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International Linear Collider R&D, Technology Options and Collaboration

International Linear Collider R&D, Technology Options and Collaboration. Steve Holmes Fermilab Indo-US Working Group Meeting August 5-6, 2004. International Linear Collider View.

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International Linear Collider R&D, Technology Options and Collaboration

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  1. International Linear Collider R&D, Technology Options and Collaboration Steve Holmes Fermilab Indo-US Working Group Meeting August 5-6, 2004

  2. International Linear Collider View • An internationally constructed and operated electron-positron linear collider, with an initial center-of-mass energy of 500 GeV, has received strong endorsement by advisory committees in North America, Europe, and Asia as the next large High Energy Physics facility beyond LHC. • An international panel, under the auspices of ICFA, has established performance goals (next slide) as meeting the needs of the world HEP community. http://www.fnal.gov/directorate/icfa/LC_parameters.pdf • An International Technology Recommendation Panel has now been convened under the auspices of ICFA with a charge to issue a technology recommendation by the end of 2004. http://www.ligo.caltech.edu/~donna/ITRP_Home.htm

  3. International Performance Specification • Initial maximum energy of 500 GeV, operable over the range 200-500 GeV for physics running. • Equivalent (scaled by 500 GeV/s) integrated luminosity for the first four years after commissioning of 500 fb-1. • Ability to perform energy scans with minimal changeover times. • Beam energy stability and precision of 0.1%. • Capability of 80% electron beam polarization over the range 200-500 GeV. • Two interaction regions, at least one of which allows for a crossing angle enabling gg collisions. • Ability to operate at 90 GeV for calibration running. • Machine upgradeable to approximately 1 TeV.

  4. Performance Parameters *JLC-C utilizes c-band for first 200 GeV, x-band for following 300 GeV of each linac

  5. TESLA JLC-X/NLC Current Round (ITRP) Contenders

  6. Linear Collider Performance ParametersTechnology Requirements • Energy: 500 GeV, upgradeable to 1000 GeV • RF Structures • The accelerating structures must support the desired gradient in an operational setting and there must be a cost effective means of fabrication. • TESLA: 24-35 MV/m • NLC/GLC: 65 MV/m (unloaded, 52 MV/m loaded) • RF power generation and delivery • The rf generation and distribution system must be capable of delivering the power required to sustain the design gradient  Demonstration projects: NLC 8-pack test, NLCTA, TTF-I and II • Luminosity: 500 fb-1 in the first four years of operation • The specified beam densities must be produced within the injector system, preserved through the linac, and maintained in collision at the IR.  R&D Facilities: ATF, ASSET, FFTB • Luminosity • Damping Rings

  7. Linear Collider Technology StatusNLC/GLC Structures

  8. Linear Collider Technology StatusNLC/GLC Structures • The NLC/GLC structure has evolved over the last several years in response to difficulties encountered with structure damage after several thousand hours of operations. • Length = 60 cm • Group velocity = 3% • New input couplers lowering peak fields • The resultant structure features: • Less stored energy, reduced ability for energy to flow within the cavity, and lower peak fields at the upstream end • Operational criterion for breakdown rate is based on: • 99% availability with a 5 second recovery time (with 2% energy overhead)  <0.4 breakdowns/structure/hour when operated at 60 Hz and the full (400 nsec) rf pulse width  Spec: <0.1 breakdowns/structure/hour • 8 structures operating at NLCTA meet the gradient/breakdown spec

  9. Linear Collider Technology StatusNLC Test Accelerator (NLCTA)

  10. Breakdown Rate at 60 Hz (#/hr) Average Rate Limit Unloaded Gradient (MV/m) Linear Collider Technology StatusNLC/GLC Structures Performance (circa April 2004)

  11. Linear Collider Technology StatusNLC/GLC Structures Performance

  12. Linear Collider Technology StatusTESLA Structures TESLA Linac RF Unit:10MW klystron, 3 modules  12 cavities each Total for 500 GeV: 572 units (includes 2% reserve for failure handling)

  13. Linear Collider Technology StatusTESLA Structures • The structure proposed for 500 GeV operation requires 24 MV/m. • Achieved in 1999-2000 cavity production run • 13,000 hours operation in TTF (not all modules at 24 MV/m) • The goal is to develop and install cavities capable of 35 MV/m for the energy upgrade to 800-1000 GeV. • Progress over the last several years has been in the area of surface processing and quality control. • Buffered chemical polishing • Electro-polishing • Several single cell cavities at 40 MV/m • Five nine-cell cavities at >35 MV/m • Dark current criteria established based on <10% increase in heat load • 50 nA/cavity BCP EP

  14. Linear Collider Technology StatusTESLA Structures Vertical (low power test) Comparison of low and high power tests (AC73)

  15. Linear Collider Technology StatusTESLA Structures: Dark Current 25 MV/m 35 MV/m Dark Current (nA) AC72 Radiation emissions of BCP and EP cavities (vertical test stand) Gradient (MV/m) • Dark Current measurement on 8-cavity CM (ACC4) • ~15 nA/cavity at 25 MV/m

