1 / 43

Scenarios for the sLHC and the vLHC

Scenarios for the sLHC and the vLHC. Walter Scandale, Frank Zimmermann CERN HCP2007. We acknowledge the support of the European Community-Research Infrastructure Activity under the FP6 "Structuring the European Research Area" programme (CARE, contract number RII3-CT-2003-506395). outline.

bmack
Download Presentation

Scenarios for the sLHC and the vLHC

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. Scenarios for the sLHC and the vLHC Walter Scandale, Frank Zimmermann CERN HCP2007 We acknowledge the support of the European Community-Research Infrastructure Activity under the FP6 "Structuring the European Research Area" programme (CARE, contract number RII3-CT-2003-506395)

  2. outline • LHC upgrade: why and when ? • beam parameters • the two selected scenarios for luminosity upgrade • features, • Bunch structure • IR layout, • merits and challenges • luminosity leveling ? • summary & recommendations for the sLHC • perspective for higher energy hadron collisions • VLHC at FNAL • dLHC and tLHC at CERN • R&D • possible plans

  3. LHC luminosity upgrade: why and when? • How fast performance is expected to increase: • 4 y up to nominal L • 4 y up to nominal L & 2 y up to ultimate L • 4 y up to ultimate • IR quadrupole lifetime ≥ 8 years owing to high radiation doses • halving time of the statistical error ≥ 5 y already after 4-5 y of operation • luminosity upgrade to be planned by the middle of next decade

  4. LHC luminosity upgrade: the LARP perspective Courtesy of V. Shiltsev - FNAL

  5. baseline upgrade parameters 2001-2005 abandoned at LUMI’06 total heat 15.6 W/m >> 2.4 W/m (heat load induced by Sync.Rad + image current larger than the local heat load capacity)

  6. New upgrade scenarios challenges injector upgrade Crossing with large Piwinski angle aggressive triplet compromises between # of pile up events and heat load

  7. Luminosity at the beam-beam limit for operation at beam-beam limit with alternating planes of crossing at two IPs, luminosity equation can be written as 50 ns 50 ns 25 ns 50 ns where Qbb = total beam-beam tune shift (the change of Fh-g due to hourglass effect is neglected above) PAF/POFPA Meeting 20 November 2006

  8. luminosity reduction factor from crossing angle Piwinski angle R  0.85 (nominalLHC)

  9. 25-ns ultra-low- upgrade scenario • stay with ultimate LHC beam (1.7x1011 protons/bunch, 25 spacing) • squeeze * below ~10 cm in ATLAS & CMS • add early-separation dipoles in detectors, one at ~ 3 m, the other at ~ 8 m from IP • possibly also add quadrupole-doublet inside detector at ~13 m from IP • and add crab cavities (fPiwinski~ 0), and/or shorten bunches with massive addt’l RF  new hardware inside ATLAS & CMS,  first hadron-beam crab cavities (J.-P. Koutchouk et al)

  10. CMS & ATLAS IR layout for 25-ns option l* = 22 m stronger triplet magnets D0 dipole Q0 quad’s Magnets embedded in the expt. apparatus small-angle crab cavity ultimate bunch intensity & near head-on collision (R1) PAF/POFPA Meeting 20 November 2006

  11. 25-ns scenario assessment (accelerator view point) • merits: • negligible long-range collisions, • reduced geometric luminosity loss, • no increase in beam current beyond ultimate • challenges: • D0 dipole deep inside detector (~3 m from IP), • Q0 doublet inside detector (~13 m from IP & slim magnet technology), • crab cavity for hadron beams (emittance growth ?), • 4 parasitic collisions at 4-5 separation, • “chromatic beam-beam” Q’eff ~ z/(4*), • poor beam and luminosity lifetime ~ * PAF/POFPA Meeting 20 November 2006

  12. 50-ns high intensity upgrade scenario • double bunch spacing • longer & more intense bunches with fPiwinski~ 2 • keep *~25 cm (achieved by stronger low- quads alone) • do not add any elements inside detectors • long-range beam-beam wire compensation  novel operating regime for hadron colliders Variant (not yet studied) • add early-separation dipoles, one at ~ 5 m, the other at ~ 9 m from IP • Reduce the current • Almost head-on crossing angle (W. Scandale, F.Zimmermann & PAF)

  13. CMS & ATLAS IR layout for 50-ns option l* = 22 m stronger triplet magnets wire compensator long bunches & nonzero crossing angle & wire compensation PAF/POFPA Meeting 20 November 2006

