628 research outputs found
Commissioning of the CNGS Extraction in SPS LSS4
The CNGS project (CERN Neutrino to Gran Sasso) aims at directly detecting νμ - Î½Ï oscillations. For this purpose an intense νμ beam is generated at CERN and directed towards LNGS (Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso) in Italy, about 730 km from CERN. The neutrinos are generated from the decay of pions and kaons which are produced by 400 GeV protons hitting a graphite target. The protons are extracted from the SPS straight section 4 (LSS4) in two 10.5 ïs batches, nominally 2.4 Ñ 1013 protons each, at an interval of 50 ms. The high intensity extracted beam can cause damage to equipment if lost in an uncontrolled way, with the extraction elements particularly at risk. In addition, the beam losses at extraction must be very well controlled to avoid unacceptably high levels of radiation. To guarantee safe operation and limit radiation, the LSS4 extraction system was thoroughly commissioned with beam during the CNGS commissioning in summer 2006. The obtained results in terms of aperture in the extraction channel, longitudinal loss patterns, extraction losses and radiation during nominal operation are summarised in this note
Radiation protection issues after 20 years of LHC operation
Since November 2009, the LHC commissioning progresses very well, both with
proton and lead beams. It will continue in 2011 and nominal LHC operation is
expected to be attained in 2013. In parallel, plans for various LHC upgrades
are under discussion, suggesting a High-Luminosity (HL) upgrade first and a
High-Energy (HE) upgrade in a later state. Whereas the upgrade in luminosity
would require the modification of only some few key accelerator components like
the inner triplets, the upgrade in beam energy from 7 TeV to 16.5 TeV would
require the exchange of all dipoles and of numerous other accelerator
components. The paper gives an overview of the radiation protection issues
related to the dismantling of LHC components prior to the installation of the
HE-LHC components, i.e. after about 20 years of LHC operation. Two main topics
will be discussed: (i) the exposure of workers to ionizing radiation during the
dismantling of dipoles, inner triplets or collimators and experiments and (ii)
the production, conditioning, interim storage and final disposal of radioactive
waste.Comment: 3 pages, contribution to the EuCARD-AccNet-EuroLumi Workshop: The
High-Energy Large Hadron Collider, Malta, 14 -- 16 Oct 2010; CERN Yellow
Report CERN-2011-003, pp. 134-13
Indirect Self-Modulation Instability Measurement Concept for the AWAKE Proton Beam
AWAKE, the Advanced Proton-Driven Plasma Wakefield Acceleration Experiment,
is a proof-of-principle R&D experiment at CERN using a 400 GeV/c proton beam
from the CERN SPS (longitudinal beam size sigma_z = 12 cm) which will be sent
into a 10 m long plasma section with a nominal density of approx. 7x10^14
atoms/cm3 (plasma wavelength lambda_p = 1.2mm). In this paper we show that by
measuring the time integrated transverse profile of the proton bunch at two
locations downstream of the AWAKE plasma, information about the occurrence of
the self-modulation instability (SMI) can be inferred. In particular we show
that measuring defocused protons with an angle of 1 mrad corresponds to having
electric fields in the order of GV/m and fully developed self-modulation of the
proton bunch. Additionally, by measuring the defocused beam edge of the
self-modulated bunch, information about the growth rate of the instability can
be extracted. If hosing instability occurs, it could be detected by measuring a
non-uniform defocused beam shape with changing radius. Using a 1 mm thick
Chromox scintillation screen for imaging of the self-modulated proton bunch, an
edge resolution of 0.6 mm and hence a SMI saturation point resolution of 1.2 m
can be achieved.Comment: 4 pages, 4 figures, EAAC conference proceeding
Design Considerations for the PS2 Beam Dumps
The different beam dump functionalities required for the proposed PS2 machine and its transfer lines are briefly described, followed by first estimates about the expected beam loads. This data has been taken as input for comparing the different technical options for the dump systems, in particular to simulate the radiological impact for internal or external beam dump options. The numbers derived have been used to help decide which of the feasible technical alternatives are preferred
Dense astrophysical plasmas
We briefly examine the properties of dense plasmas characteristic of the
atmospheres of neutron stars and of the interior of massive white dwarfs. These
astrophysical bodies are natural laboratories to study respectively the problem
of pressure ionization of hydrogen in a strong magnetic field and the
crystallization of the quantum one-component-plasma at finite temperature.Comment: 8 pages, 3 figures, LaTeX using iopart.cls and iopart12.clo
(included). In the special issue "Liquid State Theory: from White Dwarfs to
Colloids" (International Conf. in the honor of Prof. J.-P. Hansen's 60th
birthday, Les Houches, April 1-5, 2002
High Intensity Commissioning of the SPS LSS4 extraction for CNGS
The SPS LSS4 fast extraction system will serve both the anti-clockwise ring of the LHC and the CERN Gran Sasso Neutrino project (CNGS). CNGS requires 2 fast extractions of 10.5 microsecond long batches, 50 milliseconds apart. Each batch will consist of 2.4 × 1013 protons at 400 GeV. These intensities are factor of 10 above the equipment damage limit in case of beam loss. Active (interlock system) and passive protection systems have to be in place to guarantee safe operation and to respect the radiation limits in zones close to the extraction region. In summer 2006 CNGS was commissioned including extraction with high intensity. A thorough setting-up of the CNGS extraction was carried out as part of the CNGS commissioning, including aperture and beam loss measurements, and defining and checking of interlock thresholds for extraction trajectory, beam loss monitors and radiation monitors. The relevant systems and risks are introduced in this paper, the commissioning results are summarised and comparisons with simulation predictions are presented
Hydrogen atom moving across a strong magnetic field: analytical approximations
Analytical approximations are constructed for binding energies,
quantum-mechanical sizes and oscillator strengths of main radiative transitions
of hydrogen atoms arbitrarily moving in magnetic fields 10^{12}-10^{13} G.
Examples of using the obtained approximations for determination of maximum
transverse velocity of an atom and for evaluation of absorption spectra in
magnetic neutron star atmospheres are presented.Comment: 17 pages, 3 figures, 5 tables, LaTeX with IOP style files (included).
In v.2, Fig.1 and Table 5 have been corrected. In v.3, a misprint in the fit
for oscillator strengths, Eq.(21), has been correcte
The H molecular ion: a solution
Combining the WKB expansion at large distances and Perturbation Theory at
small distances it is constructed a compact uniform approximation for
eigenfunctions. For lowest states 1s\si_{g} and 2p\si_{u} this
approximation provides the relative accuracy (5 s.d.) for
any real in eigenfunctions and for total energy it gives 10-11 s.d.
for internuclear distances . Corrections to proposed
approximations are evaluated. Separation constants and the oscillator strength
for the transition 1s\si_{g} \rar 2p\si_{u} are calculated and compared with
existing data.Comment: 16 pages, 4 figures, 6 tables, typos are corrected and small
additions are inserted, to be published at JPB (fast track comm
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