1 / 36

A Short History of Nearly Everything

A Short History of Nearly Everything. Michele Viti. Outline. Myself About my work in Zeuthen ILC overview Beam energy measurement An brief overview of my work and results Magnetic measurements Relative beam energy resolution Laser Compton energy spectrometer. Myself.

aysha
Download Presentation

A Short History of Nearly Everything

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. A Short History of Nearly Everything Michele Viti

  2. Outline • Myself • About my work in Zeuthen • ILC overview • Beam energy measurement • An brief overview of my work and results • Magnetic measurements • Relative beam energy resolution • Laser Compton energy spectrometer Michele Viti

  3. Myself • I was born 31 years ago somewhere in Italy • I studied physics at the Perugia university Michele Viti

  4. Myself • Master degree in 2004. • Title of the thesis : “Evaluation of a Tracking Algorithm for the Trigger of KOPIO Experiment on the Decay ”. • I continued working on this topic until the project was canceled by the DOE. Michele Viti

  5. Myself • I moved then to Germany and started in February 2006 my PhD. • I joined the Linear Collider working under the supervision of H.J. Schreiber. • Title of the thesis “Precise and Fast Beam Energy Measurements at ILC”. Michele Viti

  6. ILC • 30 Km electrons/positrons linear accellerator • Total energy in the cms 500 Gev (upgradeable 1 Tev) • High luminosity (2*10^34 /cm^2*s) • A machine for precise measurements Michele Viti

  7. ILC: Precise Top Mass Measurements • Many Standard Model depends strongly on the value of the Top Mass. • Well understood background, clean experimental environment • Best direct measurement of the top mass will be at ttbar threshold • Vary the beam energy (Precise Beam Energy Measurements) • Count number top-antitop events. Michele Viti

  8. Basic Requirements for Beam Energy Measurements • In order to make a precise measurement of the top quark mass we need to know some “input” parameters very well such as the mean energy of the bunch • We need to have a fast (bunch-by-bunch), precise and non-destructive monitor for beam energy • Direct measurement of energy at the IP is very difficult. We want to measure the beam energy upstream, downstream the IP plus a slow monitoring at the IP • Relative Energy precision required for upstream measurements Michele Viti

  9. BPM L offset d BPM BPM magnets Magnetic Chicane Energy Spectrometer • Electrons are deflected in this chicane and the offset in the mid-chicane is anti-proportional to the energy. • Measuring this position with some special devices (Beam Position Monitor, BPM) together with B-field integral we have access to the beam energy • Method well tested used at LEP with a precision of Michele Viti

  10. Experiment T474/491 • At the End Station A (ESA) a 4-magnet chicane energy spectrometer was commissioned in 2006/2007 (experiment T474/491). • The goal is to demonstrate the feasibility of the system. Michele Viti

  11. End Station A • Characteristic: • Parasitic with PEP II operation • 10 Hz and 28.5 GeV • Bunch charge, bunch length energy spread similar to ILC • Prototype components of the Beam delivery System and interaction Region. Michele Viti

  12. End Station A Beam Parameters at SLAC ESA and ILC Michele Viti

  13. Experiment T474/491 • Institutes involved: SLAC, U.C. Berkeley, Notre Dame, Dubna, DESY, RHUL, UCL, Cambridge • 2006: • January (4 days): commissioning steering BPMs • April(2 weeks): commissioning cavity BPMS, optimization digitization and processing • July(2 weeks): commissioning interferometer and stabilty data taken with frequent calibrations • 2007: • March(3 weeks):Commissioning and installation magnets: first chicane data!!! • July(2 weeks):Additional new BPM in the centre of the chicane. Michele Viti

  14. Magnetic measurements

  15. Magnetic measurements • B-field Integral, essential parameter for beam energy measurement. • Need to be measured with an accuracy of 50 ppm. Michele Viti

  16. Magnetic measurements • Between November 2006 – February 2007 measurements on these magnets were performed in the SLAC laboratories (DESY, Dubna, SLAC). • Purpose of the measurements: • General understanding and characterization of the magnets • Stability of the B-field and B-field integral with fixed current and switching the polarity. • Monitoring of the residual B-field. • B-field map. • Measurement of the temperature coefficient for B-field and B-field integral . • Development and test a procedure to monitor the B-field integral. Michele Viti

  17. Magnetic measurements • Monitor of the B-field integral: in ESA no device was available to measure directly this quantity. • Solution: measure the B-field in one point and from that determine the integral. • Basic assumption When the field is changing in one point, changes everywhere by the same amount. The field shape stay constant Michele Viti

  18. Magnetic measurements • To measure the B-field in one point an NMR probe was used. • Flip coil technique to measure for B-field integral. • Calibration of the NMR: determination of the slope and intercept for the relation. • Comparison of the prediction with the measurement. Michele Viti

