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RHIC performance for FY2014 heavy ion run

Authors :
Robert-Demolaize, Guillaume
Alessi, James
Bai, Mei
Beebe, Edward
Beebe-Wang, Joanne
Belomestnykh, Sergey
Blackler, Ian
Blaskiewicz, Michael
Brennan, Joseph
Brown, Kevin
Bruno, Donald
Butler, John
Connolly, Roger
D'Ottavio, Ted
Drees, Kirsten
Fedotov, Alexei
Fischer, Wolfram
Gardner, Chris
Gassner, David
Gu, Xiaofeng
Harvey, Margaret
Hayes, Thomas
Huang, Haixin
Ingrassia, Peter
Jamilkowski, James
Kling, Nicholas
Laster, Jonathan
Liu, Chuyu
Luo, Yun
Maffei, David
Makdisi, Yousef
Mapes, Michael
Marr, Gregory
Marusic, Al
Méot, Francois
Mernick, Kevin
Michnoff, Robert
Minty, Michiko
Montag, Christoph
Morris, John
Naylor, Christopher
Nemesure, Seth
Pikin, Alexander
Pile, Philip
Ptitsyn, Vadim
Raparia, Deepak
Roser, Thomas
Sampson, Paul
Sandberg, Jon
Schoefer, Vincent
Schultheiss, Carl
Severino, Freddy
Shrey, Travis
Smith, Kevin
Tepikian, Steven
Thieberger, Peter
Trbojevic, Dejan
Tuozzolo, Joseph
Van Kuik, Brian
Wilinski, Michelle
Wu, Qiong
Zaltsman, Alex
Zeno, Keith
Zhang, Wu
Source :
Scopus-Elsevier

Abstract

After running uranium-uranium and copper-gold collisions in 2012, the high energy heavy ion run of the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC) for Fiscal Year 14 (Run14) is back to gold-gold (Au-Au) collisions at 100 GeV/nucleon. Following the level of performance achieved in Run12, RHIC is still looking to push both instantaneous and integrated luminosity goals. To that end, a new 56 MHz superconducting RF cavity was installed and commissioned, designed to keep ions in one RF bucket and improve luminosity by allowing a smaller beta function at the interaction point (IP) due to a reduced hourglass effect. The following presents an overview of these changes and reviews the performance of the collider.<br />Proceedings of the 5th Int. Particle Accelerator Conf., IPAC2014, Dresden, Germany

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scopus-Elsevier
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....11cfb8ed83488460a9053c3a8d3a0fd1