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TC 25th October1 LHC Real-time requirements What is real-time? What is latency? The time between asking for something to be done and it being done The.

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Presentation on theme: "TC 25th October1 LHC Real-time requirements What is real-time? What is latency? The time between asking for something to be done and it being done The."— Presentation transcript:

1 TC 25th October1 LHC Real-time requirements What is real-time? What is latency? The time between asking for something to be done and it being done The violation of one or more temporal constraints causes a loss of functionality. If it takes too long it don’t work. It ain’t necessarily speed.

2 TC 25th October2 Implications Front-ends Field bus Gateway Network Workstation Widely available industrial standards: ATM, WorldFIP, LynxOS, PowerPC which would satisfy LHC requirements (and in fact are already in use, planned to be used, or being used in prototypes.) E.g: Full ATM for LHC: 2M CHF Power converters Beam Instrumentation Reference magnets Real time To allow real time control/access of: But note: things are moving quickly out there

3 TC 25th October3 Why bother? 150 units of Q’ Large but reproducible, will clearly have to be measured Energy during injection plateau Orbit 1. Multipole errors

4 TC 25th October4 Control: assumptions Snap-back and low energy provide the challenge Nominal is the worse case... The “multipole factory” takes care of at least 80% of the effect i.e. –magnetic measurements –non-linear models –on-line reference magnets Characteristic frequency of snap-back slow & not changed by feed-forward from “multipole factory” Corrections to: horiz. orbit correctors (b1) & tuning quads. (b2) sextupole (b3) and decapole (b5) spool pieces Characteristic frequency is low 70 s

5 TC 25th October5 Beam parameter changes

6 TC 25th October6 Beam based feedback max rate db3/dt  0.067 units/second, 3 - 5 units Q’/second  1 unit per second given the 80% from the magnet factory (NB out of tolerance in 1 second) Chromaticity is NOT an easy measurement and is not likely to be available for the physics beams (emittance growth). Available for pilots  reproducibility (again…) Tune & orbit we can do but b3: caveat...

7 TC 25th October7 So we have large multipole swings during the injection plateau and snapback... Beam stability will depend totally on –feed-forward from the reference magnets –feedback on the key beam parameters tune, orbit, energy, chromaticity Have to make a phase jump in our expected performance of a control system: –at present it is in the stone-age –have a look at synchrotron light sources to get an idea of what is possible... We will need similar to deal with multipoles, tight physics constraints & the low tolerance to beam loss.

8 TC 25th October8 LEP Orbit Maximum sampling frequency 0.067 Hz LHC Orbit Proposed sampling frequency 10 Hz The stone age...

9 TC 25th October9 RT Requirements Reference magnets –feed-forward of corrections to machine Feedback-loops –Global Orbit –Local Orbit - e.g. orbit stability at collimators –Tune –Chromaticity Real-time knobs –typically tune, orbit bumps –extension of feedback, operator close loop, need... Display –Orbit –Beam loss (not for abort, but display & possible feedback) –Luminosity, Beam sizes, Lifetimes… Timing like actions (possibly) –e.g post-mortem trigger

10 TC 25th October10 RT requirements II Response limited by PC/magnet

11 TC 25th October11 Work in progress Power converters: –WordlFip 2.5 Mb/s + PowerPC/LynxOS gateway –already planning RT capabilities up to 100 Hz BPM/BLM –work in progress but use of RT functionality assume ATM prototyping –SPS Q-loop –LHC orbit correction simulation Requirements elucidated: –LHC report 221 “Requirements for real time correction…” –CO/OP forum –LHC-CP workshop –here...

12 TC 25th October12 SL-BI Two classes of instrumentation: global & local The global systems e.g. orbit and beam loss will provide the main control challenges:- Orbit: 10 Hz RT connection to PCR BLMs: 10 Hz RT connection to PCR (NOT to decide on beam abort) Local systems such as tune & chromaticity will be involved in RT feedback Proposed Architecture VME World FIP for RT Ethernet for off-line retrieval & Post-mortem Under discussion

13 TC 25th October13 Gateway MCCS Server ~80 Gateways ~1700 Digital Controllers Up to 30 Digital Controllers Per WorldFIP fieldbus RT LHC Network Major system - all magnets - set, ramp, trim etc. etc. Offering RT control at 100 Hz (whether you need it or not!) Digital controllers:- CERN design, manufactured by industry. Prototypes for String II. Gateways:- standard SL-CO - Power PC running LynxOS Fieldbus: WorldFIP from CEGELEC Timing: via an IRIG-B receiver card Power Converters

14 TC 25th October14 Reference magnets C MCCS Gateway Multipoles Factory DB I SM18 Magnet Test Benches WorldFIP fieldbus Real-time LHC controls network FB Power Converter Real-Time LHC Control System Instrumented Magnet 3-10Hz

15 TC 25th October15 SL-CO-FE - Real Time Investigating RT architectures –Front-ends, Networks –Prototype WorldFIP, FIP running LynxOS, ATM SPS as test-bed –Q-loop –LHC orbit correction simulation

16 TC 25th October16 Conclusions Demonstrable need for real-time control at the LHC Essential requirements established. Foresee dual system: –real-time for purposes outlined above –non-deterministic but high bandwidth for non-critical monitoring, command flow, post-mortem etc. etc. Accept RT is necessary, form WG under auspices of LHC- CP, ask them to investigate possible architectures… Much work already done in prototyping possible system, however technology choice can wait. Final architecture will clearly take into account such things as: –cost –reliability –maintenance

17 TC 25th October17 Acknowledgements Michel Jonker Pedro Ribeiro Thijs Wijnands Quentin King Alan Burns Oliver Bruning Luca Bottura Robin Lauckner


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