  14. 50-ns scenario assessment (accelerator view point) • merits: • no elements in detector, no crab cavities, • lower chromaticity, • less demand on IR quadrupoles (NbTi possible) • challenges: • operation with large Piwinski parameter unproven for hadron beams, • high bunch charge, • beam production and acceleration through SPS, • “chromatic beam-beam” Q’eff ~ z/(4*), • larger beam current, • wire compensation (established  last validation in RHIC) PAF/POFPA Meeting 20 November 2006

  15. IR upgrade optics compatible with 50-ns upgrade path “compact low-gradient” NbTi,*=25 cm <75 T/m (Riccardo De Maria, Oliver Bruning) “modular low gradient” NbTi, *=25 cm <90 T/m (Riccardo De Maria, Oliver Bruning) “low max low-gradient” NbTi, *=25 cm <125 T/m (Riccardo De Maria, Oliver Bruning) standard Nb3Sn upgrade, *=25 cm ~200 T/m,2 versions with different magnet parameters (Tanaji Sen et al, Emmanuel Laface, Walter Scandale) + crab-waist sextupole insertions? (LNF/FP7) include sextupoles to compansate the glass-hours effect early separation with *=8 cm, Nb3Sn includes D0; either triplet closer to IP; being prepared for PAC’07 (Jean-Pierre Koutchouk et al) Use of Q0 being finalized for PAC’07 (E. Laface, W.Scandale) PAF/POFPA Meeting 20 November 2006

  16. crab waist scheme realization: add sextupoles at right phase distance from IP initiated and led by LNF in the frame of FP7; first beam tests at DAFNE later in 2007 minimizes  at s=x/c Hamiltonian focal plane PAF/POFPA Meeting 20 November 2006

  17. IP1& 5 luminosity evolution for 25-ns & 50-ns spacing • Turnaround time  10h • Optimized run duration 25 ns spacing 50 ns spacing average luminosity initial luminosity peak may not be useful for physics PAF/POFPA Meeting 20 November 2006

  18. IP1& 5 event pile up for 25-ns and 50-ns spacing 50 ns spacing 25 ns spacing PAF/POFPA Meeting 20 November 2006

  19. new upgrade bunch structures nominal 25 ns new alternative! ultimate & 25-ns upgrade 25 ns 50-ns upgrade, no collisions @S-LHCb! 50 ns new baseline! 50-ns upgrade with 25-ns collisions in LHCb 50 ns 25 ns PAF/POFPA Meeting 20 November 2006

  20. S-LHCb collision parameters rms length of luminous region: PAF/POFPA Meeting 20 November 2006

  21. luminosity leveling in IP1&5 experiments prefer more constant luminosity, less pile up at the start of run, higher luminosity at end how could we achieve this? 50-ns higher- scheme: dynamic  squeeze, and/or dynamic reduction in bunch length (less invasive) 25-ns low- scheme: dynamic  squeeze or Novel proposal under investigation based on the change the crossing angle (G. Sterbini) PAF/POFPA Meeting 20 November 2006

  22. leveling equations beam intensity decays linearly length of run average luminosity PAF/POFPA Meeting 20 November 2006

  23. assuming 5 h turn-around time PAF/POFPA Meeting 20 November 2006

  24. IP1& 5 luminosity evolution for 25-ns & 50-ns spacing with leveling 25 ns spacing 50 ns spacing average luminosity PAF/POFPA Meeting 20 November 2006

  25. IP1& 5 event pile up for 25-ns and 50-ns spacing with leveling 50 ns spacing 25 ns spacing PAF/POFPA Meeting 20 November 2006

  26. summary • two scenarios of L~1035 cm-2s-1 for which heat load and #events/crossing are acceptable • 25-ns option: pushes *; requires slim magnets inside detector, crab cavities, & high gradient large aperture (Nb3Sn) quadrupoles and/or Q0 doublet; attractive if total beam current is limited; transformed to a 50-ns spacing by keeping only 1/2 the number of bunches • 50-ns option: has fewer longer bunches of higher charge ; can be realized with NbTi technology if needed ; compatible with LHCb ; open issues are SPS upgrade & beam-beam effects at large Piwinski angle; luminosity leveling may be done via bunch length and via * tuning

