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Proton Plans at Fermilab Robert Zwaska - Fermilab Science and Engineering at Henderson-DUSEL Capstone Workshop Stony Brook University May 5, 2006 Outline I. Introduction to the accelerator complex II. Planned and possible upgrades III.Proton power projections
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Proton Plans at Fermilab Robert Zwaska - Fermilab Science and Engineering at Henderson- DUSEL Capstone Workshop Stony Brook University May 5, 2006 Outline.

Jan 12, 2016

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Page 1: Proton Plans at Fermilab Robert Zwaska - Fermilab Science and Engineering at Henderson- DUSEL Capstone Workshop Stony Brook University May 5, 2006 Outline.

Proton Plans at Fermilab

Robert Zwaska - Fermilab

Science and Engineering at Henderson-

DUSEL Capstone WorkshopStony Brook University

May 5, 2006

Outline

I. Introduction to the accelerator complex

II. Planned and possible upgrades

III. Proton power projections

Page 2: Proton Plans at Fermilab Robert Zwaska - Fermilab Science and Engineering at Henderson- DUSEL Capstone Workshop Stony Brook University May 5, 2006 Outline.

Making Neutrino Beams• Two operating beams at Fermilab

– Use 8 or 120 GeV protons– Secondaries produced with solid target and focused

• A rough figure of merit: proton power on target– Average current × Beam energy– 120 GeV beam does better

• Other factors (not covered):– Neutrino beam elements & design– Detector size & design

NuMI

Page 3: Proton Plans at Fermilab Robert Zwaska - Fermilab Science and Engineering at Henderson- DUSEL Capstone Workshop Stony Brook University May 5, 2006 Outline.
Page 4: Proton Plans at Fermilab Robert Zwaska - Fermilab Science and Engineering at Henderson- DUSEL Capstone Workshop Stony Brook University May 5, 2006 Outline.

The Main Injector Today

Batch 1 (PBar)

Batch 2

Batch 3

Batch 4

Batch 5

Batch 6

Booster

Main Injector

• Provides high power, 120 GeV proton beam– 80 kW for antiproton production– 170 kW for neutrino production

• Takes 6 or 7 batches from the 8 GeV Booster @ 15 Hz– 4-5 × 1012 protons per Booster batch

• Total cycle time ≥ 1.467 s + batches/15

NuMI

Page 5: Proton Plans at Fermilab Robert Zwaska - Fermilab Science and Engineering at Henderson- DUSEL Capstone Workshop Stony Brook University May 5, 2006 Outline.

Past-Year NuMI Running• Average power of 165 kW in the last few months

• Maximum beam power of 270 kW down the NuMI line (stably for ~ ½ hour)

• Peak intensity of 3×1013 ppp on the NuMI target

Pro

ton s

per

pu

l se

(10

1 2)

May 1 ‘05

10

20

30

March 1‘06

Pow

er (

kW)

100

May 1‘05

March 1‘06

200

300

Page 6: Proton Plans at Fermilab Robert Zwaska - Fermilab Science and Engineering at Henderson- DUSEL Capstone Workshop Stony Brook University May 5, 2006 Outline.

1st Booster Batch Injected into MI

2nd Booster Batch

Merged bunch train in MI

E

1st Batch 2nd Batch

Decelerate

Accelerate

Time

• Merge two booster batches through RF manipulations

K. Seiya et. al., PAC2003

Slip-stacking (Proton Plan)

Doubles the azimuthal charge in the Main InjectorBooster loading time is doubled

→ 440 kW of protons

Page 7: Proton Plans at Fermilab Robert Zwaska - Fermilab Science and Engineering at Henderson- DUSEL Capstone Workshop Stony Brook University May 5, 2006 Outline.

SnuMI: Recycler as an 8 GeV proton accumulator

• After the Collider program is terminated, we can use the Recycler as a proton accumulator

– Booster batches are injected at 15 Hz rep rate

• Accumulate protons from the Booster while MI is running

– save 0.4 s for each 6 Booster batches injected

• Can also slip-stack beam in the Recycler

– Up to 12 Booster batches injected (save 0.8 s)

• 5.4×1013 ppp every 1.467 s → 700 kW

D. McGinnis, Beams-doc-1782, 2138

Page 8: Proton Plans at Fermilab Robert Zwaska - Fermilab Science and Engineering at Henderson- DUSEL Capstone Workshop Stony Brook University May 5, 2006 Outline.