  16. Linear Collider Technology StatusTESLA Structures • One electropolished cavity (AC72) has been installed into cryomodule ACC1 in TTF-II (March) • Cavity individually tested in the accelerator with high power rf. • Result: 35 MV/m • No field emission detected • Good results with LLRF and piezo-tuner • Calibrated with beam and spectrometer

  17. Linear Collider Technology StatusSummary: Structures • Eight NLC/GLC structures are operating per performance specification in the NLCTA. • Built by three different institutions on two continents • Keys to success were reducing length, reducing group velocity, improving input coupler design. • Five TESLA cavities have met the 35 MV/m performance specification • One has seen beam in a complete cryomodule • Key to success has been advancement in surface treatment procedures (BCP and EP)

  18. Linear Collider Technology StatusNLC/GLC Power Sources • 75 MW PPM Klystron • (Nearly) full specification performance by two tubes • Full-specification induction modulator operating in support of the 8–pack test.

  19. Linear Collider Technology StatusNLC/GLC Power Sources • Power to loads 580 MW at 400 ns (design is 475 MW) • Operated 500 hours at ~500 MW “8-pack” test at SLAC

  20. Linear Collider Technology StatusTESLA Power Sources • Three Thales TH1801 Multi-beam klystrons fabricated and test. • Efficiency = 65% • Pulse width = 1.5 msec • Peak power = 10 MW • Repetition rate = 5 Hz • Operational hours (at full spec) = 500 hours • Independent R&D efforts now underway at CPI and Toshiba • 10 Modulators have been built • 3 by FNAL and 7 by industry • 7 modulators are in operation • 10 years operation experience

  21. Linear Collider Technology StatusSummary: RF Sources • Modulators for both NLC/GLC and TESLA have been demonstrated and do not appear to have major issues. • Klystrons remain a challenge • Modest numbers of klystrons meeting specs exist for both NLC/GLC and TESLA. • R&D programs are continuing to develop units that can meet requirements in a reproducible manner.

  22. Linear Collider Technology StatusDamping Rings: ATF • NLC/GLC requirement met • electrons, single bunch • Performance consistent with intra-beam scattering Need to move to multi-bunch; Better understanding of e-cloud; Alternatives to TESLA dogbone

  23. International CollaborationOrganizational Models • Pre-construction • A description of a pre-construction organization is contained in the “Report of the ILCSC Task Force for Establishment of the International Linear Collider Global Design Initiative” http://www.fnal.gov/directorate/icfa/04-03-31_GDI_TF_Report.pdf • Global Design Initiative (GDI) responsible for development of the complete ILC engineering design and coordination of the associated R&D program. • Establish early 2005 • Phase 1 = Conceptual Design Report • Phase 2 = Engineering Design • Construction and Operations • All regions of the world are looking at models for the international organization in the construction & operations phases. • Consensus evolving towards “host lab” + international organization. For an example see the ECFA study: http://committees.web.cern.ch/Committees/ECFA/Cern03KalmusReport.pdf

  24. ICFA ITRP Government Agencies ILCSC Asia/Pacific LCSC European LCSC US LCSC Participating Laboratories and Universities International CollaborationPresent Organization ILC-TRC Participating Laboratories and Universities Participating Laboratories and Universities

  25. ICFA Government Agencies ILCSC GDI Central Team Central Team Director, 3 Regional Team Directors, Chief Accelerator Scientist, Chief Engineer, & staff Machine Advisory Committee Asia/Pacific LCSC European LCSC US LCSC Asia/Pacific Regional Team Regional Team Director, European Regional Team Regional Team Director, American Regional Team Regional Team Director, Participating Laboratories and Universities International CollaborationOrganizational Models: GDI Phase I Participating Laboratories and Universities Participating Laboratories and Universities

  26. Group of Governments and Their Oversight Board ICFA GDI Central Team Central Team Director, 3 Regional Team Directors, Chief Accelerator Scientist, Chief Engineer, & staff Machine Advisory Committee ILCSC US LCSC European LCSC Asia/Pacific LCSC Asia/Pacific Regional Team Regional Team Director, European Regional Team Regional Team Director, The American Regional Team Regional Team Director, Participating Laboratories and Universities Participating Laboratories and Universities Participating Laboratories and Universities International CollaborationOrganizational Models: GDI Phase II • Committees on • Site Selection • Study of the international organization for ILC construction and operations Regional Governments

  27. Conclusions • Technologies required to support room temperature or superconducting rf-based linear colliders have made substantial progress over the last several years. Either could form the basis of a linear collider meeting the needs of the world HEP community. • We expect a technology decision before the end of the year. • Will allow consolidation of resources on the global level • Will trigger establishment of the GDI • A world organization is forming and will present multiple opportunities for participation: • Accelerating structures (in multiple world regions) • Simulations • Emittance preservation • Maintaining beams in collision • Damping rings • Collimation systems • Rf sources • Magnets, power supplies, controls, etc.

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