  27. recommendations • luminosity leveling should be seriously considered in all cases: • more regular flow of events • moderate decrease in average luminosity • long-bunch 50-ns option entails less risk and less uncertainties; however with the drawback of the larger bunch population • 25-ns option is an optimal back up until we have gained some experience with the real LHC • concrete optics solutions, beam-beam tracking studies, and beam-beam machine experiments are needed for both scenarios

  28. The VLHC versus the LHC energy upgrade

  29. Design Study for a Staged Very Large Hadron Collider Fermilab-TM-2149 June 11, 2001 www.vlhc.org

  30. The two Stages of the VLHC • Build a long tunnel. • Fill it with a “cheap” 40 TeV collider. • Later, upgrade to a 200 TeV collider in the same tunnel. • Spreads the cost • Produces exciting energy-frontier physics sooner & cheaper • Allows time to develop cost-reducing technologies for Stage 2 • vigorous R&D program in magnets and underground construction required. • This is a time-tested formula for success Main Ring  Tevatron LEP  LHC

  31. Parameters of the VLHC

  32. Cost drivers for the stage-1 (at FNAL) • Stage-1 at 40 TeV and 1034 luminosity • large tunnel to be build in the Fermilab area • total construction time ~ 10 years • Logistics and management complex • only 20 MW of refrigeration power, comparable to the Tevatron. • significant money and time saving by building the VLHC at FNAL • Cost estimate ~ 4 G$ • no detectors (2 halls included), • no EDI, • no indirect costs, • no escalation, • no contingency • 2001 prices and c.a. 2001 technology. • No cost reduction assumed from R&D • Cost almost independent of the choice of the B-field

  33. vacuum chambers SC transmission line (100 kA) 30cm support tube/ vacuum jacket Cryo-lines 100kA return bus Transmission line magnet for Stage-1 • 2-in-1 warm iron • Superferric: 2T B- field • 100kA Transmission Line • Combined function dipole (no quadrupoles needed) • 65m Length • Self-contained including Cryogenic System and Electronics Cabling • Warm Vacuum System

  34. Stage-2 • The Stage-2 VLHC can reach 200 TeV and 2x1034 or possibly significantly more in the 233 km tunnel. • A large-circumference ring is a great advantage for Stage-2 • A high-energy, high B-field (B > 12 T) VLHC in a small-circumference ring may not be realistic (too much synchrotron radiation). • To demonstrate feasibility and to reduce cost, there is the need for R&D in the following items • high-field magnet, • vacuum in presence of large radiated power • efficient tunneling • photon stopper.

  35. Magnets for Stage-2 • Superconducting magnets based on Nb3Sn Stage-2 Dipole Single-layer common coil Stage-2 Dipole Warm-iron Cosine Q

  36. Synchrotron radiation

  37. Beam screen • There is an optimal size of the coolant pipe and of the beam screen temperature for a given synchrotron emission regime

  38. Photon stoppers • Synchrotron radiation masks look promising. • Preliminary tests already performed at FNAL. • They will decrease refrigerator power and permit higher energy and luminosity. • They are practical only in a large-circumference tunnel.

  39. Optimum Dipole Field Luminosity scale PSR<10 W/m/beam peak tL > 2 tsr Interaction per cross < 60 L units 1034 cm-2s-1 • The cutoffs are • field too low, not enough damping, • field too high, too much synchrad power so required aperture too large.

  40. LHC energy doubler 14*14 TeV • dipole field Bnom = 16.8 T, Bdesign = 18.5-19.3 T (10-15% margin) • superconductor - Nb3Sn • 10-13 T field demonstrated in several 1-m long Nb3Sn dipole models • DLHC magnet parameters well above the demonstrated Nb3Sn magnet technology • R&D and construction time and cost estimates • 10+ years for magnet technology development and demonstration • Magnet production by industry ~ 8-10 years • High cost for R&D and construction (cost of dipoles > 3GCHF ?)

  41. LHC energy tripler 21*21 TeV • dipole field Bnom = 25 T, Bdesign = 28-29 T (10-15% margin) • superconductor - HTS-BSCCO (low demand) or Nb3Sn • Magnet technology to be fully demonstrated • DLHC magnet parameters well above the demonstrated Nb3Sn magnet technology • Large aperture dipole to accommodate an efficient beam screen • R&D and construction time and cost/risk estimates • 20++ years for magnet technology development and demonstration • Extremely high R&D and construction cost and risk • SC cable to be developed, • Magnetic coil stress requires innovative dipole cross section • Magnet production by industry (?) ?? years

  42. LHC, sLHC, DLHC perspective

  43. VLHC perspective

More Related