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Interaction Region Issues

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The solenoidal field is the primary defense against the pair backgrounds ... the flight path of the backgrounds ... Understanding and mitigation of backgrounds ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Interaction Region Issues


1
Interaction Region Issues
  • Jeff Gronberg / LLNL
  • Santa Cruz Linear Collider Retreat
  • June 26-29 2002

This work was performed under the auspices of the
U.S. Department of Energy by the University of
California, Lawrence Livermore National
Laboratory under Contract No. W-7405-Eng-48.
2
Outline
  • Backgrounds which drive the detector design
  • Good Luminosity related
  • Bad Machine backgrounds
  • SVX is closest to the IP and least shielded from
    machine backgrounds, it is the primary driver of
    the design
  • Photon Collider design
  • Basic principles
  • TESLA and NLC/JLC differences
  • Opportunities at SLC
  • Final quad stabilization
  • Beam Halo reduction through non-linear optics
  • Photon Collider test bed

3
The NLC beam delivery group has been actively
studying the IR for many years
  • IR Design and Backgrounds
  • Takashi Maruyama, Lew Keller, Rainer Pitthan
  • Tor Raubenheimer, Andrei Seryi, Peter Tenenbaum,
    Nan Phinney, Pantaleo Raimondi, Mark
    Woodley, Yuri Nosochkov
  • Stan Hertzbach (U. Mass)
  • Jeff Gronberg, Tony Hill (LLNL)
  • RD Efforts
  • Joe Frisch, Linda Hendrickson, Tom Himel
  • Eric Doyle, Leif Eriksson, Knut Skarpaas, Steve
    Smith
  • Tom Mattison Students (UBC)
  • Phil Burrows, Simon Jolly, Gavin Nesom, Glen
    White, Colin Perry (Oxford)
  • Brett Parker (BNL)

University groups are already involved in the IR
design
4
Beam-Beam InteractionSR photons from individual
particles in one bunch when in the E field of the
opposing bunch
Slide of T. Markiewicz
  • Beams attracted to each other reduce effective
    spot size and increase luminosity
  • HD 1.4-2.1
  • Pinch makes beamstrahlung photons
  • 1.2-1.6 g/e- with E3-5 E_beam
  • Photons themselves go straight to dump
  • Not a background problem, but angular dist. (1
    mrad) limits extraction line length
  • Particles that lose a photon are off-energy

NLC-1 TeV
5
Pair ProductionPhotons interact with opposing
e,g to produce e,e- pairs and hadrons
Slide of T. Markiewicz
500 GeV designs
  • Pair PT
  • SMALL Pt from individual pair creation process
  • LARGE Pt from collective field of opposing bunch
  • limited by finite size of the bunch

6
Pair Stay-Clear from Guinea-Pig Generator and
Geant
Slide of T. Markiewicz
7
e,g,n secondaries made when pairs hit high Z
surface of LUM or Q1
High momentum pairs mostly in exit beampipe
N.B. Major TESLA / NLC difference TESLA has zero
crossing angle, low energy particles travel
farther down the beam pipe before hitting anything
Low momentum pairs trapped by detector solenoid
field
8
The basic design drivers are the same for TESLA
and NLC
The solenoidal field is the primary defense
against the pair backgrounds
pairs scales w/ Luminosity 1-2x109/sec
Low energy particles will shower in the material
of the beam line
The detector must be protected by masks against
secondary particles
9
Neutron Backgrounds at the SVXThe closer to the
IP a particle is lost, the worse
  • Off-energy e/e- pairs hit material near the IP
    Pair-LumMon, beam-pipe and Ext.-line magnets
  • Radiative Bhabhas Lost beam
  • Showering particles produce neutrons which can
    damage the SVX
  • Solutions
  • Move L away from IP
  • Open extraction line aperture
  • Low Z (Carbon, etc.) absorber where space permits

10
Design IR to Control ee- Pairs
Slide of T. Markiewicz
  • Direct Hits
  • Increase detector solenoid field
  • Increase minimum beam pipe radius at VXD
  • Move beampipe away from pairs ASAP
  • Secondaries (e,e-, g,n)
  • Point of first contact as far from IP/VXD as
    possible
  • Increase L if possible
  • Largest exit aperture possible to accept
    off-energy particles
  • Keep extraneous instrumentation out of pair
    region
  • Masks
  • Instrumented conical M1 protrudes at least 60cm
    from face of PAIR-LumMon
  • Longer more protection but eats into EndCap CAL
    acceptance
  • M1,M2 at least 8-10cm thick to protect against
    backscattered photons leaking into CAL
  • Low Z (Graphite, Be) 10-50cm wide disks covering
    area where pairs hit the low angle W/Si Pair
    Luminosity monitor

11
HALO Synchrotron Radiation Fans with Nominal 240
mrad x 1000 mrad Collimation
Slide of T. Markiewicz
Stan Hertzbach
12
Neutrons from the Beam Dump
  • Neutrons from Beam Dump(s)
  • Solutions Geometry Shielding
  • Shield dump, move it as far away as possible, and
    use smallest window
  • Constrained by angular distribution of
    beamstrahlung photons
  • Minimize extraction line aperture
  • Keep sensitive stuff beyond limiting aperture
  • If VXD Rmin down x2 Fluence UP x40

