1,383 research outputs found
Machine Protection and Operation for LHC
Since 2010 the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is the accelerator with the
highest stored energy per beam, with a record of 140 MJ at a beam energy of 4
TeV, almost a factor of 50 higher than other accelerators. With such a high
stored energy, machine protection aspects set the boundary conditions for
operation during all phases of the machine cycle. Only the low-intensity
commissioning beams can be considered as relatively safe. This document
discusses the interplay of machine operation and machine protection at the LHC,
from commissioning to regular operation.Comment: 25 pages, contribution to the 2014 Joint International Accelerator
School: Beam Loss and Accelerator Protection, Newport Beach, CA, USA , 5-14
Nov 201
Response Matrix and Dispersion Study of the TI2 Transfer Line
The optics of the TI2 transfer line was studied with beam trajectories during its commissioning in October 2007. The optics and the quality of the steering magnets and of the beam position monitors were determined from steering magnet response measurements. A strength error of the main quadrupoles was identified with this technique. The dispersion was measured and found to be close to the nominal value
Study of the TI 8 optics and beam stability based on beam trajectories
The optics and the stability of the SPS-LHC transfer line TI 8 was studied with beam trajectories during its commissioning in October 2004. Steering magnet response measurements were used to analyze the quality of the steering magnets and of the beam position monitors. A simultaneous fit of the quadrupole strengths was used to search for setting or calibration errors. A large setting error of a quadrupole was identified with this technique, as well as a 1% phase advance error in the vertical plane. Residual coupling between the planes was evaluated using high statistics samples of trajectories. The same high statistics sample were analysed using the Model Independent Analysis technique to understand possible sources of trajectory movements. The transfer line was found to be very stable and the dominant source of position jitter seems to be due to the ripple of the extraction septum
ABS at the SPS and LEP
LEP and SPS are large circular accelerators equiped with more than 100 orbit monitors and corrector dipoles in each plane. At the SPS orbit control is mainly used to minimize beam losses, while for LEP the orbit is a crucial parameter for lumonisity performance. Various algorithms and strategies have been developped for LEP to find "Golden Orbits" that optimize the dispersion and the beam emittances. Despite those differences, the two machines share a large amount of control software for beam steering. The experience and problems related to beam steering at such large machines will be presented. The limitations of the orbit control system sharing between the two machines will be reviewed
Protection Controls for High Power Accelerators
The next generation hadron accelerators will operate with MW beams or store beams with an energy of many 100 MJ. Such accelerators must be protected by fast and very reliable interlock systems to avoid damage due to uncontrolled beam loss. Machine protection will constrain operation, but some operational flexibility is still required for commissioning and performance optimization. This is a substantial challenge for control systems and application programs. New tools are developed to face those challenges: critical settings management, software interlocks, role based access to equipment, automatic accelerator mode recognition etc. This talk presents some of the challenges and tools. Experience with novel approaches are discussed
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