120 research outputs found
Cryogenic Thermometer Calibration Facility at CERN
A cryogenic thermometer calibration facility has been designed and is being commissioned in preparation for the very stringent requirements on the temperature control of the LHC superconducting magnets. The temperature is traceable in the 1.5 to 30 K range to standards maintained in a national metrological laboratory by using a set of Rhodium-Iron temperature sensors of metrological quality. The calibration facility is designed for calibrating simultaneously 60 industrial cryogenic thermometers in the 1.5 K to 300 K temperature range, a thermometer being a device that includes both a temperature sensor and the wires heat-intercept. The thermometers can be calibrated in good and degraded vacuum or immersed in the surrounding fluid and at different Joule self-heating conditions that match those imposed by signal conditioners used in large cryogenic machinery. The calibration facility can be operated in an automatic mode and all the control and safety routines are handled by a Programmable Logic Controller (PLC). LabVIEW is used both as the PLC operator interface and for configuring and reading the thermometric data sampled by the higher accuracy laboratory equipment. The isothermal support onto which the thermometers are mounted is thermally anchored through the wiring to a helium bath. The calibration procedure begins once the temperature of the support is stabilized. Measured data is presented and it is possible to infer that the absolute accuracy that can be obtained is better than ± 5 mK for the full temperature range
Design and Status of the Dipole Spectrometer Magnet for the ALICE Experiment
Proposal of abstract for MT16, Tallahesse, Florida, 26th September to 2nd October 1999.A large Dipole Magnet is required for the Muon Arm Spectrometer of the ALICE experiment at the LHC.The absence of strong requirements on the symmetry and homogeneity of the magnetic field has lead to a design dominated by economic and feasibility considerations.In March 1997 the decision was taken to build a resistive dipole magnet for the muon spectrometer of the ALICE experiment. Since then, design work has been pursued in JINR/Russia and at CERN. While a common concept has been adopted for the construction of the steel core, two different proposals have been made for the manufacturing technology of the excitation coils. In both cases, however, the conductor material will be Aluminium.The general concept of the dipole magnet is based on a window frame return yoke, fabricated from low carbon steel sheets. The flat vertical poles follow the defined acceptance angle of 9 degrees. The excitation coils are of saddle type. The coils are wound from large hollow Aluminium profiles. They are cooled by pressurized demineralised water. The coil ends are located to both sides of the magnet yoke and determine the overall length of the magnet. The main flux direction in the gap is horizontal and perpendicular to the LHC beam axis.Both coil concepts and the underlying manufacturing technology are compared and the present status of the development of the magnet is described
The 4 K outer cryostat for the CUORE experiment: construction and quality control
The external shell of the CUORE cryostat is a large cryogen-free system
designed to host the dilution refrigerator and the bolometers of the CUORE
experiment in a low radioactivity environment. The three vessels that form the
outer shell were produced and delivered to the Gran Sasso underground
Laboratories in July 2012. In this paper, we describe the production techniques
and the validation tests done at the production site in 2012.Comment: 11 pages, 13 figures; to appear in NIM
Models and experimental results from the wide aperture Nb-Ti magnets for the LHC upgrade
MQXC is a Nb-Ti quadrupole designed to meet the accelerator quality
requirements needed for the phase-1 LHC upgrade, now superseded by the high
luminosity upgrade foreseen in 2021. The 2-m-long model magnet was tested at
room temperature and 1.9 K. The technology developed for this magnet is
relevant for other magnets currently under development for the high-luminosity
upgrade, namely D1 (at KEK) and the large aperture twin quadrupole Q4 (at CEA).
