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Experimental Demonstration of β* Leveling at the LHC
The HL-LHC project foresees to boost the LHC peak luminosity beyond the capabilities of the LHC experimental detectors. Leveling the luminosity down to a constant value that is sustainable for the experiments is therefore the operational baseline of HL-LHC. Various luminosity leveling techniques are...
Autores principales: | , , , |
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Lenguaje: | eng |
Publicado: |
2016
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://dx.doi.org/10.18429/JACoW-IPAC2016-TUPMW013 http://cds.cern.ch/record/2207366 |
Sumario: | The HL-LHC project foresees to boost the LHC peak luminosity beyond the capabilities of the LHC experimental detectors. Leveling the luminosity down to a constant value that is sustainable for the experiments is therefore the operational baseline of HL-LHC. Various luminosity leveling techniques are available at the LHC. Leveling by adjusting β^{*}, the betatron function at the interaction point, to maintain a constant luminosity is favorable because the beams remain head-on which provides optimal stability from the point of view of collective effects. Smooth leveling by β^{*} requires however excellent control of the beam orbits and beam losses in the interaction regions since the beam offsets should not vary by more than around one r.m.s. beam size during the process. This leveling scheme has been successfully tested and experimentally demonstrated during the LHC machine development program in 2015. This paper presents results on luminosity leveling over a β^{*} range from 10 m to 0.8 m and provides an outlook on future developments and use of this technique at the LHC. |
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