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Beam Induced Hydrodynamic Tunneling in the Future Circular Collider Components

A future circular collider (FCC) has been proposed as a post-Large Hadron Collider accelerator, to explore particle physics in unprecedented energy ranges. The FCC is a circular collider in a tunnel with a circumference of 80–100 km. The FCC study puts an emphasis on proton-proton high-energy and el...

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Autores principales: Tahir, Naeem Ahmad, Burkart, Florian, Schmidt, Rudiger, Shutov, A, Wollmann, Daniel, Piriz, A
Publicado: 2016
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevAccelBeams.19.081002
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2215387
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author Tahir, Naeem Ahmad
Burkart, Florian
Schmidt, Rudiger
Shutov, A
Wollmann, Daniel
Piriz, A
author_facet Tahir, Naeem Ahmad
Burkart, Florian
Schmidt, Rudiger
Shutov, A
Wollmann, Daniel
Piriz, A
author_sort Tahir, Naeem Ahmad
collection CERN
description A future circular collider (FCC) has been proposed as a post-Large Hadron Collider accelerator, to explore particle physics in unprecedented energy ranges. The FCC is a circular collider in a tunnel with a circumference of 80–100 km. The FCC study puts an emphasis on proton-proton high-energy and electron-positron high-intensity frontier machines. A proton-electron interaction scenario is also examined. According to the nominal FCC parameters, each of the 50 TeV proton beams will carry an amount of 8.5 GJ energy that is equivalent to the kinetic energy of an Airbus A380 (560 t) at a typical speed of 850  km/h . Safety of operation with such extremely energetic beams is an important issue, as off-nominal beam loss can cause serious damage to the accelerator and detector components with a severe impact on the accelerator environment. In order to estimate the consequences of an accident with the full beam accidently deflected into equipment, we have carried out numerical simulations of interaction of a FCC beam with a solid copper target using an energy-deposition code (FLUKA) and a 2D hydrodynamic code (BIG2) iteratively. These simulations show that, although the penetration length of a single FCC proton and its shower in solid copper is about 1.5 m, the full FCC beam will penetrate up to about 350 m into the target because of the “hydrodynamic tunneling.” These simulations also show that a significant part of the target is converted into high-energy-density matter. We also discuss this interesting aspect of this study.
id cern-2215387
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
publishDate 2016
record_format invenio
spelling cern-22153872022-08-10T12:47:00Zdoi:10.1103/PhysRevAccelBeams.19.081002http://cds.cern.ch/record/2215387Tahir, Naeem AhmadBurkart, FlorianSchmidt, RudigerShutov, AWollmann, DanielPiriz, ABeam Induced Hydrodynamic Tunneling in the Future Circular Collider ComponentsAccelerators and Storage RingsA future circular collider (FCC) has been proposed as a post-Large Hadron Collider accelerator, to explore particle physics in unprecedented energy ranges. The FCC is a circular collider in a tunnel with a circumference of 80–100 km. The FCC study puts an emphasis on proton-proton high-energy and electron-positron high-intensity frontier machines. A proton-electron interaction scenario is also examined. According to the nominal FCC parameters, each of the 50 TeV proton beams will carry an amount of 8.5 GJ energy that is equivalent to the kinetic energy of an Airbus A380 (560 t) at a typical speed of 850  km/h . Safety of operation with such extremely energetic beams is an important issue, as off-nominal beam loss can cause serious damage to the accelerator and detector components with a severe impact on the accelerator environment. In order to estimate the consequences of an accident with the full beam accidently deflected into equipment, we have carried out numerical simulations of interaction of a FCC beam with a solid copper target using an energy-deposition code (FLUKA) and a 2D hydrodynamic code (BIG2) iteratively. These simulations show that, although the penetration length of a single FCC proton and its shower in solid copper is about 1.5 m, the full FCC beam will penetrate up to about 350 m into the target because of the “hydrodynamic tunneling.” These simulations also show that a significant part of the target is converted into high-energy-density matter. We also discuss this interesting aspect of this study.CERN-ACC-2016-0115oai:cds.cern.ch:22153872016-08-03
spellingShingle Accelerators and Storage Rings
Tahir, Naeem Ahmad
Burkart, Florian
Schmidt, Rudiger
Shutov, A
Wollmann, Daniel
Piriz, A
Beam Induced Hydrodynamic Tunneling in the Future Circular Collider Components
title Beam Induced Hydrodynamic Tunneling in the Future Circular Collider Components
title_full Beam Induced Hydrodynamic Tunneling in the Future Circular Collider Components
title_fullStr Beam Induced Hydrodynamic Tunneling in the Future Circular Collider Components
title_full_unstemmed Beam Induced Hydrodynamic Tunneling in the Future Circular Collider Components
title_short Beam Induced Hydrodynamic Tunneling in the Future Circular Collider Components
title_sort beam induced hydrodynamic tunneling in the future circular collider components
topic Accelerators and Storage Rings
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1103/PhysRevAccelBeams.19.081002
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2215387
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AT shutova beaminducedhydrodynamictunnelinginthefuturecircularcollidercomponents
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