HEP03 Advanced Neutrino Beams Rob Edgecock RAL. Candidates……. Conventional super beam Conventional super beam Neutrino Factory Neutrino Factory Beta beam.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Participants WP3total Imperial College CERN STFC University Warwick CRNS University Oxford6 6 Total Euro  - WP3.
Advertisements

Highlights of NuFact02 Bruno Autin, CERN. Outline Introduction Particle production Transverse and longitudinal collection Cooling  beams Conclusions.
Bunched-Beam Phase Rotation- Variation and 0ptimization David Neuffer, A. Poklonskiy Fermilab.
Alain Blondel MICE: Constraints on the solenoids 2.Field Homogeneity: or ? this will be dictated by the detector requirements. TPG will be.
Catalina Island Meeting May, Proton Drivers for Neutrino Factories: The CERN Approach Presented by B. Autin, CERN.
Μ-Capture, Energy Rotation, Cooling and High-pressure Cavities David Neuffer Fermilab.
Kirk McDonald Monday, 28th May Report of the International Working Group on Muon Beamlines Bruno Autin, Roberto Cappi, Rob Edgecock, Kirk McDonald,
The Front End MAP Review Fermi National Accelerator Lab August 24-26, 2010 Harold G. Kirk Brookhaven National Laboratory.
-Factory Front End Phase Rotation Optimization David Neuffer Fermilab Muons, Inc.
(ISS) Topics Studied at RAL G H Rees, RAL, UK. ISS Work Areas 1. Bunch train patterns for the acceleration and storage of μ ± beams. 2. A 50Hz, 1.2 MW,
FFAG Concepts and Studies David Neuffer Fermilab.
Emittance measurement: ID muons with time-of-flight Measure x,y and t at TOF0, TOF1 Use momentum-dependent transfer matrices iteratively to determine trace.
Institutional Logo Here Harold G. Kirk DOE Review of MAP (FNAL August 29-31, 2012)1 The Front End Harold Kirk Brookhaven National Lab August 30, 2012.
Emittance measurement: ID muons with time-of-flight Measure x,y and t at TOF0, TOF1 Use momentum-dependent transfer matrices to map  path Assume straight.
Storage Ring : Status, Issues and Plans C Johnstone, FNAL and G H Rees, RAL.
Moriond meeting Accelerator based Neutrino beams Mats Lindroos.
3 GeV,1.2 MW, Booster for Proton Driver G H Rees, RAL.
Brookhaven Science Associates U.S. Department of Energy AGS Upgrade and Super Neutrino Beam DOE Annual HEP Program Review April 27-28, 2005 Derek I. Lowenstein.
Source Group Bethan Dorman Paul Morris Laura Carroll Anthony Green Miriam Dowle Christopher Beach Sazlin Abdul Ghani Nicholas Torr.
2002/7/02 College, London Muon Phase Rotation at PRISM FFAG Akira SATO Osaka University.
PRISM and Neutrino Factory in Japan Y. Kuno KEK, IPNS January 19th, 2000 at CERN.
The ISIS strong focusing synchrotron also at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory. Note that ISIS occupies the same hall as NIMROD used to and re- uses some.
Harold G. Kirk Brookhaven National Laboratory Targetry Concept for a Neutrino Factory Muon Meeting BNL January 26, 2004.
Advanced Accelerator Design/Development Proton Accelerator Research and Development at RAL Shinji Machida ASTeC/STFC/RAL 24 March 2011.
1 Higgs : keV precision and CP violation W. J. Murray RAL.
Bunched-Beam Phase Rotation for a Neutrino Factory David Neuffer Fermilab.
Bunched-Beam Phase Rotation and FFAG -Factory Injection David Neuffer Fermilab.
Bunched-Beam Phase Rotation for a Neutrino Factory David Neuffer, Andreas Van Ginneken, Daniel Elvira Fermilab.
Front-End Design Overview Diktys Stratakis Brookhaven National Laboratory February 19, 2014 D. Stratakis | DOE Review of MAP (FNAL, February 19-20, 2014)1.
Secondary Particle Production and Capture for Muon Accelerator Applications S.J. Brooks, RAL, Oxfordshire, UK Abstract Intense pulsed.
R.G. 7/09/20101 Options for neutrinos. R.G. 7/09/20102 Conventional beam from the SPS (1/3) Neutrinos using the SPS Nominal CNGS 732 km baseline from.
J. Pasternak First Ideas on the Design of the Beam Transport and the Final Focus for the NF Target J. Pasternak, Imperial College London / RAL STFC ,
WG3 – Part 3 - Design Studies Introduction Introduction View from Europe - RE View from Europe - RE “ “ Japan- Yoshi Kuno “ “ Japan- Yoshi Kuno “ “ US-
