Title: Operating the LHC Initially at a Lower Energy?
1Operating the LHC Initially at a Lower Energy?
- from Chamonix 2004
- Rüdiger Schmidt AB-CO
- with M.Calvi, V.Kain and A.Siemko
Reminder Chamonix 2003 Discovery potential for
Higgs Transient losses and quench
level Reliability of machine / magnet operation
Proposals and Conclusions
presentation to LEADE 26 March 2004
2Operating LHC at lower energies - main
conclusions from André Verdier
- Heat load for cryogenic system only marginally
reduced when operating at lower energy - In case of energy deposition due to continuous
beam losses of given value, the discovery
potential increases with the machine energy - In case of energy deposition due to transient
losses, the discovery potential may decrease with
the machine energy
3Operating LHC at lower energies
- During initial operation, say, the first year,
the discovery potential for Higgs production is
considered - For a light Higgs (120 GeV), the relative
potential R is decreased by 10 for 6 TeV
compared to 7 TeV assuming the same luminosity
(from particle physics, A.Verdier 2003) - R7 TeV 1, R6 TeV 0.9
- Discovery potential and luminosity with the same
beam parameters the luminosity at 7 TeV would be
16 higher compared to 6 TeV. Assuming the same
efficiency and the same luminosity lifetime, the
Higgs discovery potential at 7 TeV is larger by
about 20.
- The LHC is a frightening complex accelerator
both from the hardware point of view and from
operation - Initially, the efficiency of the operation will
to a large extent determine the integrated
luminosity
challenging
4Higgs discovery potential for case A
- assuming
- not full beam intensity (collimation and machine
protection) - not limited by beam-beam effects (due to limited
intensity) - not limited by aperture (no full squeezing to 0.5
m, too delicate, and non-linearities in the
triplet) - given emittance of the beams at injection
- given number of protons per bunch at injection
- the luminosity scales with energy
- assuming same efficiency of operation
?
?
5Transient beam losses when, where and why?
- at injection and during the ramp, due to beam
parameters that are not constant (orbit, tune,
chromaticity) - at 7 TeV when collimators are adjusted
- collimators will be moved in small steps, and
during such steps protons will be touched and
lost - during initial operation the collimation
efficiency will not have been fully optimised - transient losses at collimators particle showers
in downstream dipole and quadrupole magnets - at 7 TeV during squeezing and adjustments for
luminosity preparation (shifting from dipoles to
low-beta triplets) - see also experience from HERA fluctuation of
beam losses - During all this time, transient losses could well
cause magnet quenches
6Beam losses and machine operation
- Quenches induced by beam losses will inevitably
occur - at 7 TeV, a fast loss of a tiny fraction of the
nominal beam (10-8 - 10-7 ) would induce
a quench in a superconducting magnet - at 450 GeV, a fast loss of some 10-4 of the
nominal injected beam would quench a magnet
- Quenching due to magnets for LHC start. should
never happen - being too close to their margin
- retraining
- etc.
- It must be easy to understand if quenches are
beam induced or from other causes - in particular during initial operation, quenching
of magnets should only happen due to beam losses
and due to hardware failures that cannot be
avoided (quench protection, cryogenics, etc.)
See later
7Operational margin of a superconducting magnet
Applied Magnetic Field T
Bc critical field
Bc
Normal state
Applied field T
Superconducting
state
Tc critical temperature
Tc
9 K
Temperature K
8Increased quench margin at lower energy for
transient losses
- More margin at 6 TeV with respect to transient
losses, determined by several factors - Part of the beam hits a magnet less energy
density beam energy is lower and beam size is
larger - more temperature margin
- Calculation for proton shower assumes (Verena
Kain) - 6 TeV versus 7 TeV, emittance decrease with
energy - Calculations for quench limit assumes (Marco
Calvi) - heating in inner layer
- magnet field for 7 TeV corresponding to 8.34 Tesla
9Energy deposition by 6TeV and 7TeV proton shower
820
620
V.Kain
10Field map of LHC dipole magnet superconducting
cable for 12 kA 15 mm / 2 mm Temperature 1.9 K
cooled with Helium
56 mm
11Temperature margin versus beam energyinner layer
M.Calvi and A.Siemko
12Energy margin versus beam energyinner layer
(
M.Calvi and A.Siemko
13Energy margin versus beam energy no heliuminner
layer
(
M.Calvi and A.Siemko
14Margin for fast beam loss between 6TeV and 7TeV
- both together, the increased margin for fast
losses and the decreased energy deposition from
protons showers need to be combined - the margin could be up by a factor of 2 twice
more protons are tolerated to be lost in magnet
for fast losses at 6 TeV - the real situation is more complex when the
margin becomes smaller at higher energy (closer
