Eric Prebys Representing the “Mu2e Task Force”: Steve Werkema Jim Morgan Vladimir Nagaslaev Chuck Ankenbrandt Vladimir Shiltsev Ioanis Kourbanis *Mu2e-doc-1911.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Proton Beam Measurements in the Recycler Duncan Scott On Behalf of the Main Injector Group.
Advertisements

Electron Cooling in the Accumulator McGinnis Electron Cooling in the Accumulator Dave McGinnis.
Masahito TOMIZAWA and Satoshi MIHARA Accelerator and proton beam.
1 Proton Upgrades at Fermilab Robert Zwaska Fermilab March 12, 2007 Midwest Accelerator Physics Collaboration Meeting Indiana University Cyclotron Facility.
Muon Collider 2011 Workshop Jun 27-July 1 in Telluride, CO Gollwitzer & Nagaitsev presented Attending: Ankenbrandt, Lebedev, Pasquinelli, Popovic, and.
Task Force on Project X for Muon Collider Keith Gollwitzer Accelerator Division Fermilab.
Fermilab Accelerator Complex in the Near Term: Muon Physics Program Eric Prebys Accelerator Physics Center FNAL.
Nufact09-IIT 107/24/2009 Project X and a Muon Facility at Fermilab Milorad Popovic FNAL.
NOvA meeting PIP Update W. Pellico. PIP Goals and Scope (Provided in 2011 – Directorate S. H. / DOE Talk ) Goals: Specific to the issues surrounding the.
Paul Derwent 30 Nov 00 1 The Fermilab Accelerator Complex o Series of presentations  Overview of FNAL Accelerator Complex  Antiprotons: Stochastic Cooling.
Proton Plan PMG 3/22/07 E Prebys 1 Proton Plan Status February Eric Prebys.
3 GeV,1.2 MW, Booster for Proton Driver G H Rees, RAL.
Proton Plans at Fermilab Robert Zwaska - Fermilab Science and Engineering at Henderson- DUSEL Capstone Workshop Stony Brook University May 5, 2006 Outline.
F MI High Power Operation and Future Plans Ioanis Kourbanis (presented by Bruce Brown) HB2008 August 25, 2008.
AGS/Booster PP Setup Plan Jan. 11, 2013 RSC Meeting Haixin Huang.
Antiproton Source Capabilities and Issues Keith Gollwitzer & Valeri Lebedev Accelerator Division Fermilab 1.
SNuMI 1 Outline Action Items PP2 Progress [Nancy/Elaine] –Org Chart Update –FY07 Budget/Plans Discussion –FY08 Summer Shutdown –Overall cost Reduction.
Muon Campus Projects Jerry Annala Jan 23, µ AIP Scope Recycler RF system to provide needed bunch structure to future Muon Experiments Recycler RF.
Storage Rings Group Meeting Steve Werkema 24 March 2010.
Mu2e WBS 2 Accelerator Progress Report Mu2e WGM 6/15/2011 Steve Werkema L2 Manager for the Accelerator Systems.
SNuMI (>1MW) SNuMI 1 Motivations for SNuMI The neutrino experimental program for the next decade –NOνA (long baseline νμ→νe search) –MINERνA (Main Injector.
AAC February 4-6, 2003 Protons on Target Ioanis Kourbanis MI/Beams.
F 1 MW Proton Beam for Neutrinos Dave McGinnis AAC Meeting May 10, 2006.
Extraction from the Delivery Ring November 19, 2013 J. Morgan.
F Proton Plan Eric Prebys, FNAL Accelerator Division.
Mu2e WGM 11/16/2011 R. Ray Mu2e Project manager. Review of the past few months In September it became apparent that the cost of Mu2e was well in excess.
Accelerator Issues Fermilab Antiproton Experiment Keith Gollwitzer Antiproton Source Department Accelerator Division Fermilab.
Mu2e, August 15, 2007 E Prebys 1 The Steering Group and mu2e Eric Prebys.
Proton Plan PMG 7/7/05 E Prebys 1 Proton Plan Status June Report Eric Prebys.
Damping Ring Parameters and Interface to Sources S. Guiducci BTR, LNF 7 July 2011.
Project X RD&D Plan Beam Transfer Line and Recycler Injection David Johnson AAC Meeting February 3, 2009.
Overview of the Project X RD&D Plan Sergei Nagaitsev AAC Meeting February 3, 2009.
Mu2e Mu2e CD-2 Review Template Eric Prebys Extinction October 21-24, 2014.
