Cargando…
Accelerator physics concept for upgraded LHC collimation performance
The LHC collimation system is implemented in phases, in view of the required extrapolation by 2-3 orders of magnitude beyond Tevatron and HERA experience in stored energy. All available simulations predict that the LHC proton beam intensity with the "Phase I" collimation system may be limi...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , |
---|---|
Lenguaje: | eng |
Publicado: |
2009
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | http://cds.cern.ch/record/1212926 |
Sumario: | The LHC collimation system is implemented in phases, in view of the required extrapolation by 2-3 orders of magnitude beyond Tevatron and HERA experience in stored energy. All available simulations predict that the LHC proton beam intensity with the "Phase I" collimation system may be limited by the impedance of the collimators or cleaning efficiency. Maximum efficiency requires collimator materials very close to the beam, generating the dominant resistive wall impedance in the LHC. Above a certain intensity the beam is unstable. On the other hand, even if collimators are set very close to the beam, the achievable cleaning efficiency is predicted to be inadequate, requiring either beam stability beyond specifications or reduced intensity. The accelerator physics concept for upgrading cleaning efficiency, for both proton and heavy ion beams, and reducing collimator-related impedance is described. Besides the "Phase II" secondary collimators, new collimators are required in a few super-conducting regions. |
---|