Back to Search Start Over

Designing and building a collimation system for the high-intensity LHC beam

Authors :
Brennan Goddard
F. Ruggiero
Bernd Dehning
Arnaud Ferrari
E. Chiaveri
P. Sievers
R. Schmidt
J. Wenninger
M. Brugger
R. Abmann
Verena Kain
Helmut Burkhardt
O. Aberle
M. Jimenez
D. Kaltchev
Jan Uythoven
L. Bruno
J.B. Jeanneret
I. Baishev
Mike Lamont
Vasilis Vlachoudis
L. Vos
Source :
Scopus-Elsevier

Abstract

The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) will collide proton beams at 14 TeV c.m. with unprecedented stored intensities. The transverse energy density in the beam will be about three orders of magnitude larger than previously handled in the Tevatron or in HERA, if compared at the locations of the betatron collimators. In particular, the population in the beam halo is much above the quench level of the superconducting magnets. Two LHC insertions are dedicated to collimation with the design goals of preventing magnet quenches in regular operation and preventing damage to accelerator components in case of irregular beam loss. We discuss the challenges for designing and building a collimation system that withstands the high power LHC beam and provides the required high cleaning efficiency. Plans for future work are outlined.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Scopus-Elsevier
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4d4dca51431c7a34e4d8758d0b0a00b7