The protection of accelerator equipment is as old as accelerator technology
and was for many years related to high-power equipment. Examples are the
protection of powering equipment from overheating (magnets, power converters,
high-current cables), of superconducting magnets from damage after a quench and
of klystrons. The protection of equipment from beam accidents is more recent.
It is related to the increasing beam power of high-power proton accelerators
such as ISIS, SNS, ESS and the PSI cyclotron, to the emission of synchrotron
light by electron-positron accelerators and FELs, and to the increase of energy
stored in the beam (in particular for hadron colliders such as LHC). Designing
a machine protection system requires an excellent understanding of accelerator
physics and operation to anticipate possible failures that could lead to
damage. Machine protection includes beam and equipment monitoring, a system to
safely stop beam operation (e.g. dumping the beam or stopping the beam at low
energy) and an interlock system providing the glue between these systems. The
most recent accelerator, the LHC, will operate with about 3x10 14 protons per
beam, corresponding to an energy stored in each beam of 360 MJ. This energy can
cause massive damage to accelerator equipment in case of uncontrolled beam
loss, and a single accident damaging vital parts of the accelerator could
interrupt operation for years. This article provides an overview of the
requirements for protection of accelerator equipment and introduces the various
protection systems. Examples are mainly from LHC, SNS and ESS.Comment: 23 pages, contribution to the CAS - CERN Accelerator School: Advanced
Accelerator Physics Course, Trondheim, Norway, 18-29 Aug 201