of the interface velocity, which also show differences in good agreement with
the theoretical expectations for the differences between soft and hard
dynamics. Our results confirm that different stochastic interface dynamics that
all obey detailed balance and the same conservation laws nevertheless can lead
to radically different interface responses to an applied force.Comment: 18 pages RevTex. Minor revisions. Phys. Rev. B, in pres
Luminosity optimisation using beam-beam deflections at LEP
In maximizing the performance of the LEP electron-positron collider it is important to ensure that the beams collide head-on at the interaction points. The deflection of the beams due to the beam-beam interactions has been measured using orbit monitors located close to the interaction points. The dependence of the beam-beam deflection on the transverse distance between the beams has been used to optimise the overlap of the beams in the vertical plane and to measure the beam sizes at the interaction points
Equilibrium and Stability of Polarization in Ultrathin Ferroelectric Films with Ionic Surface Compensation
Thermodynamic theory is developed for the ferroelectric phase transition of
an ultrathin film in equilibrium with a chemical environment that supplies
ionic species to compensate its surface. Equations of state and free energy
expressions are developed based on Landau-Ginzburg-Devonshire theory, using
electrochemical equilibria to provide ionic compensation boundary conditions.
Calculations are presented for a monodomain PbTiO (001) film coherently
strained to SrTiO with its exposed surface and its electronically
conducting bottom electrode in equilibrium with a controlled oxygen partial
pressure. The stability and metastability boundaries of phases of different
polarization are determined as a function of temperature, oxygen partial
pressure, and film thickness. Phase diagrams showing polarization and internal
electric field are presented. At temperatures below a thickness-dependent Curie
point, high or low oxygen partial pressure stabilizes positive or negative
polarization, respectively. Results are compared to the standard cases of
electronic compensation controlled by either an applied voltage or charge
across two electrodes. Ionic surface compensation through chemical equilibrium
with an environment introduces new features into the phase diagram. In
ultrathin films, a stable non-polar phase can occur between the positive and
negative polar phases when varying the external chemical potential at fixed
temperature, under conditions where charged surface species are not present in
sufficient concentration to stabilize a polar phase.Comment: 53 pages, 24 figure
Cyanide-modified Pt(111) : structure, stability and hydrogen adsorption
A.C. acknowledges the support of the DGI (Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation) through Project CTQ2009-07017. W.S. acknowledges financial support by the Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft under Schm 344/40-1, Schm 344/34-1.2 and FOR 1376. W.S. and P.Q. thank DFG-CONICET International Cooperation and CONICET for continued support. E.P.M.L. and M.Z.-M. wish to acknowledge CONICET PIP: 112-200801-000983, Secyt UNC, Program BID (PICT 2006N 946), and PME: 2006-01581 for financial support. P.Q. acknowledges PICT 0737-2008. A generous grant of computing time from the Baden-Wuerttemberg grid is gratefully acknowledged. M.E.-E. acknowledges an FPI fellowship from the Spanish Ministry of Science and Innovation and an accommodation grant at the Residencia de Estudiantes from the Madrid City Council.Peer reviewedPostprin
Excitation of Large Transverse Beam Oscillations without Emittance Blow-up using the AC-Dipole Principle
The so-called "AC-Dipole" principle allows the excitation of transverse oscillations to large (several sigma) excursions without emittance blow-up. The idea was originally proposed and tested at BNL for resonance crossing with polarized beams, using an orbit corrector dipole with an excitation frequency close to the betatron tune, hence "AC-Dipole". This method of beam excitation has several potential applications in teh LHC, such as phase advance and beta-measurements, dynamic aperture studies and the investigation of resonance strengths. The technique was recently tested in the CERN SPS using the transverse damper as an "AC-Dipole" providing the fixed frequency excitation. Results from this experiment are presented, along with an explanation of the underlying principle
Performance of the new SPS beam position orbit system (MOPOS)
The orbit and trajectory measurement system COPOS of the CERN SPS accelerator has been in operation since the construction of the machine in 1976. Over the years the system has been slightly modified in order to follow the evolving demands of the machine, in particular for its operation as a p-pbar collider and, since 1991, for the acceleration of heavy ions. In 1995 the performance of the system was reviewed and the following shortcomings were identified: - lack of turn-by-turn position measurements due to the 1ms integration time of the voltage to frequency converters used for the analogue to digital conversion (to be compared with a revolution time of 23 ms), - ageing effects on the 200 MHz resonating input filters, which had over the years drifted out of tolerance. As a consequence the signal to noise ratio, the linearity and the absolute precision were affected, - the calibration system based on electromechanical relays had become very unreliable, such that frequent calibrations were no longer possible, - a remote diagnostic for the observation of timing signals relative to the beam signals was missing. For the above reasons a large-scale upgrade program was launched, the results of which are described in the following sections
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