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Protection of the CERN Large Hadron Collider

Authors :
Jorg Wenninger
Benjamin Todd
B Goddard
Eva Barbara Holzer
M Zerlauth
Bernd Dehning
Reiner Denz
B. Puccio
Verena Kain
Jan Uythoven
R. Schmidt
Ralph Assmann
E. Carlier
Publication Year :
2006

Abstract

TheLargeHadronCollider(LHC)atCERNwillcollidetwocounter- rotating proton beams, each with an energy of 7TeV. The energy stored in the superconducting magnet system will exceed 10GJ, and each beam has a stored energy of 362MJ which could cause major damage to accelerator equipment in the case of uncontrolled beam loss. Safe operation of the LHC will therefore rely on a complex system for equipment protection. The systems for protection of the superconducting magnets in case of quench must be fully operational before powering the magnets. For safe injection of the 450GeV beam into the LHC, beam absorbers must be in their correct positions and specific procedures must be applied. Requirements for safe operation throughout the cycle necessitate early detection of failures within the equipment, and active monitoring of the beam with fast and reliable beam instrumentation, mainly beam loss monitors (BLM). When operating with circulating beams, the time constant for beam loss after a failureextendsfrom ≈mstoafewminutes—failuresmustbedetectedsufficiently early and transmitted to the beam interlock system that triggers a beam dump. It is essential that the beams are properly extracted on to the dump blocks at the end of a fill and in case of emergency, since the beam dump blocks are the only elements of the LHC that can withstand the impact of the full beam.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....893ba477a7d2dc43f69cd1c1d9397286