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CAS - CERN Accelerator School: Magnets: Hotel Novotel Brugge Centrum, Bruges, Belgium 16 - 25 Jun 2009

These proceedings present the lectures given at the twenty-third specialized course organized by the CERN Accelerator School (CAS), the topic being 'Magnets'. The course was held in Bruges, Belgium, from 16 to 25 June 2009. This is the first time this topic has been selected for a speciali...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Brandt, Daniel
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: CERN 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.5170/CERN-2010-004
http://cds.cern.ch/record/1158462
Descripción
Sumario:These proceedings present the lectures given at the twenty-third specialized course organized by the CERN Accelerator School (CAS), the topic being 'Magnets'. The course was held in Bruges, Belgium, from 16 to 25 June 2009. This is the first time this topic has been selected for a specialized course. Taking into account the number of related applications currently in use in accelerators around the world, but, even more important, the worrying decrease in the corresponding expertise in the different laboratories, it was recognized that such a topic should definitively be incorporated into the CAS series of specialized courses. The specific aim of the course was to introduce the participants to the basics of resistive magnet design and its underlying theoretical concepts. The first part of the school dealt with basic introductory courses such as Maxwell's equations for magnets, beam optics, physics and measurement of magnetic materials, the different types of resistive magnets and their respective performance, an introduction to numerical field computation, and a core lecture on basic magnet design. The second part of the course focused more on quality control, the different measurement systems with their electronics, calibration techniques and respective applications as well as the question of stability and reproducibility. For the first time, in addition to the actual lectures, a Case Study was proposed to the participants. This consisted of eight hours of a guided practical exercise, where the participants had to propose their own design for a magnet fulfilling the boundary conditions corresponding to a combined-function magnet developed for the ALBA Synchrotron Light Source in Barcelona, Spain. This Case Study was enthusiastically received by the participants, who praised both the proposed approach and the amount of practical information acquired from this exercise.