Highlights of Tuesday’s session Machine aspects Copyright © Dale Carnegie & Associates, Inc.
-Factory Front End Phase Rotation Gas-filled rf David Neuffer Fermilab Muons, Inc.
1 International Design Study Front End & Variations David Neuffer January 2009.
MICE at STFC-RAL The International Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment -- Design, engineer and build a section of cooling channel capable of giving the.
Technical Challenges of future neutrino beams Mary Anne Cummings Northern Illinois University WIN ’03 Lake Geneva, Wisconsin.
Neutrino Factory R&D in Europe Rob Edgecock/RAL. Outline Introduction i.e. what has happened since last year European feasibility study Proton driver.
 Stephen Brooks / RAL / April 2004 Muon Front Ends Providing High-Intensity, Low-Emittance Muon Beams for the Neutrino Factory and Muon Collider.
NEUTRINO DETECTORS Cutting-Edge Accelerator Research for a Neutrino Factory and Other Applications Ajit Kurup for the FETS and UKNF Collaborations Cutting-Edge.
The High Intensity Frontier Franco Cervelli INFN-Pisa 7 Nov, 2005.
Stephen Brooks / RAL / May 2004  Optimisation of the RAL Muon Front End Design.
IDS-NF Accelerator Baseline The Neutrino Factory [1, 2] based on the muon storage ring will be a precision tool to study the neutrino oscillations.It may.
DOE Program Review 5/17/06 A. Bross Muon Accelerator R&D DOE Program Review May 17, 2006 A. Bross.
29 September 2006M.Sakuda NuFact06 Asian Regional Outlook (Japan) -by Y.Kuno (Osaka) (1) SuperBeam (T2K) (2) J-PARC current upgrade plan (3) T2HK or T2KK.
Progress in the construction of the MICE cooling channel and first measurements Adam Dobbs, EPS-HEP, 23 rd July 2011.
Institutional Logo Here July 11, 2012 Muon Accelerator Program Advisory Committee Review (FNAL July 11-13, 2012)1 The Front End.
Summary of Nufact-03 Alain Blondel NuFact 03 5th International Workshop on Neutrino Factories & Superbeams Columbia University, New York 5-11 June 2003.
 1 of 13 Stephen Brooks / RAL / March 2005 Muon Front Ends Providing High-Intensity, Low-Emittance Muon Beams for the Neutrino Factory and Muon Collider.
THE DESIGN OF THE AGS-BASED PROTON DRIVER FOR NEUTRINO FACTORY W.T. WENG, BNL FFAG WORKSHOP JULY 7-11, 2003 KEK, JAPAN.
H. Haseroth Friday, August 31, 2001 MUG Meeting 1 Overview of the CERN Neutrino Factory Machine Studies H. Haseroth for the Neutrino Factory Working Group.
Context of the Neutrino Factory Neutrino factory (2018) –4MW proton driver –p +   +   +  e + e  Linear e + e − collider (2014/5) –Leptons at 0.4.
FFAG’ J. Pasternak, IC London/RAL Proton acceleration using FFAGs J. Pasternak, Imperial College, London / RAL.
WP3: The Neutrino Factory Costing Status Ajit Kurup CERN Costing Workshop 8 th December 2011.
1 Muon Capture for a Muon Collider David Neuffer July 2009.
Bunched-Beam Phase Rotation - Ring Coolers? - FFAGs? David Neuffer Fermilab.
ICHEP Conference Amsterdam 31st International Conference on High Energy Physics 24  31 July 2002 Gail G. Hanson University of California, Riverside For.
Introduction to NS-FFAGs and EMMA Rob Edgecock STFC Rutherford Appleton Laboratory.
U.S. Plans for High Power Proton Drivers Steve Holmes Fermilab Workshop on Physics with a Multi-MW Proton Source CERN May 25, 2004.
Ionization Cooling for Muon Accelerators Prepared by Robert Ryne Presented by Jean-Pierre Delahaye MICE Optics Review Jan, 2016 RAL.
Research and development toward a future Muon Collider Katsuya Yonehara Accelerator Physics Center, Fermilab On behalf of Muon Accelerator Program Draft.
Final Results from IDS-NF Study NUFACT14 Workshop, Glasgow on behalf of the IDS-NF Collaboration Paul Soler, 26 August 2014.
PSI, Zurich February 29 – March Session classification : Accelerator Concepts Tuesday, March 1, 2016 Introduction Vyacheslav Yakovlev Fermilab,
UK Neutrino Factory Conceptual Design
+-- Collider Front end- Balbekov version
Future Muon Colliders: A Perspective
The Accelerator Complex from the International Design Study
Accelerator R&D for Future Neutrino Projects
Superbeams with SPL at CERN
Presentation transcript:

