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Brief Review of Superbunches for Hadron Colliders

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Presentation on theme: "Brief Review of Superbunches for Hadron Colliders"— Presentation transcript:

1 Brief Review of Superbunches for Hadron Colliders
Frank Zimmermann, Factories’03 History & Motivation Tune Shift Optimum Luminosity

2 Collider Commissioning year Energy [GeV] Peak Luminosity
The CERN ISR - the first hadron collider - collided coasting (unbunched) proton beams with currents up to 50 A and reached a peak luminosity of 2.2x1032cm-2s-1. This has not yet been achieved by any other hadron collider. Collider Commissioning year Energy [GeV] Peak Luminosity [1032 cm-2s-1] ISR 1970 31 1.4 SPPS 1980 316 0.06 Tevatron 1987 980 0.4 RHIC 2000 100 0.02 (polarized) LHC 2007 7000 LHC-II? 2017? >7000? >1000?

3 ISR-style quasi-coasting beams recently identified as key ingredient for future highest-energy high-luminosity proton colliders [e.g., Ken Takayama et al., ‘Superbunch Hadron Colliders,’ Phys. Rev. Lett 88, (2002).] In particular, a possible upgrade of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) [2] can be considered, by operating not exactly with coasting beams, but with long super-bunches, which are confined, e.g., by a barrier bucket rf system. [F. Ruggiero (ed.), et al., ‘LHC Luminosity and Energy Upgrade: A Feasibility Study,’ CERN LHC Project Report 626 (2002).]

4 LHC: nominal, ultimate, and possible upgrades
#bunches 2808 1 rms bunch length [cm] 7.6 7.6, 4.2 7500 rms energy spread [10-4] 1.1 1.1, 3.7 5.8 beta at IP [m] 0.5 0.25 crossing angle[mrad] 300 315 485 1000 beam current [A] 0.56 0.86 1.3,1.3 1.0 luminosity [1034 cm-2 s-1] 2.3 7.3, 9.7 9.0

5 main advantages: cancellation between head-on and ‘long-range’ components of the beam-beam tune shift, which is realized by colliding the beams at two interaction points with alternating planes of crossing absence of PACMAN bunches at the end of a bunch train no beam-induced multipacting and electron-cloud build up

6 cancellation between head-on and ‘long-range’ components
of the beam-beam tune shift PRSTAB 5, (2002)

7 x-y crossing or 45/135 degree crossing

8 (1) luminosity of a conventional hadron collider operating with round bunched Gaussian beams can be increased in proportion to the bunch current, while keeping a constant beam-beam tune shift, by enlarging the product of bunch length and crossing angle (2) if one chooses a uniform profile instead of a Gaussian, an additional factor sqrt(2) is gained [F. Ruggiero, F. Zimmermann, ‘Luminosity Optimization Near the Beam-Beam Limit by Increasing Bunch Length or Crossing Angle,’ PRSTAB 5, (2002)]

9 total tune shift for flat bunches colliding at 2 IPs
with alternating crossings total tune shift for Gaussian bunches

10 further simplifying assumptions:
Gaussian bunches (i) q<<1 rad (ii) s* <<sz<<b (iii) large Piwinski parameter qsz /(2s*)>>1 Long flat superbunches (ii) q>sqrt(e/(gb*)) (iii) lflat>10 s*/q

11 Gaussian bunches proportional to qsz!

12 flat superbunches proportional to ql!

13 F. Ruggiero, F. Zimmermann, G. Rumolo, Y. Papaphilippou,
“Beam Dynamics Studies for Uniform (Hollow) Bunches or Super-bunches in the LHC : Beam-beam effects, Electron Cloud, Longitudinal Dynamics, and Intrabeam Scattering”, RPIA2002 “Beam-Beam Interaction, Electron Cloud and Intrabeam Scattering for Proton Super-bunches”, PAC2003

14 LHC, L0=2.3x1034 cm-2 s-1, q0=300 mrad

15 Conclusion: Operating with large Piwinski parameter or preferably with flat superbunches, LHC luminosity can be increased about 10 times to 1035 cm-2 s-1 for the same total tune shift and beam current Problems with PACMAN bunches and electron cloud are solved simultaneously


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