525 research outputs found
Conceptual designs of dipole magnet for muon collider ring
Conceptual designs of a superconducting dipole magnet for a Storage Ring of a
Muon Collider with a 1.5 TeV center of mass (c.o.m.) energy and an average
luminosity of 10 34 cm-2s-1 are presented. In contrast to proton machines, the
dipoles for the Muon Collider should be able to handle ~0.5 kW/m of dynamic
heat load from the muon beam decays. The magnets are based on Nb3Sn
superconductor and designed to provide an operating field of 10 T in the 20-mm
aperture with the critical current margin required for reliable machine
operation. The magnet cross-sections were optimized to achieve the best
possible field quality in the aperture occupied by beams. The developed
mechanical structures provide adequate coil prestress and support at the
maximum level of Lorentz forces in the coil. Magnet parameters are reported and
compared with the requirements.Comment: 4 pp. Applied Superconductivity Conference (ASC 2010), 1-6 Aug 2010:
Washington, D.
LARP Joint IR studies
LARP initiated Joint IR Studies (JIRS) in October 2007 (FY2008) to coordinate efforts related to the LHC Phase I and II upgrades previously situated either in Accelerator Systems or in Magnet Systems. This note outlines JIRS goals, main directions and milestones
Status of NbSn accelerator magnet R&D at Fermilab
New accelerator magnet technology based on Nb3Sn superconductor is being
developed at Fermilab since late 90's. Six short dipole models, seven short
quadrupole models and numerous individual dipole and quadrupole coils have been
built and tested, demonstrating magnet performance parameters and their
reproducibility. The technology scale up program has built and tested several
dipole and quadrupole coils up to 4-m long. The results of this work are
summarized in the paper.Comment: 9 pages, contribution to the EuCARD-AccNet-EuroLumi Workshop: The
High-Energy Large Hadron Collider, Malta, 14 -- 16 Oct 201
Experimental results and analysis from the 11 T Nb3Sn DS dipole
FNAL and CERN are developing a 5.5-m-long twin-aperture Nb3Sn dipole suitable
for installation in the LHC. A 2-m-long single-aperture demonstrator dipole
with 60 mm bore, a nominal field of 11 T at the LHC nominal current of 11.85 kA
and 20% margin has been developed and tested. This paper presents the results
of quench protection analysis and protection heater study for the Nb3Sn
demonstrator dipole. Extrapolations of the results for long magnet and
operation in LHC are also presented.Comment: 10 pages, Contribution to WAMSDO 2013: Workshop on Accelerator
Magnet, Superconductor, Design and Optimization; 15 - 16 Jan 2013, CERN,
Geneva, Switzerlan
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