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What is an Antiproton? (How to Produce Antiprotons )

What is an Antiproton? (How to Produce Antiprotons ). Keith Gollwitzer Antiproton Source Department Accelerator Division Fermilab 8 April 2011. p for proton p for antiproton. What is an Antiproton?. Government issued Webster’s Dictionary: “The antiparticle of the proton”

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What is an Antiproton? (How to Produce Antiprotons )

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  1. What is an Antiproton?(How to Produce Antiprotons ) Keith Gollwitzer Antiproton Source Department Accelerator Division Fermilab 8 April 2011

  2. p for proton p for antiproton What is an Antiproton? • Government issued Webster’s Dictionary: • “The antiparticle of the proton” • Antiparticle definition “subatomic particle having the same mass, average lifetime, spin, magnitude of magnetic moment but opposite direction, magnitude of electric charge but opposite sign, opposite intrinsic parity” • What about “Antimatter”? • “Matter made from antiparticles” • What is a Pbar? • Shortened name for Antiproton based upon symbol used in physics • Over-line or bar above symbol means “anti”

  3. So what are protons? • With neutrons form different atomic nuclei • Simplest is Hydrogen nucleus of a single proton • Made up of quarks (up and down) • Proton is uud • Neutron is ddu • Antiproton is uud • Antiquarks

  4. Matter and Antimatter • Matter • Plentiful and “free” by separating hydrogen components • 13.6eV to ionize electron from proton • Antimatter • Scarce in nature • Created by cosmic rays interacting with the atmosphere. • The original “Fixed Target” experiment • Positrons are by-product of normal everyday radioactivity • Particle & Antiparticle when they met --- annihilate • Who first informed most of us of this fact?

  5. Where else has Antimatter been “seen” in the last few years? • Dan Brown’s Angels & Demons • We will come back to this later • Move back to reality and what Fermilab does

  6. Originally studied Cosmic Ray Particles Cosmic rays are energetic No human control of energy, type, when Detection done at high altitudes Discovered many types of particles that are not everyday matter Accelerators allow control of collisions Allowed study of many new particles Some with masses greater than the initial particles History: Particle Collisions

  7. Fermilab Collisions • Fixed Target • In the Fixed Target mode, ½ of the experiment is at rest. • The other ½ is moving at high energy. • There is a big “relativistic” penalty to be paid because of the conservation of momentum. • Collider Mode • In the Collider mode, two particles of equal mass and energy travel directly at each other. • The total momentum of the system is zero, so there is no “relativistic” penalty to be paid. • Most of the energy goes directly into making new particles.

  8. + - Particle Acceleration • A charged particle will be accelerated by a voltage potential. • Opposite charges attract. • One electron Volt (eV) is the energy gained by an electron (or any particle of unit charge) when it is accelerated through a potential of 1 Volt.

  9. To Higher Energies Scientific Prefixes K (kilo) 1,000 M (mega) 1,000,000 G (giga) 1,000,000,000 T (tera) 1,000,000,000,000 TeVatron accelerates beam to nearly 1 trillion electron Volts Batteries are 1Volt per inch A trillion inches is 15.8 million miles

  10. First Stage of the Acceleration • Crockoft-Walton Accelerator • Can be thought of as a 750,000V DC voltage source. • The maximum voltage is limited by how much the air can “stand-off” before sparking.

  11. Second Stage of Acceleration • A linear accelerator (LINAC)

  12. Drift Tube Linac

  13. The Fermilab Linac is 130 meters long and reaches an energy of 400 MeV (1 million Volts per foot) To get to 980 billion volts, a Linac would have to be 200 miles long at 1 million Volts per foot What about using the Linac over and over? The drift tube spacing at the beginning of the Linac would be wrong for higher energy particles But a Synchrotron could be used! Dipoles are used to bend particles Quadrupoles are used to focus particles RF cavities are used to accelerate particles Synchrotrons

  14. Dipole Magnets • Dipole magnets are used to bend the particle’s path • The magnet body confines or concentrates the magnetic field • The pole faces shape the magnetic field

  15. Quadrupole Magnets • Quadrupoles are needed for focusing particles • Not all the particles are on the “perfect” orbit. • If the particle is on the right orbit – don’t bend. • If the particle is on the inside – bend to the outside. • If the particle is on the outside – bend to the inside.

  16. Pre-Acc First stage of acceleration Start with Hydrogen Bottle Final Energy = 750KeV

  17. Linac Final Energy of 400MeV

  18. Booster Ring Final Energy of 8GeV Uses combined function magnets

  19. Main Injector Ring Final Energy of 150GeV 2 mile circumference Upper ring is the Recycler

  20. Tevatron Ring Final Energy of 980GeV 4 mile circumference Uses cryogenic superconducting dipoles

  21. Fixed Target Beam Lines Fixed Target program has run at 800GeV and currently at 120GeV Neutrino Program runs at two different energies 8GeV and 120GeV

  22. Antiproton Source 120GeV protons from Main Injector hit (fixed) production target. Antiproton Source beam lines and rings capture and collect 8GeV pbars 8GeV pbars are sent to the rest of accelerator complex to be injected into the Tevatron for the collider program

