Cargando…
Experimental observation of proton-induced shocks in free surface liquid metal targets
Tests on the response of liquid metal targets to high-power proton beams have been performed at ISOLDE/CERN. During these tests, a so- called thimble geometry and an extended version, the trough, filled with liquid mercury were exposed to a 1.4 GeV proton beam with intensities up to 33 multiplied by...
Autores principales: | , , |
---|---|
Lenguaje: | eng |
Publicado: |
2003
|
Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0022-3115(03)00008-4 http://cds.cern.ch/record/643274 |
Sumario: | Tests on the response of liquid metal targets to high-power proton beams have been performed at ISOLDE/CERN. During these tests, a so- called thimble geometry and an extended version, the trough, filled with liquid mercury were exposed to a 1.4 GeV proton beam with intensities up to 33 multiplied by 10**1**2 protons/pulse. In order to extrapolate the behaviour of a liquid metal target from the kilowatt to the megawatt-scale as required for a neutrino factory, various measurements were carried out with the aim of establishing scaling laws of the splash velocity as a function of beam size, intensity and time structure. The mercury volume was placed in a steel frame, while the region above the mercury level was observed through two quartz windows with a high-speed camera. For the highest intensity available at the PS Booster (33 multiplied by 10**1**2 protons/pulse), the mercury expanded with velocities up to 50 m/s. The splash velocity scaled with the power density of the proton pulse. Increasing the beam size or the pulse duration reduced the velocity. |
---|