* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download ISIS Related Issues for MICE
Super-Kamiokande wikipedia , lookup
Standard Model wikipedia , lookup
Cross section (physics) wikipedia , lookup
Faster-than-light neutrino anomaly wikipedia , lookup
ALICE experiment wikipedia , lookup
Large Hadron Collider wikipedia , lookup
Electron scattering wikipedia , lookup
ATLAS experiment wikipedia , lookup
ISIS Related Issues for MICE Adam Dobbs Proton Accelerator Development Meeting, RAL 24th March 2011 24/03/2011 A. Dobbs 1 Contents • Introduction to MICE – – – – Purpose Ionisation Cooling The Cooling Channel MICE in ISIS and the Beamline • ISIS beam loss measurement • ISIS beam loss and MICE particle rate – Beam loss and target depth – Beam loss and particle rate – Beam loss and muon rate • Conclusion 24/03/2011 A. Dobbs 2 Muon Ionisation Cooling Experiment • Purpose: investigate the feasibility of ionisation cooling, for application to a future Neutrino Factory or Muon Collider. • Neutrino Factory → Precision measurements of neutrino oscillations • Muon Collider → Multi-TeV lepton – anti-lepton collisions 24/03/2011 A. Dobbs 3 Ionisation Cooling - Why • An NF muon beam requires cooling (emittance reduction) in order to fit efficiently within the acceptance of downstream acceleration components • An MC also requires small interaction points to increase luminosity • Muon lifetime of 2.2μs to fast to permit traditional cooling techniques → ionisation cooling 24/03/2011 A. Dobbs 4 Ionisation Cooling - How • Pass the beam through an absorber e.g. liquid hydrogen, lithium hydride • The particle beam ionises the medium, the beam particles losing energy and momentum in all directions • Re-accelerate the beam in the beamline direction (z) only, using a radio frequency electric field v LiH2 24/03/2011 RF v A. Dobbs v 5 MICE Step VI 24/03/2011 A. Dobbs 6 MICE in ISIS and the Beamline 24/03/2011 A. Dobbs 7 The MICE target • A 24 coil stator is used to drive a shuttle, consisting of a titanium shaft upon which are mounted permanent magnets to couple to the field produced by the stator • The lower end of the shaft takes the form of a hollow cylinder, which is pulsed into the ISIS beam by the stator • Upper and lower bearings are used to maintain the transverse position of the shaft. 24/03/2011 A. Dobbs 8 ISIS Beam loss • 39 argon gas ionisation chambers around the ring • Use the summed signal of the four sector 7 BLMs, integrate over the whole 10ms ISIS cycle (V.ms) • Slightly different gauge used than ISIS (smaller by ∼ 1/3 ) Increased beam loss levels raise the concerns over machine activation levels inhibiting hands-on maintenance 24/03/2011 A. Dobbs 9 Beam Loss and Target Depth 24/03/2011 A. Dobbs 10 Beam Loss and MICE Particle Rate • Linear correlation • Constant offset • Averaged data – few hundred pulses per point • Pion optics 24/03/2011 A. Dobbs 11 Beam Loss and MICE Particle Rate Spill-by-spill data (no averaging) -ve π → μ optics +ve π → μ optics Still linear 24/03/2011 A. Dobbs 12 Beam Loss and MICE Particle Rate +ve π → μ optics, “10V study” Not linear at low beam loss... not to worry, believed to be caused by a mis-configured gate 24/03/2011 A. Dobbs 13 ...but what about Muons? • Use Time-ofFlight to perform Particle Identification • -ve π → μ optics 24/03/2011 A. Dobbs 14 Beam Loss and Muon Rate -ve π → μ optics +ve π → μ optics Still linear 24/03/2011 A. Dobbs 15 Muon Rate Numbers So, depending on MICE optics get a few 10’s of muons per 1ms spill 24/03/2011 A. Dobbs 16 Conclusion • The MICE Muon Beamline is functioning well in ISIS, and has been for sometime • Depending on MICE optics, the beamline delivers a few 10’s of muons per 1ms spill that can be used • Desired rate is several hundred “good” muons per 1ms spill • Would probably require beam loss levels that are intolerable to ISIS • Various solutions put forward: – – – – 24/03/2011 Increased MICE target dip rate Longer MICE data running to account for lower rates ISIS beam bump at MICE target Improved ISIS collimator system A. Dobbs 17 Appendix I: Run conditions 24/03/2011 A. Dobbs 18