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Evaluation of Beam Losses and Energy Depositions for a Possible Phase II Design for LHC Collimation

The LHC beams are designed to have high stability and to be stored for many hours. The nominal beam intensity lifetime is expected to be of the order of 20h. The Phase II collimation system has to be able to handle particle losses in stable physics conditions at 7 TeV in order to avoid beam aborts a...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Lari, L, Assmann, Ralph Wolfgang, Bracco, C, Brugger, M, Cerutti, F, Doyle, E, Ferrari, A, Keller, L, Lundgren, S, Mauri, M, Redaelli, S, Sarchiapone, L, Smith, J, Vlachoudis, V, Weiler, T
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/1123684
Descripción
Sumario:The LHC beams are designed to have high stability and to be stored for many hours. The nominal beam intensity lifetime is expected to be of the order of 20h. The Phase II collimation system has to be able to handle particle losses in stable physics conditions at 7 TeV in order to avoid beam aborts and to allow correction of parameters and restoration to nominal conditions. Monte Carlo simulations are needed in order to evaluate the behavior of metallic high-Z collimators during operation scenarios using a realistic distribution of losses, which is a mix of the three limiting halo cases. Moreover, the consequences in the IR7 insertion of the worst (case) abnormal beam loss are evaluated. The case refers to a spontaneous trigger of the horizontal extraction kicker at top energy, when Phase II collimators are used. These studies are an important input for engineering design of the collimation Phase II system and for the evaluation of their effect on adjacent components. The goal is to build collimators that can survive the expected conditions during LHC stable physics runs, in order to avoid quenches of the SC magnets and to protect other LHC equipments.