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First Experiences of Beam Presence Detection Based on Dedicated Beam Position Monitors
High intensity particle beam injection into the LHC is only permitted when a low intensity pilot beam is already circulating in the LHC. This requirement addresses some of the risks associated with high intensity injection, and is enforced by a so-called Beam Presence Flag (BPF) system which is...
Autores principales: | , , , |
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Lenguaje: | eng |
Publicado: |
2011
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Acceso en línea: | http://cds.cern.ch/record/1562645 |
_version_ | 1780930723538010112 |
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author | Jalal, A Gabourin, S Gasior, M Todd, B |
author_facet | Jalal, A Gabourin, S Gasior, M Todd, B |
author_sort | Jalal, A |
collection | CERN |
description | High intensity particle beam injection into the LHC is only permitted when a low intensity pilot beam is already circulating in the LHC. This requirement addresses some of the risks associated with high intensity injection, and is enforced by a so-called Beam Presence Flag (BPF) system which is part of the interlock chain between the LHC and its injector complex. For the 2010 LHC run, the detection of the presence of this pilot beam was implemented using the LHC Fast Beam Current Transformer (FBCT) system. However, the primary function of the FBCTs, that is reliable measurement of beam currents, did not allow the BPF system to satisfy all quality requirements of the LHC Machine Protection System (MPS). Safety requirements associated with high intensity injections triggered the development of a dedicated system, based on Beam Position Monitors (BPM). This system was meant to work first in parallel with the FBCT BPF system and eventually replace it. At the end of 2010 and in 2011, this new BPF implementation based on BPMs was designed, built, tested and deployed. This paper reviews both the FBCT and BPM implementation of the BPF system, outlining the changes during the transition period. The paper briefly describes the testing methods, focuses on the results obtained from the tests performed during the end of 2010 LHC run and shows the changes made for the BPM BPF system deployment in LHC in 2011. |
id | cern-1562645 |
institution | Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear |
language | eng |
publishDate | 2011 |
record_format | invenio |
spelling | cern-15626452022-08-17T13:30:33Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1562645engJalal, AGabourin, SGasior, MTodd, BFirst Experiences of Beam Presence Detection Based on Dedicated Beam Position MonitorsHigh intensity particle beam injection into the LHC is only permitted when a low intensity pilot beam is already circulating in the LHC. This requirement addresses some of the risks associated with high intensity injection, and is enforced by a so-called Beam Presence Flag (BPF) system which is part of the interlock chain between the LHC and its injector complex. For the 2010 LHC run, the detection of the presence of this pilot beam was implemented using the LHC Fast Beam Current Transformer (FBCT) system. However, the primary function of the FBCTs, that is reliable measurement of beam currents, did not allow the BPF system to satisfy all quality requirements of the LHC Machine Protection System (MPS). Safety requirements associated with high intensity injections triggered the development of a dedicated system, based on Beam Position Monitors (BPM). This system was meant to work first in parallel with the FBCT BPF system and eventually replace it. At the end of 2010 and in 2011, this new BPF implementation based on BPMs was designed, built, tested and deployed. This paper reviews both the FBCT and BPM implementation of the BPF system, outlining the changes during the transition period. The paper briefly describes the testing methods, focuses on the results obtained from the tests performed during the end of 2010 LHC run and shows the changes made for the BPM BPF system deployment in LHC in 2011.oai:cds.cern.ch:15626452011 |
spellingShingle | Jalal, A Gabourin, S Gasior, M Todd, B First Experiences of Beam Presence Detection Based on Dedicated Beam Position Monitors |
title | First Experiences of Beam Presence Detection Based on Dedicated Beam Position Monitors |
title_full | First Experiences of Beam Presence Detection Based on Dedicated Beam Position Monitors |
title_fullStr | First Experiences of Beam Presence Detection Based on Dedicated Beam Position Monitors |
title_full_unstemmed | First Experiences of Beam Presence Detection Based on Dedicated Beam Position Monitors |
title_short | First Experiences of Beam Presence Detection Based on Dedicated Beam Position Monitors |
title_sort | first experiences of beam presence detection based on dedicated beam position monitors |
url | http://cds.cern.ch/record/1562645 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT jalala firstexperiencesofbeampresencedetectionbasedondedicatedbeampositionmonitors AT gabourins firstexperiencesofbeampresencedetectionbasedondedicatedbeampositionmonitors AT gasiorm firstexperiencesofbeampresencedetectionbasedondedicatedbeampositionmonitors AT toddb firstexperiencesofbeampresencedetectionbasedondedicatedbeampositionmonitors |