Mu2e and Project X, September 3, 2008 E Prebys Background: Proton Economics in Project X Era* Assume  9mA*1ms = 5.3x10 13 protons/linac “blast”  Main.
Doug Michael Sep. 16, GeV protons 1.9 second cycle time 4x10 13 protons/pulse 0.4 MW! Single turn extraction (10  s) 4x10 20 protons/year 700.
Proton Plan Expectations Eric Prebys AD/Proton Source.
Preliminary MEIC Ion Beam Formation Scheme Jiquan Guo for the MEIC design study team Oct. 5,
 A model of beam line built with G4Beamline (scripting tool for GEANT4)  Simulated performance downstream of the AC Dipole for core of beam using  x.
What we have now – the Pbar source 1 1/23/2013 J. Morgan.
Proton Plan PMG 2/22/07 E Prebys 1 Proton Plan Status January Eric Prebys.
SNuMI: WBS 1.1 Booster Upgrades Eric Prebys $642K FY06$ (no contingency, no G&A) xx% contingency Main Injector & Recycler BNB NuMI Tunnel Booster Ring.
F A Fermilab Roadmap Dave McGinnis May 28, f Fermilab Roadmap - McGinnis Timelines  Divide the road map into three parallel paths  ILC - Energy.
Early Beam Injection Scheme for the Fermilab Booster: A Path for Intensity Upgrade Chandra Bhat Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory DPF2015, ANN ARBOR,
Proton Plan Director’s Review 8/15/06 Prebys Proton Plan Answers to Questions Director’s Review August 2006 Eric Prebys.
F Possible Proton Capabilities at Fermilab Dave McGinnis April 16, 2007.
Robert R. Wilson Prize Talk John Peoples April APS Meeting: February 14,
Mu2e Meeting, FNAL, September 15-16, 2006 E Prebys 1 Radiation and Slow Extraction Issues* (work in progress) Eric Prebys, FNAL/AD.
F Proton Plan Eric Prebys, FNAL Accelerator Division.
NuFACT06 Muon Source at Fermilab David Neuffer Fermilab.
Proton Drivers & Muon Sources at Fermilab David Neuffer Fermilab.
Limitations to Total Booster Flux Total protons per batch: 4E12 with decent beam loss, 5E12 max. Average rep rate of the machine: –Injection bump magnets.
F Project X: Recycler 8.9 GeV/c Extraction D. Johnson, E. Prebys, M. Martens, J. Johnstone Fermilab Accelerator Advisory Committee August 8, 2007 D. Johnson.
MI/RR Operation Status Ioanis Kourbanis August 21, 2014.
Overview of Project X ICD and RD&D Plans David Neuffer material from Paul Derwent & Sergei Nagaitsev (AAC Meeting, February 3, 2009)
Proton Driver Keith Gollwitzer Accelerator Division Fermilab MAP Collaboration Meeting June 20, 2013.
Ioanis Kourbanis 01/23/13 RR AIP 1. Requirements Provide proton beam with the proper time structure from the Recycler to the muon campus for the g-2/mu2e.
Muon Department Meeting Jerry Annala Staged Commissioning of Muon Campus 17 December 2015.
ELENA RF Manipulations S. Hancock. Apart from debunching before and rebunching after cooling, the principal role of the rf is to decelerate the beam and.
Slip stacking in Recycler Ioanis Kourbanis 9/14/11.
F Sergei Nagaitsev (FNAL) Aug Project X ICD2 Briefing.
WBS – 30 Straight Section Reconfiguration g-2 Accelerator – 30 Straight Section Reconfiguration D. Still Fermilab Muon g-2 IDR, June 5-7.
Simulation of Extinction Channel Eric Prebys Mu2e Extinction Technical Design Review 2 November 2015.
Investigation of Injection Schemes for SLS 2.0
8 GeV Linac (Project X) and mu2e Chuck Ankenbrandt Fermilab Mu2e Collaboration Meeting August 1, 2007 My Preferred title: Linac & Recycler & Accumulator.
ALCW at SLAC, January 7, 2004J. Rogers, Novel Schemes for Damping Rings1 Novel Schemes for Damping Rings J. Rogers Cornell University Improving dynamic.
Beam Transport and Storage Rings Design Review November 17, 2010 J. Morgan.
Alternative/complementary Possibilities
Plans for ions in the injector complex D
Updated MEIC Ion Beam Formation Scheme
JLEIC Ion Beam Formation options for 200 GeV
Presentation transcript:

