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Title: Compensation of the long-range beam-beam interactions as a path towards new configurations for the high luminosity LHC

Journal Article · · Physical Review Special Topics. Accelerators and Beams

Colliding bunch trains in a circular collider demands a certain crossing angle in order to separate the two beams transversely after the collision. The magnitude of this crossing angle is a complicated function of the bunch charge, the number of long-range beam-beam interactions, of β* and type of optics (flat or round), and possible compensation or additive effects between several low-β insertions in the ring depending on the orientation of the crossing plane at each interaction point. About 15 years ago, the use of current bearing wires was proposed at CERN in order to mitigate the long-range beam-beam effects [J.P. Koutchouk, CERN Report No. LHC-Project-Note 223, 2000], therefore offering the possibility to minimize the crossing angle with all the beneficial effects this might have: on the luminosity performance by reducing the need for crab-cavities or lowering their voltage, on the required aperture of the final focus magnets, on the strength of the orbit corrector involved in the crossing bumps, and finally on the heat load and radiation dose deposited in the final focus quadrupoles. In this paper, a semianalytical approach is developed for the compensation of the long-range beam-beam interactions with current wires. This reveals the possibility of achieving optimal correction through a careful adjustment of the aspect ratio of the β functions at the wire position. We consider the baseline luminosity upgrade plan of the Large Hadron Collider (HL-LHC project), and compare it to alternative scenarios, or so-called ''configurations,'' where modifications are applied to optics, crossing angle, or orientation of the crossing plane in the two low-β insertions of the ring. Furthermore, for all these configurations, the beneficial impact of beam-beam compensation devices is then demonstrated on the tune footprint, the dynamical aperture, and/or the frequency map analysis of the nonlinear beam dynamics as the main figures of merit.

Research Organization:
Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (FNAL), Batavia, IL (United States)
Sponsoring Organization:
USDOE Office of Science (SC), High Energy Physics (HEP)
Grant/Contract Number:
AC02-07CH11359
OSTI ID:
1227334
Alternate ID(s):
OSTI ID: 1235051
Report Number(s):
FERMILAB-PUB-15-539-APC; PRABFM; 121001
Journal Information:
Physical Review Special Topics. Accelerators and Beams, Journal Name: Physical Review Special Topics. Accelerators and Beams Vol. 18 Journal Issue: 12; ISSN 1098-4402
Publisher:
American Physical SocietyCopyright Statement
Country of Publication:
United States
Language:
English
Citation Metrics:
Cited by: 13 works
Citation information provided by
Web of Science

References (6)

Detecting chaos in particle accelerators through the frequency map analysis method journal June 2014
Application of frequency map analysis to beam-beam effects study in crab waist collision scheme journal January 2011
Pile up management at the high-luminosity LHC and introduction to the crab-kissing concept journal November 2014
Long-range beam-beam experiments in the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider journal September 2011
Achromatic telescopic squeezing scheme and application to the LHC and its luminosity upgrade journal November 2013
Stability diagrams of colliding beams in the Large Hadron Collider journal November 2014