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Split-Field Magnet facility upgraded

The Split Field Magnet (SFM) was the largest spectrometer for particles from beam-beam collisions in the ISR. It could determine particle momenta in a large solid angle, but was designed mainly for the analysis of forward travelling particles.As the magnet was working on the ISR circulating beams, i...

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Autor principal: CERN PhotoLab
Publicado: 1977
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/918062
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author CERN PhotoLab
author_facet CERN PhotoLab
author_sort CERN PhotoLab
collection CERN
description The Split Field Magnet (SFM) was the largest spectrometer for particles from beam-beam collisions in the ISR. It could determine particle momenta in a large solid angle, but was designed mainly for the analysis of forward travelling particles.As the magnet was working on the ISR circulating beams, its magnetic field had to be such as to restore the correct proton orbit.The SFM, therefore, produced zero field at the crossing point and fields of opposite signs upstream and downstream of it and was completed by 2 large and 2 small compensator magnets. The gradient effects were corrected by magnetic channels equipped with movable flaps. The useful magnetic field volume was 28 m3, the induction in the median plane 1.14 T, the gap heigth 1.1 m, the length 10.5 m, the weight about 1000 ton. Concerning the detectors, the SFM was the first massive application of multiwire proportional chambers (about 70000 wires) which filled the main and the large compensator magnets. In 1976 an improved programme was started with two goals: - to have a high density of wire chamber points per trajectory (to be combined with a new software) - to include particle identification by means of Cerenkov counters and time- of-flight hodoscopes. The programme was completed at the time of the photo.
id cern-918062
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
publishDate 1977
record_format invenio
spelling cern-9180622019-09-30T06:29:59Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/918062CERN PhotoLabSplit-Field Magnet facility upgradedExperiments and DetectorsThe Split Field Magnet (SFM) was the largest spectrometer for particles from beam-beam collisions in the ISR. It could determine particle momenta in a large solid angle, but was designed mainly for the analysis of forward travelling particles.As the magnet was working on the ISR circulating beams, its magnetic field had to be such as to restore the correct proton orbit.The SFM, therefore, produced zero field at the crossing point and fields of opposite signs upstream and downstream of it and was completed by 2 large and 2 small compensator magnets. The gradient effects were corrected by magnetic channels equipped with movable flaps. The useful magnetic field volume was 28 m3, the induction in the median plane 1.14 T, the gap heigth 1.1 m, the length 10.5 m, the weight about 1000 ton. Concerning the detectors, the SFM was the first massive application of multiwire proportional chambers (about 70000 wires) which filled the main and the large compensator magnets. In 1976 an improved programme was started with two goals: - to have a high density of wire chamber points per trajectory (to be combined with a new software) - to include particle identification by means of Cerenkov counters and time- of-flight hodoscopes. The programme was completed at the time of the photo.CERN-PHOTO-7707176oai:cds.cern.ch:9180621977
spellingShingle Experiments and Detectors
CERN PhotoLab
Split-Field Magnet facility upgraded
title Split-Field Magnet facility upgraded
title_full Split-Field Magnet facility upgraded
title_fullStr Split-Field Magnet facility upgraded
title_full_unstemmed Split-Field Magnet facility upgraded
title_short Split-Field Magnet facility upgraded
title_sort split-field magnet facility upgraded
topic Experiments and Detectors
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/918062
work_keys_str_mv AT cernphotolab splitfieldmagnetfacilityupgraded