  23. 29 cm 81cm 3° Before After Pulsed Magnet Li Lens Target The Antiproton Target Station Unacceptable Have changed cooling and now try to prevent oxidation Nickel Alloy with air cooling through the copper disks

  24. Current Target • Interference fit of copper heat sink (inside) & beryllium jacket (outside) to keep from oxidizing • Still blow air down through center of device • Change vertical position every day

  25. Target installed on fixture which hangs from 8ft steel module (above picture)

  26. Extent of bolts Target operating range Crack initiation at discontinuity? Extent of bolts

  27. 29 cm 81cm 3° Pulsed Magnet Li Lens Target The Antiproton Target Station

  28. “Hot” Beam • The pbars leave the target at a wide range of energies, positions, and angles. • This randomness is equivalent to temperature. The pbar beam is “hot” coming off the target. • This “hot” beam will have a difficult time fitting into a beam pipe of reasonable dimensions. • Also, this “hot” beam is very diffuse and not very “bright”. Bright beams are needed in the collider in order to increase the odds that the particles collide with particles in the other beam • Stochastic cooling is a technique that is used to remove the randomness of the “hot” beam on a particle by particle basis.

  29. Stochastic Cooling • Stochastic cooling uses feedback • A pickup electrode measures an “error” signal for a given pbar. • This error signal could be the pbar’s position or energy • The pickup signal can be extremely small, on the order of 1pW • The Debuncher pickups are cooled to 4 Kelvin to reduce the effect of thermal noise and 300 Kelvin “shine” • This signal is processed and amplified • The gain of the Debuncher systems is about 150 dB • The opposite of the error signal is applied to the pbar at the kicker • The kicker signal can be as large as 2 kW

  30. Stochastic Cooling Pickups

  31. Every 2.2 seconds 8 x 1012 (8 trillion) 120GeV protons onto target Beam line transfers negatively charged 8GeV particles to the Debuncher Other particles decay or radiate away in a few turns Beam circulates every 1.6 microseconds 0.0000016 seconds 2.5 x 108 (250 million) 8GeV pbars circulate in the Debuncher Stochastic cooling reduces the phase space by a factor of ten Transfer all pbars to the Accumulator Stacking Cycle - Debuncher

  32. RF system decelerates from injection to deposition orbit Stochastic Cooling 2-4 GHz stacktail Pushes and compresses beam into the core 2-4 & 4-8 GHz core momentum Gathers beam from the stacktail 4-8 GHz transverse slotted waveguide pickups Increase particle density by factor of 5000 Factor of 3-5 decrease in both transverse phase space dimensions Cyan = After injection before RF capture Green = After RF is turned off Stacking Cycle - Accumulator

  33. p p p p p p Total Antiprotons at Fermilab • Accumulation rate of 2.7 x 1011 (270 billion) antiprotons per hour • When reach 3 x 1011 (300 billion) pbars, transfer beam out of the Accumulator to the Main Injector into the Recycler Ring for storage until needed for the Tevatron collider program • Most number of antiprotons that have been on site at Fermilab at one time (Accumulator, Recycler and Tevatron) • 6 x 1012 (6 trillion) pbars • 10pg = 0.000 000 000 01grams • During the last year produced • 1400 trillion pbars (2.3ng)

  34. Using Antiprotons • Antiprotons are collected in Recycler Ring at 8GeV for a day • Then antiprotons are sent in 36 batches to Main Injector to be accelerated to 150GeV • Antiprotons are transferred to the Tevatron which already has 36 proton batches • Both beams are accelerated to 980GeV

  35. Tevatron Collider • Two beams in one accelerator going in opposite directions! • Electrostatic separators keep beams on different helical orbits during acceleration • Bring beams into collisions by collapsing helix orbits at desired interaction points • Middle of detectors

  36. Angels & Demons + Antiprotons • Page of “Facts” in a book of fiction • Antimatter exists • 0.25 grams of antimatter mixed with 0.25 grams of matter would produce an explosion equivalent Hiroshima (wipe out the Vatican)

  37. *2940 trillion $ ~ 420 x U.S. GNP Angels & Demons + Antiprotons • Can easily produce 0.25 grams of antimatter • Fact: Fermilab is the world leader for producing antiprotons/antimatter • It would take 100 million years • Can easily transport that much antimatter • Fact: Fermilab’s bottles are over 6 miles of rings • It would cost a lot

  38. Antimatter Uses • Scientific Studies • Laboratories use antimatter to collide with matter • Study why no antimatter today • Applications • Example is Positron Emission Tomography (PET Scans) Courtesy NIH • Not Spaceships

  39. Antimatter Uses • Scientific Studies • Laboratories use antimatter to collide with matter • Study why no antimatter today • Applications • Example is Positron Emission Tomography (PET Scans) Courtesy NIH • Not Spaceships

  40. Today Enjoy your time at Fermilab Please ask questions Hope that you have learned a little about antiprotons, particle accelerators and what goes on at Fermilab

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