Eric Prebys Representing the “Mu2e Task Force”: Steve Werkema Jim Morgan Vladimir Nagaslaev Chuck Ankenbrandt Vladimir Shiltsev Ioanis Kourbanis *Mu2e-doc-1911

April 2, 2012 E. Prebys, AEM Presentation 2

 The total project cost (TPC) of Mu2e at CD-0 was $200M  The cost grew for both the detector and (particularly) the accelerator to >$300M  It’s was unambiguously stated if the cost could not be reduced, Mu2e would be canceled and the physics deferred to the Project X era.  “Mu2e Task Force” formed by Stuart Henderson in September, 2011 to address the problem  Our goal was to reduce the TPC to “something like $200M” through  De-scoping the beam delivery plan, considering up to an order of magnitude reduction in beam flux.  Associated reduction in detector and building costs  Concurrent saving from reducing the magnet costs (Mike Lamm, last week’s AEM)  Moving the cost of things that are of general use off project In particular, exploit synergy with g-2 April 2, 2012 E. Prebys, AEM Presentation 3

 Three Booster batches at time are momentum stacked in the Accumulator  They are rebunched into 4 bunches, which are transferred 1 at a time to the Debuncher  In the Debuncher it is slow extracted, generating the required beam structure of the experiment.  In order to deliver the Booster batches (6 per MI super cycle) we have to “thread” them through the Recycler while NOvA batches are there:  This requires extremely fast and expensive kickers in the Recycler, to “sneak” the bunch through in the empty slot. April 2, 2012 E. Prebys, AEM Presentation 4

5  A resonance is driven to slowly extract the single bunch which is circulating around the Debuncher.  The result is a train of bunches separated by the period of the Debuncher (~1.7  s) ~100 ns ~1.6  s April 2, 2012

 We can’t save significant money without eliminating something major from the proposed configuration  Focus on eliminating Accumulator Saves a lot of $$ directly Frees up magnets and power supplies to use elsewhere  Consider whether there’s a way to possibly extract directly from the Recycler Knee-jerk reaction is no, but There are (too many?) smart people around here. April 2, 2012 E. Prebys, AEM Presentation 6

 “Pass-through”  A single batch is passed through the Recycler straight to the Debuncher, where it is bunched  “g-2”  A Booster batch is sent to the Recycler, where It’s divided into MHz bunches, just like g-2 These are individually extracted to the Debuncher  In both cases, beam is slow-extracted from the Debuncher, as before.  In both cases, one and two batch variations appear feasible  1/6 and 1/3 of nominal average flux, respectively.  Note, the ratio of Debuncher bunch sizes is (original):(pass-through):(g-2) = 3:4:1 April 2, 2012 E. Prebys, AEM Presentation 7