HEP03 Advanced Neutrino Beams Rob Edgecock RAL

Candidates……. Conventional super beam Conventional super beam Neutrino Factory Neutrino Factory Beta beam Beta beam PS SPS ISOL target & Ion source SPL Cyclotrons Storage ring and fast cycling synchrotron Decay Ring Decay ring Brho = 1500 Tm B = 5 T L ss = 2500 m

Outline Introduction Proton driver Target and capture Muon frontend Acceleration Storage ring Conclusions Emphasis on problems and R&D to be done Discussion of options being considered

Introduction Idea for a Neutrino Factory: muon collider Concept of a muon collider: Tinlot (1960), Tikhonin (1968), Budker (1969), Skrinsky (1971) Neuffer (1979) Many advantages over electron collider: But…….luminosity! Fast cooling technique – ionisation cooling – invented 1981: Skrinsky and Parkhomchuk Another problem…….neutrino radiation! Neutrino Factory! Enough neutrinos to be a problem Must be enough to do physics

Muon Collider Three stage scenario: Neutrino Factory Higgs Factory Muon Collider Recently, much interest in Neutrino Factory alone. 5 different layouts: BNL CERN FNAL J-PARC RAL

RAL Layout RAL Neutrino Factory layout

Proton Driver Main requirements: 4 MW beam power* 1 ns bunch length  50Hz Two types: Linac RCS Range of energies: 2.2 to 50 GeV R&D: HIPPI * = F1 GP

Proton Driver 30 GeV Rapid Cycling Synchrotron in the ISR tunnel

Proton Driver CERN Super-conducting Proton Linac

Most advanced……J-PARC J-PARC Facility Construction 2001 ~ 2006 (approved) (60km N.E. of KEK) (0.77MW) Super Conducting magnet for beam line Near POT(130day)≡ “1 year”

JHF ~1GeV beam Kamioka JAERI (Tokaimura) 0.77MW 50 GeV PS ( conventional beam) Super-K: 22.5 kt 4MW 50 GeV PS Hyper-K: 1000 kt Phase-I (0.77MW + Super-Kamiokande) Phase-II (4MW+Hyper-K) ~ Phase-I  200 Plan to start in 2007 Kobayashi

JHF Superbeam Kobayashi Proton Beam Target Focusing Devices Decay Pipe Beam Dump  ,K,K  “Conventional” neutrino beam  Target Horns Decay Pipe Far Det. “Off-axis”

Target Proposed rotating tantalum target ring Many difficulties: enormous power density  lifetime problems pion capture Replace target between bunches: Liquid mercury jet or rotating solid target Stationary target: RAL CERN

Liquid Mercury Tests Tests with a proton beam at BNL. Proton power 16kW in 100ns Spot size 3.2 x 1.6 mm Hg jet - 1cm diameter; 3m/s 0.0ms0.5ms1.2ms1.4ms2.0ms3.0ms Dispersal velocity ~10m/s, delay ~40  s

Magnet Tests Tests with a 20T magnet at Grenoble. B = 0T 1cm Mercury jet (v=15 m/s) B = 18T Jet deflection Reduction in velocity Reduction in radius Smoothing

