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An Early Beam Separation Scheme for the LHC Luminosity Upgrade

The high nominal luminosity of the LHC requires a large number of bunches spaced by about 7.5 m. To prevent more than one head-on collision in each interaction region, a crossing angle of 0.285 mrad is necessary. A side effect of this crossing angle is the increase of the effective transverse beam c...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Koutchouk, Jean-Pierre, Sterbini, G
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2006
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/977795
Descripción
Sumario:The high nominal luminosity of the LHC requires a large number of bunches spaced by about 7.5 m. To prevent more than one head-on collision in each interaction region, a crossing angle of 0.285 mrad is necessary. A side effect of this crossing angle is the increase of the effective transverse beam cross-section, thereby decreasing the luminosity by some 16%. For the LHC luminosity upgrade, depending on the focusing scenarios, this loss significantly increases and largely offsets the potential gain of a stronger focusing. In this paper we analyze a strategy to circumvent this difficulty, based on an early beam separation using small dipoles placed at a few meters from the interaction point. From the beam dynamics point of view, the essential constraint is to control the long-range beam–beam interactions in a scenario where the normalized beam separation is not constant.