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Heavy-Ion Collimation at the Large Hadron Collider: Simulations and Measurements
The CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC) stores and collides proton and $^{208}$Pb$^{82+}$ beams of unprecedented energy and intensity. Thousands of superconducting magnets, operated at 1.9 K, guide the very intense and energetic particle beams, which have a large potential for destruction. This implies...
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Lenguaje: | eng |
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2017
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Acceso en línea: | http://cds.cern.ch/record/2241364 |
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author | Hermes, Pascal Dominik |
author_facet | Hermes, Pascal Dominik |
author_sort | Hermes, Pascal Dominik |
collection | CERN |
description | The CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC) stores and collides proton and $^{208}$Pb$^{82+}$ beams of unprecedented energy and intensity. Thousands of superconducting magnets, operated at 1.9 K, guide the very intense and energetic particle beams, which have a large potential for destruction. This implies the demand for a multi-stage collimation system to provide protection from beam-induced quenches or even hardware damage. In heavy-ion operation, ion fragments with significant rigidity offsets can still scatter out of the collimation system. When they irradiate the superconducting LHC magnets, the latter risk to quench (lose their superconducting property). These secondary collimation losses can potentially impose a limitation for the stored heavy-ion beam energy. Therefore, their distribution in the LHC needs to be understood by sophisticated simulations. Such simulation tools must accurately simulate the particle motion of many different nuclides in the magnetic LHC lattice and simulate their interaction with the collimators. Previous simulation tools used simplified models for the simulation of particle-matter interaction and showed discrepancies compared to the measured loss patterns. This thesis describes the development and application of improved heavy-ion collimation simulation tools. Two different approaches are presented to provide these functionalities. In the first presented tool, called STIER, fragmentation at the primary collimator is simulated with the Monte-Carlo event generator FLUKA. The ion fragments scattered out of the primary collimator are subsequently tracked as protons with ion-equivalent rigidities in the existing proton tracking tool SixTrack. This approach was used to prepare the collimator settings for the 2015 LHC heavy-ion run and its predictions allowed reducing undesired losses. More accurate simulation results are obtained with the second presented simulation tool, in which SixTrack is extended to track arbitrary heavy ions. This new tracking tool, called hiSixTrack, is actively coupled to FLUKA to simulate the interaction of heavy ions with matter. The new software is used to study the collimation performance for future LHC configurations. The simulation results are combined with experimental input from a quench test experiment to deduce potential intensity limitations and define required upgrades of the collimation system for High Luminosity LHC. |
id | cern-2241364 |
institution | Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear |
language | eng |
publishDate | 2017 |
record_format | invenio |
spelling | cern-22413642019-09-30T06:29:59Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2241364engHermes, Pascal DominikHeavy-Ion Collimation at the Large Hadron Collider: Simulations and MeasurementsAccelerators and Storage RingsThe CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC) stores and collides proton and $^{208}$Pb$^{82+}$ beams of unprecedented energy and intensity. Thousands of superconducting magnets, operated at 1.9 K, guide the very intense and energetic particle beams, which have a large potential for destruction. This implies the demand for a multi-stage collimation system to provide protection from beam-induced quenches or even hardware damage. In heavy-ion operation, ion fragments with significant rigidity offsets can still scatter out of the collimation system. When they irradiate the superconducting LHC magnets, the latter risk to quench (lose their superconducting property). These secondary collimation losses can potentially impose a limitation for the stored heavy-ion beam energy. Therefore, their distribution in the LHC needs to be understood by sophisticated simulations. Such simulation tools must accurately simulate the particle motion of many different nuclides in the magnetic LHC lattice and simulate their interaction with the collimators. Previous simulation tools used simplified models for the simulation of particle-matter interaction and showed discrepancies compared to the measured loss patterns. This thesis describes the development and application of improved heavy-ion collimation simulation tools. Two different approaches are presented to provide these functionalities. In the first presented tool, called STIER, fragmentation at the primary collimator is simulated with the Monte-Carlo event generator FLUKA. The ion fragments scattered out of the primary collimator are subsequently tracked as protons with ion-equivalent rigidities in the existing proton tracking tool SixTrack. This approach was used to prepare the collimator settings for the 2015 LHC heavy-ion run and its predictions allowed reducing undesired losses. More accurate simulation results are obtained with the second presented simulation tool, in which SixTrack is extended to track arbitrary heavy ions. This new tracking tool, called hiSixTrack, is actively coupled to FLUKA to simulate the interaction of heavy ions with matter. The new software is used to study the collimation performance for future LHC configurations. The simulation results are combined with experimental input from a quench test experiment to deduce potential intensity limitations and define required upgrades of the collimation system for High Luminosity LHC.CERN-THESIS-2016-230oai:cds.cern.ch:22413642017-01-12T14:44:30Z |
spellingShingle | Accelerators and Storage Rings Hermes, Pascal Dominik Heavy-Ion Collimation at the Large Hadron Collider: Simulations and Measurements |
title | Heavy-Ion Collimation at the Large Hadron Collider: Simulations and Measurements |
title_full | Heavy-Ion Collimation at the Large Hadron Collider: Simulations and Measurements |
title_fullStr | Heavy-Ion Collimation at the Large Hadron Collider: Simulations and Measurements |
title_full_unstemmed | Heavy-Ion Collimation at the Large Hadron Collider: Simulations and Measurements |
title_short | Heavy-Ion Collimation at the Large Hadron Collider: Simulations and Measurements |
title_sort | heavy-ion collimation at the large hadron collider: simulations and measurements |
topic | Accelerators and Storage Rings |
url | http://cds.cern.ch/record/2241364 |
work_keys_str_mv | AT hermespascaldominik heavyioncollimationatthelargehadroncollidersimulationsandmeasurements |