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Future Hadron Colliders

Plans for future hadron colliders are presented, and accelerator physics and engineering aspects common to these machines are discussed. The Tevatron is presented first, starting with a summary of the achievements in Run IB which finished in 1995, followed by performance predictions for Run II which...

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Autor principal: Keil, Eberhard
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 1997
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/334600
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author Keil, Eberhard
author_facet Keil, Eberhard
author_sort Keil, Eberhard
collection CERN
description Plans for future hadron colliders are presented, and accelerator physics and engineering aspects common to these machines are discussed. The Tevatron is presented first, starting with a summary of the achievements in Run IB which finished in 1995, followed by performance predictions for Run II which will start in 1999, and the TeV33 project, aiming for a peak luminosity $L ~ 1 (nbs)^-1$. The next machine is the Large Hadron Collider LHC at CERN, planned to come into operation in 2005. The last set of machines are Very Large Hadron Colliders which might be constructed after the LHC. Three variants are presented: Two machines with a beam energy of 50 TeV, and dipole fields of 1.8 and 12.6 T in the arcs, and a machine with 100 TeV and 12 T. The discussion of accelerator physics aspects includes the beam-beam effect, bunch spacing and parasitic collisions, and the crossing angle. The discussion of the engineering aspects covers synchrotron radiation and stored energy in the beams, the power in the debris of the particle collisions, ground motion, and concepts for reducing the cost per TeV of future hadron colliders.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 1997
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spelling cern-3346002023-05-31T13:22:07Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/334600engKeil, EberhardFuture Hadron CollidersAccelerators and Storage RingsPlans for future hadron colliders are presented, and accelerator physics and engineering aspects common to these machines are discussed. The Tevatron is presented first, starting with a summary of the achievements in Run IB which finished in 1995, followed by performance predictions for Run II which will start in 1999, and the TeV33 project, aiming for a peak luminosity $L ~ 1 (nbs)^-1$. The next machine is the Large Hadron Collider LHC at CERN, planned to come into operation in 2005. The last set of machines are Very Large Hadron Colliders which might be constructed after the LHC. Three variants are presented: Two machines with a beam energy of 50 TeV, and dipole fields of 1.8 and 12.6 T in the arcs, and a machine with 100 TeV and 12 T. The discussion of accelerator physics aspects includes the beam-beam effect, bunch spacing and parasitic collisions, and the crossing angle. The discussion of the engineering aspects covers synchrotron radiation and stored energy in the beams, the power in the debris of the particle collisions, ground motion, and concepts for reducing the cost per TeV of future hadron colliders.LHC-Project-Report-138CERN-LHC-Project-Report-138oai:cds.cern.ch:3346001997-09-15
spellingShingle Accelerators and Storage Rings
Keil, Eberhard
Future Hadron Colliders
title Future Hadron Colliders
title_full Future Hadron Colliders
title_fullStr Future Hadron Colliders
title_full_unstemmed Future Hadron Colliders
title_short Future Hadron Colliders
title_sort future hadron colliders
topic Accelerators and Storage Rings
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/334600
work_keys_str_mv AT keileberhard futurehadroncolliders