to the critical surface) - the length of the minimum propagation zone
decreases - the effect of helium cooling might be reduced
- there could be less current sharing
- excellent Project Report 44 Quench levels and
transient beam losses in the LHC magnets
J.B.Jeanneret, D.Leroy, L.Oberli and T.Trenkler -
1996
15Luminosity for case B LHC operation limited due
to transient losses
- assuming
- not full beam intensity (collimation and machine
protection) - not limited by beam-beam effects (due to limited
intensity) - not limited by aperture (no full squeezing to 0.5
m, too delicate, and non-linearities in the
triplet) - given emittance of the beams at injection
- number of protons per bunch could be increased,
possibly by up to a factor of two if operating at
6 TeV - the luminosity scales with the energy and N2
16. this demonstrates that operation of the LHC
initially at 6 TeV could be of interest
- depends on
- assumption for Higgs mass
- LHC limitation during initial operation (is it
really fast losses?) - Today coupling with MAD including a (partial)
aperture model of the LHC and FLUKA for loss
calculations (V.Kain) - Tomorrow (?) coupling of the output with a
program for quench studies (for example SPQR
F.Sonnemann and M.Calvi) - With such an approach it might be possible to
calculate the quench limits with more realistic
assumptions for beam losses
17Other arguments for / against 6 TeV operation
- Quench propagation from quenching magnet to
adjacent magnet is reduced less magnets will
quench - Faster recovery of the cryogenic system
- Faster ramping up and down (initially, due to
quenches and hardware failures the average length
of a run might not be very long) - At 6 TeV, less synchrotron radiation and less
heating of the cryogenics (marginal effect) - At 6 TeV, less energy loss by synchrotron
radiation - abort gap cleaning less efficient
- if operation is with reduced current, this should
be acceptable
18Magnets and machine operation
- Operation with beam should start at an energy for
which the magnet system is very robust
regardless of the beam - At an energy of say, 6 TeV, magnet quenches
without beam are very unlikely - At 7 TeV, magnet quenches are more likely
- Operation without beam should be performed with a
current that is 200-300 A above the level
envisaged for luminosity operation - if hardware commissioning is done at 7 TeV, start
at 6.8 TeV - for example, if we intend to operate for
luminosity at 7 TeV, we should operate the
hardware at 7.2 TeV before - This ensures that magnets will NOT quench if
there is no beam loss and no hardware failure - post mortem recording to understand origin of
quenches !
19Quench antenna signals
- the quench antenna (pick up coils inside the
magnet) measures mechanical activity in the coils - this mechanical activity does not directly
correlate with a quench, but when there is not
activitiy, in general no quench is observed - the data shows the signals from the quench
antenna for two ramps performed with the same
magnet - during the first ramp, constant activity and
quench at 11.633 kA - during the second ramp there is no activity up to
10.8 kA, the activity starts at 11.4 kA, full
activity at 11.8 kA - at constant current, no activity is observed
M.Calvi and A.Siemko
20M.Calvi and A.Siemko
21M.Calvi and A.Siemko
22Statistical analysis of magnet quenches
- many magnets have been cold tested
- simple statistical look at magnet quenches
- this has been done by MTM all data are provided
from the MTM database by M.Calvi - to get an idea about the ability of a magnet to
operate at 7 TeV (or higher), it is of interest
to have a look at the training curves - it is absolutly normal for a magnet to require
some training quenches to reach nominal field (or
ultimate field) most magnets show an excellent
training (few quenches to ultimate) - for some magnets training is more difficult
23M.Calvi and A.Siemko
24M.Calvi and A.Siemko
25Training of one dipole magnet
M.Calvi and A.Siemko
26Training before / after thermal cycle of another
dipole magnet
M.Calvi and A.Siemko
27Conclusions
- LHC experiments tell us do not change the energy
frequently - the LHC should start operation with an energy
where the magnets are rock-solid - not to decide now, wait for magnet tests and
hardware commissioning (the magnets will tell
us) - beam loss studies
- before 7 TeV with beam, operate magnet system at
7.2 TeV - should be possibly in the shadow of physics
operation due to sectorisation, e.g. when part of
the machine is down - limited retraining of few magnets would be
acceptable - for few weaker magnets conditioning / training
with the LHC when other sectors are down
(quenched) ramp to higher current - the objective is still to go to 7 TeV after some
time - maybe one year (and later possibly higher)
28is it politically correct to start operation at 6
TeV ?
- . if initial operation is at 6 TeV no change
of the name - fortunatly we named it LHC and not the Sevatron
neither Sixatron