SNuMI: Momentum stacking in the Accumulator

• After the Collider program is terminated, we can also use the Accumulator

in the Anti-proton Source as a proton accumulator

– Momentum stack 4 (3) Booster in Accumulator batches every 267 (200) ms

– Limit Booster batch size to ~ 4×1012 protons

– Box Car stack in the Recycler

– Load in a new Accumulator batch every 267 (200) ms

• 6 Accumulator (24 or 18 Booster) batches

in Recycler

• Load the Main Injector in a single turn

• 9.1×1013 every 1.6 s → 1.1 MW

– 7.2×1013 every 1.33 s → 1.0 MW

D. McGinnis, Beams-doc-1782, 2138

Page 9: Proton Plans at Fermilab Robert Zwaska - Fermilab Science and Engineering at Henderson- DUSEL Capstone Workshop Stony Brook University May 5, 2006 Outline.

High Intensity Neutrino Source• 8 GeV Superconducting Linac as replacement for Booster

– Nominal injection charge ~1.5×1014 ppp

• Cycling every 1.4 s corresponds to a beam power of 2 MW at 120 GeV– Requires major upgrades to Main Injector RF

• Significant MI RF and magnet upgrades could reduce acceleration time– Maybe up to 4 MW

Page 10: Proton Plans at Fermilab Robert Zwaska - Fermilab Science and Engineering at Henderson- DUSEL Capstone Workshop Stony Brook University May 5, 2006 Outline.

Proton Power Projections

• Proton plan (in progress)– Ramp to 440 kW in 2009

• Recycler/Accumulator upgrades (in design – not approved yet)– One year shutdown in 2010

– Ramp to 1.1 MW (700 kW) in 2012

• High Intensity Neutrino Source (under consideration)– 2 MW sometime in the future

0200400600800

100012001400160018002000

Pea

k B

eam

Po

wer

(k

W)

2006 2008 2010 2012 20xx

Note: ~ 1.7×107 s/yr (effective, at peak power)

Page 11: Proton Plans at Fermilab Robert Zwaska - Fermilab Science and Engineering at Henderson- DUSEL Capstone Workshop Stony Brook University May 5, 2006 Outline.

Lowering the primary proton energy ?

D. Wolff

Injection dwell time 80 ms Flattop time 50 ms Maximum dp/dt 240 GeV/s

120 GeV, 1.34 s

50 GeV, 0.81 s

40 GeV, 0.73 s

30 GeV, 0.62 s

this is achievable now (conservative) limit injection dwell time to ~ 30 ms ? faster down ramp ?

Page 12: Proton Plans at Fermilab Robert Zwaska - Fermilab Science and Engineering at Henderson- DUSEL Capstone Workshop Stony Brook University May 5, 2006 Outline.

Proton Energy Scaling• Reducing proton beam energy does not results in an equal reduction in cycle time

– Worst for cases where Booster is heavily utilized

• Neutrino beams based on lower-energy protons will have lower beam power

0

500

1000

1500

2000

20 40 60 80 100 120

Primary Proton Energy (GeV)

Pea

k B

eam

Pow

er (

kW

)

CurrentProton PlanRecyclerAccumulatorHINS

Page 13: Proton Plans at Fermilab Robert Zwaska - Fermilab Science and Engineering at Henderson- DUSEL Capstone Workshop Stony Brook University May 5, 2006 Outline.

Conclusions• Fermilab proton complex can be upgraded to produce a Neutrino Superbeam

– 320 kW peak (250 kW ave.) available today

– 440 kW upgrades are in progress • Proton Plan → E. Prebys et al.

– 700 kW & 1.1 MW upgrades are under study (likely?)• SNuMI → A. Marchionni et al.

– ≥ 2 MW beams are under consideration• HINS → G. Appolinari et al.

• Primary proton energy needs to be understood– Lowering proton energy below 120 GeV always reduces the beam power on target

• Neutrino beam production needs to be considered– There is no beamline to Henderson

– Does not need to be a conventional beam:• Neutrino Factory (A. Tollestrup et al.)

• Beta Beam (A. Jansson)