Pion Capture 20T1.25T

Horn Capture Protons Current of 300 kA To decay channel  Hg target B  1/R B = 0

Target Facility

Pion Production Experiments The Hadron Production Experiment Data taking: Proton energy: 2-15 GeV Targets: H 2 -Pb 2, 5, 100% X o X-section to few % Optimise beam energy and target material for NF

Pion Production Experiments Main Injector Particle Production Experiment Data-taking: ? Proton energy: GeV Targets:NuMI Be, C,H 2, N 2, Be, C, Cu, Pb Re-use existing detectors

Phase Rotation Beam after drift plus adiabatic buncher – Beam is formed into string of ~ 200MHz bunches Beam after ~200MHz rf rotation; Beam is formed into string of equal-energy bunches; matched to cooling rf acceptance

Transverse Cooling Cooling  >10 increase in muon flux Existing techniques can’t be used  ionsation cooling Cooling is delicate balance: beam in beam out

Transverse Cooling Cooling cells are complex R&D essential: MuCool, MuScat and MICE

Transverse Cooling Recent development: ring coolers Main advantages: shorter longitudinal cooling Tetra Ring Quadrupole Ring RFOFO Ring S = solenoid, A = absorber, 36 cavities in blocks of 3 RAL Ring Main problem: kicker!

MuScat Measurement of muon multiple scattering: only relevant data – e - scattering, Russia, 1942 Input for cooling simulations and MICE First (technical) run at TRIUMF summer 2000, M11 beam Run2: April 2003

MuCool Design, prototype, test all cooling cell components High beam-power test of a cooling cell Preparations for MICE  NCRF cavities with sufficient gradient in multi-T fields  Be windows  Up to kW power deposition in absorbers  Safety considerations  Low non-absorber thickness in beam: - Absorber windows - Safety windows - RF windows  Cost effective design and construction

MuCool Absorber window development 200MHz cavity development MuCool Test Area

MuCool Original areaStage 2 construction What it will look like when it is finished

MICEMICE T.O.F. III Precise timing Electron ID Eliminate muons that decay Tracking devices: He filled TPC-GEM (similar to TESLA R&D) or sci-fi Measurement of momentum angles and position T.O.F. I & II Pion /muon ID precise timing 201 MHz RF cavities Liquid H2 absorbers or LiH ? SC Solenoids; Spectrometer, focus pair, compensation coil Muon Ionisation Cooling Experiment

MICE Muon Acceleration Needs to be fast – muon lifetime Needs to be a reasonable cost – not linacs all the way Baseline: Recirculating Linear Accelerators Other possibilities……FFAGs & VRCS

MICEFFAGs Fixed Field Alternating Gradient  magnets not ramped Cheaper/faster RLAs/RCSs Large momentum acceptance Large transverse acceptance  less cooling required!

MICEFFAGs Proof Of Principle machine built and tested in Japan. 50keV to 500keV in 1ms. 150MeV FFAG under construction at KEK.

MICEFFAGs

Staging in Japan Staging High Power Proton Driver –Muon g-2 Muon Factory (PRISM) –Muon LFV Muon Factory-II (PRISM-II) –Muon EDM Neutrino Factory –Based on 1 MW proton beam Neutrino Factory-II –Based on 4.4 MW proton beam Muon Collider Physics outcomes at each stage

MICEFFAGs R&D: Injection and extraction Magnets – GeV ring (120m radius): 6T SC RF – low frequency (6.5MHz), 1MV/m

MICEVRCS Fastest existing RCS: ISIS at 50Hz  20ms Proposal: accelerate in 37  s  4.6kHz Do it 30 times a second 920m circumference for 4 to 20 GeV Combined function magnets 100micron laminations of grain oriented silicon steel 18 magnets,  20T/m Eddy currents iron: 100MW  350kW Eddy currents cu : 170kW RF: 201MHz; 15MV/m Muons: 12 orbits, 83% survival

MICE Storage Ring Main requirement: underground lab(s) at large distances Longyearbyen~ 3520km Pyhasalmi~ 2290km Tenerife~ 2750km   15 degrees for straight sections

MICEConclusions Neutrino oscillations: one of most important physics results Many new experiments conceived New beam neutrino facilities required: - Superbeams - Neutrino Factory - Beta beams All require extensive R&D For Neutrino Factory: - proton driver - target - frontend (MuCool, MICE) - acceleration World Design Study (WDS1) planned