April 2, 2012 E. Prebys, AEM Presentation 8

 Pass-through schemes  Pros: extremely simple in the Recycler (can be done with pulsed magnet instead of kicker). Very low duty factor Can use an existing injection kicker for Debuncher (one batch scheme only)  Cons RF manipulations complicated in Debuncher Requires 8 separate harmonics Leads to out of time satellite bunches Give up synergy with g-2  g-2 schemes  Pros: Synergy with g-2 (declare Recycler work an AIP?) Extremely simple RF in Debuncher Needs extraction kicker in Recycler, but not super kicker ($5M->$1M)  Cons: Not sure about momentum aperture of line from Recycler to Debuncher April 2, 2012 E. Prebys, AEM Presentation 9 Conclusion: this wins

 During the 8 Booster ticks which are not used by NOvA, Booster batches are injected into Recycler  2.5 MHz RF is used to divide these into 4 bunches of ~1x10 12 each  Subsequent handling  g-2 Bunches are extracted individually to the muon production target  Mu2e Individual bunches are extracted to the pBar Debuncher ring Each is resonantly extracted to produce the required Mu2e time structure. E. Prebys, AEM Presentation 10 Booster batch Injected Split into 4 bunches with 2.5 MHz RF April 2, 2012

 The g-2 scheme represents significantly less technical risk than the baseline scheme  In addition, the baseline scheme assumes the Booster will run at 15 Hz during the NOvA era April 2, 2012 E. Prebys, AEM Presentation 11

 Is there a way to eliminate the pBar enclosure entire and extract directly from the Recycler?  Potential for large savings No pBar ring mods No shielding issues  Possible to re-site the experiment in a location that also works for Project X Even if we build a new experiment, using the same building is attractive.  Problems  Bunching and slow extracting a la the Debuncher simply won’t work. Too much momentum spread  As far as we can tell, this would require a new technique which has never been used before. April 2, 2012 E. Prebys, AEM Presentation 12

 We considered numerous options, and several appear promising.  As a straw man, we are focusing on the “Local Resonance” scheme (Shiltsev&Marriner, Nagaslaev, Lebedev, Nagaitsev)  Don’t rebunch the beam, but establish a separatrix and selectively extract a small portion (the length of a mu2e bunch) with a combination of tune shift and RF knockout Tune shift produced by pulsed stripline quadrupole RF knockout produced by digital damping system  This scheme and several of the alternates depend on the ability to resonantly extract beam from the Recycler with the initial longitudinal and transverse emittance of the Booster.  If that isn’t feasible, then the only schemes remaining involve even more speculative technology.  Preliminary conclusion  Local resonance schemes cannot be proven not to work at this point, BUT Lot’s of R&D work At least a year delay Might still be a show stopper. April 2, 2012 E. Prebys, AEM Presentation 13

April 2, 2012 E. Prebys, AEM Presentation 14 One proposed solution solves this problem

 Eliminating the Accumulator saves a great deal of money  Complex RF systems  Fast kickers  Re-using Accumulator magnets and power supplies for extraction line  The incremental savings of eliminating Debuncher is much less  Biggest savings comes from eliminating shielding.  The Recycler-only option is not free  R&D costs  Production costs  Tunnel shielding  Cost of delaying CD-1 by ~1 year April 2, 2012 E. Prebys, AEM Presentation 15

April 2, 2012 E. Prebys, AEM Presentation 16 Move to AIP Separate line item Use Accumulator magnets and power supplies to build extraction line Guess based on initial estimates of R&D, construction and tunnel shielding. *S. Werkema, J. Morgan, et al Save ~$70M

 Pursue “g-2” option as the new baseline for the experiment.  Make all accelerator modifications compatible with 2 batch operation  ~1/3 of original beam delivery scheme, BUT Less demanding on Booster Simplicity may lead to faster ramp up -> real time to get data set may not be that much more  Ultimately, 2 vs 1 will depend on shielding and radiation issues  This is the scheme which is currently in preparation for CD-1 review  Director’s review tomorrow  Lehman review in June April 2, 2012 E. Prebys, AEM Presentation 17