  19. Magnetic measurements • The total error on the estimation of the B-field integral using the one-point B-field measurement was • Main contributions are alignment errors of the devices. • Several suggestions were given to improve the results. Michele Viti

  20. Relative beam energy resolution

  21. Relative Beam Energy Resolution • At the End Station A several problems occurred for 4-magnet chicane prototype • A complementary method to cross-check the absolute energy measurement was not implemented • Only relative energy measurement possible at ESA Michele Viti

  22. Relative Beam Energy Resolution Beam direction • The offset d in the mid-chicane point is determined by two points, namely Xb and X0 • Xb is measured by the BPMs the mid-chicane and X0 is extrapolated using BPMs upstream and downstream of the chicane. Michele Viti

  23. Relative Beam Energy Resolution • BPMs, Beam Position Monitors. They measure the transverse position (X and Y) and angle (tilt) in the X-Z and Y-Z plane (X’ and Y’). • Accuracy on position measurement < 500 nm. Michele Viti

  24. Relative Beam Energy Resolution • X0 can be written as • For zero current magnet Xb=X0, the BPM measures directly X0. • The coefficients in Eq. above can be determined with a minimization. Michele Viti

  25. Relative Beam Energy Resolution Beam direction • One fundamental condition: the magnetic chicane must work symmetrically • The upstream path must be restored downstream Michele Viti

  26. Relative Beam Energy Resolution • Unfortunately this was not the case of the 4-magnet chicane in ESA • For a given current the magnet fields were different up to ~3% • BPMs downstream could not be used to determine X0. This resulted in a worse resolution for d. Michele Viti

  27. Relative Beam Energy Resolution • A resolution of 24 MeV was found (Resolution -- the smallest amount of energy change that the instrument can detect reliably) • For a beam energy of 28.5 GeV this corresponds to a relative resolution of ~ • The largest contribution to this number comes from the resolution on d (>2 microns). Michele Viti

  28. Laser Compton Energy Spectrometer

  29. Laser Compton Energy Spectrometer • At LEP it was possible to have redundant beam energy measurement devices  cross check!!! • At ILC so far, complementary methods for upstream beam energy measurements not implemented. • Studying the feasibility of an upstream energy spectrometer based on Compton backscattering (CBS) events. Michele Viti

  30. Laser Compton Energy Spectrometer • Compton process with initial electron not at rest. • Energy spectrum for electrons (photons) present a sharp cut-off (Compton edge). • Scattered particles collimated in forward region. Michele Viti

  31. Laser Compton Energy Spectrometer Michele Viti

  32. Energy measurement • , is the center of gravity of the scattered photons, or, equivalently, the end point of the SR fan. • , position of beam, possible to measure with BPMs • , position of the electrons with minimum energy. Michele Viti

  33. Laser Compton Energy Spectrometer • Beam parameters • Beam energies 50-500 GeV • Beam size in x (y) 20-50 (2-5) microns • Geometrical parameters • Drift distance 25-50 m • B field 0.28 T, magnet length 3 m • Laser parameters • Smaller wavelength preferable (e.g. green laser) • Pulsed laser with 3 MHz frequency • Laser spot size 50-100 microns • Laser pulse energy must ensure 10^6 scatters (e.g. 30 mJ per pulse) • Crossing angle ~8 mrad • Accuracy required to achieved • < 1-2 microns • < 1-2 microns • < 20 microns Michele Viti

  34. Laser Compton Energy Spectrometer • Beam position can measured with a normal BPM (very well know and precise technique). • Edge position: Diamond strip detector or quartz fiber detector. Basic simulation shows that this feasible. • Photon detection: Basically 2 possibilities, using the backscattered photons or the synchrotron radiation photons. Michele Viti

  35. Laser Compton Energy Spectrometer • Number of backscattered photons (BP) 4 order of magnitude less than SR photons • <Energy> BP ~100 GeV, <energy> SR photons ~3 MeV. • 2 possibilities • Place a thick absorber in front of detector and measure the profile of shower (signal from BP dominant), quartz fiber detector suitable. • No absorber, detector in front of the photon beam (signal from SR photons dominant). Novel detector under development in DUBNA (Xenon gas detector). • Main problem for both configurations: very high radiation dose (10-100 GGy per year). Michele Viti

  36. Conclusions • A prototype of 4-magnet chicane was built in ESA. • The absolute value of the B-field integral can be monitored with an accuracy 184 ppm (ESASLAC note and PAC poster) • The resolution of the chicane was found to be ~24 MeV, where the main contribution is the resolution on the beam offset in the mid-chicane (to be published…) • A novel method based on Laser Compton events was studied(NIM publication). An experiment is under study to proof the feasibility (proposal in preparation). Michele Viti

More Related