In this paper we present MQXC test results, some of the specialized heat
extraction features, spot heaters, temperature sensor mounting and voltage tap
development for the special open cable insulation. We look at some problem
solving with noisy signals, give an overview of electrical testing, look at how
we calculate the coil resistance during at quench and show that the heaters are
not working We describe the quench signals and its timing, the development of
the quench heaters and give an explanation of an Excel quench calculation and
its comparison including the good agreement with the MQXC test results. We
propose an improvement to the magnet circuit design to reduce voltage to ground
values by factor 2. The program is then used to predict quench Hot-Spot and
Voltages values for the D1 dipole and the Q4 quadrupole.Comment: 8 pages, Contribution to WAMSDO 2013: Workshop on Accelerator Magnet,
Superconductor, Design and Optimization; 15 - 16 Jan 2013, CERN, Geneva,
Switzerlan
The Dipole Magnet Design for the ALICE DiMuon Arm Spectrometer
An essential part of the DiMuon Arm Spectrometer of the ALICE experiment is a conventional Dipole Magnet of about 890 tons which provides the bending power to measure the momenta of muons. The JINR engineering design of the Dipole Magnet, technical characteristics and description of the proposed manufacturing procedure are presented. The proposed Coil fabrication technique is based on winding of flat pancakes, which are subsequently bent on cylindrical mandrels. The pancakes are then stacked and cured with prepreg insulation. The method is demonstrated on hand of the prototype II, which consists of a pancake made with full-size aluminium conductor. Some details of electromagnetic and mechanical calculations are described. The results of measuring of mechanical and electrical characteristics of materials related to the coil composite structure are discussed
CUORE and beyond: bolometric techniques to explore inverted neutrino mass hierarchy
The CUORE (Cryogenic Underground Observatory for Rare Events) experiment will
search for neutrinoless double beta decay of Te. With 741 kg of TeO
crystals and an excellent energy resolution of 5 keV (0.2%) at the region of
interest, CUORE will be one of the most competitive neutrinoless double beta
decay experiments on the horizon. With five years of live time, CUORE projected
neutrinoless double beta decay half-life sensitivity is y
at ( y at the 90% confidence level), which
corresponds to an upper limit on the effective Majorana mass in the range
40--100 meV (50--130 meV). Further background rejection with auxiliary light
detector can significantly improve the search sensitivity and competitiveness
of bolometric detectors to fully explore the inverted neutrino mass hierarchy
with Te and possibly other double beta decay candidate nuclei.Comment: Submitted to the Proceedings of TAUP 2013 Conferenc
Exploring the Neutrinoless Double Beta Decay in the Inverted Neutrino Hierarchy with Bolometric Detectors
Neutrinoless double beta decay (0nubb) is one of the most sensitive probes
for physics beyond the Standard Model, providing unique information on the
nature of neutrinos. In this paper we review the status and outlook for
bolometric 0nubb decay searches. We summarize recent advances in background
suppression demonstrated using bolometers with simultaneous readout of heat and
light signals. We simulate several configurations of a future CUORE-like
bolometer array which would utilize these improvements and present the
sensitivity reach of a hypothetical next-generation bolometric 0nubb
experiment. We demonstrate that a bolometric experiment with the isotope mass
of about 1 ton is capable of reaching the sensitivity to the effective Majorana
neutrino mass (|mee|) of order 10-20 meV, thus completely exploring the
so-called inverted neutrino mass hierarchy region. We highlight the main
challenges and identify priorities for an R&D program addressing them.Comment: 22 pages, 15 figures, submitted to EPJ
CUORE-0 results and prospects for the CUORE experiment
With 741 kg of TeO2 crystals and an excellent energy resolution of 5 keV
(0.2%) at the region of interest, the CUORE (Cryogenic Underground Observatory
for Rare Events) experiment aims at searching for neutrinoless double beta
decay of 130Te with unprecedented sensitivity. Expected to start data taking in
2015, CUORE is currently in an advanced construction phase at LNGS. CUORE
projected neutrinoless double beta decay half-life sensitivity is 1.6E26 y at 1
sigma (9.5E25 y at the 90% confidence level), in five years of live time,
corresponding to an upper limit on the effective Majorana mass in the range
40-100 meV (50-130 meV). Further background rejection with auxiliary bolometric
detectors could improve CUORE sensitivity and competitiveness of bolometric
detectors towards a full analysis of the inverted neutrino mass hierarchy.
CUORE-0 was built to test and demonstrate the performance of the upcoming CUORE
experiment. It consists of a single CUORE tower (52 TeO2 bolometers of 750 g
each, arranged in a 13 floor structure) constructed strictly following CUORE
recipes both for materials and assembly procedures. An experiment its own,
CUORE-0 is expected to reach a sensitivity to the neutrinoless double beta
decay half-life of 130Te around 3E24 y in one year of live time. We present an
update of the data, corresponding to an exposure of 18.1 kg y. An analysis of
the background indicates that the CUORE performance goal is satisfied while the
sensitivity goal is within reach.Comment: 10 pages, 3 figures, to appear in the proceedings of NEUTRINO 2014,
26th International Conference on Neutrino Physics and Astrophysics, 2-7 June
2014, held at Boston, Massachusetts, US
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