Neutrons per Year
Limiting Aperture
Radius (cm)
z(m)
13
Muon Backgrounds from Halo CollimatorsNo Big
Bend, Latest Collimation Short FF
Slide of T. Markiewicz
FF
Energy
18m 9m Magnetized steel spoilers
Betatron
BetatronCleanup
If Halo 10-6, no need to do anything If Halo
10-3 and experiment requires add magnetized tunnel filling shielding Reality
probably in between
14
Background Projects
  • Iterate all results for consistent set of results
  • Beam parameters, detectors, solenoid design,
    beamlines not consistent
  • Detector response to known backgrounds
  • TPC, Cal, Lum, Pol, etc.
  • Dose calculations on SC or REC QD0
  • Collimator scattering study
  • Locations, apertures, beam loss,
  • GEANT4 beamline model
  • gg-Hadron production

15
Realistic IR Layout
  • Masking Support
  • VXD support alignment
  • Instrumented Masks
  • Lum_Pair Mon
  • Vacuum req.
  • REC QD0
  • SC QD0
  • Beampipe support
  • Apertures
  • Optical lines of sight
  • Detector access

16
A Photon Collider requires additional hardware
in the IP
17
NLC/JLC Photon Collider Hardware
Beam Splitter
MERCURY Laser
Laser Plant
1, 100 Joule pulse - 100, 1 Joule pulses
12 Lasers x 10Hz 120Hz
1 pulse 100 Joules 1 train
Optics Assembly
Interferometric Alignment System
Beam Pipe
18
MERCURY commissioning has begunOne amplifier
head with 4 of 7 crystals installed
  • Status
  • Producing 10 Joule pulses at 0.1 Hz
  • Theoretical max 14 Joules w/ 4 crystals
  • Operation of two heads with 14 crystals
  • within the next year
  • Installation of new front end for 10Hz
    operation

19
NLC solution might be adapted to TESLA, but TESLA
bunch spacing opens new options
  • A single light pulse can travel around the ring
    and hit every bunch in the TESLA train
  • DESY and Max Born Institute will prototype a
    scale model
  • Tolerances are tight, but enormous savings in
    laser power

20
All detector elements are affected by the photon
collider environment
  • Outgoing beam Compton backscattering leaves a
    large energy spread
  • On-energy peak (30 of particles)
  • Low-energy tail (Multiple backscatters)
  • Hard cutoff at 5 GeV
  • Solution
  • Zero field extraction line to the dump, no
    diagnostics
  • Increase extraction line aperture, SVX sees the
    beam dump!
  • gg ? hadrons resolved photon events
  • Every bunch crossing has tracks
  • 730 GeV / train into the calorimeter with
    cos(q)
  • Events look more like those from a hadron machine
    than a lepton machine

TESLA bunch spacing makes it easier to isolate a
single bunch crossing
21
System Integration Optics/Beampipe
LCD - Large with new mirror placement
  • Essentially identical to ee- IR
  • All masking preserved
  • 30 mRad x-angle
  • Extraction line 10 mRadian
  • New mirror design 6 cm thick, with central hole 7
    cm radius.
  • Remove all material from the flight path of the
    backgrounds

22
Photon Collider projects
The photon collider has all of the issues of the
regular ee- IR and then some
  • Detector studies
  • Rad-hard SVX design
  • Resolved photon backgrounds
  • SVX b-tagging
  • Jet resolution
  • Timing requirements
  • Complete background and reconstruction simulation
  • Machine studies
  • Optics / beampipe integration
  • Crossing angle minimization
  • Realistic IR layout
  • Radiation damage to the optics
  • Coupon tests

23
Engineering Test Facility at SLC
  • An ee- linear collider exists and could be
    resurrected as a test facility for
  • Test of final quad stabilization
  • Beam halo reduction
  • Photon collider demo

NLC 250 GeV 300 / 2 360 / 3.5 same 0.11 mm
245/2.7nm 7.5E9
SLC 30 GeV 1100 / 50 1600 / 160 8 / 0.1 mm 0.1
1.0 mm 1500/55nm 6.0E9
  • Beam Energy
  • DR emittances g?x,y (m-rad)
  • FF emittances g?x,y (m-rad)
  • IP Betas ?x / ?y
  • Bunch length ? z
  • IP spot sizes ?x,y
  • Beam currents N?

24
IP Girder Testbed
25
Nanometer Stability of Colliding Beams
Beam-Beam Deflection gives 1nm stability
resolution
BPMres
400nm
  • Colliding beams provide a Direct
    Model-Independent Test of any engineering
    solution to the final doublet stability problem
  • Not possible in FFTB

26
Controlling Beam Backgrounds with Non-Linear
Optical Elements
  • Tail Folding via Octupole Pairs has the promise
    of relaxing collimation depths
  • Confidence that comes from an Actual
    Demonstration may permit a great savings in
    collimator design, radiation shielding, and muon
    shielding

27
SLC Photon Collider testbed hardware
Pulses at 30 Hz at SLC, 11,000 Hz at NLC The
laser is easy for a SLC testbed
Laser Plant
Beam Splitter
MERCURY Laser
A small 30Hz, 15W average power laser is
sufficient for this experiment
Optics Assembly
Interferometric Alignment System
Beam Pipe
½ size to fit in SLC
28
Particle spectra in SLC photon collider
  • A 0.1 Joule laser pulse converts 25 of the
    incoming electrons.
  • Maximum energy transfer is 1/3 of the beam energy
  • First direct production of gg luminosity
  • Look for 2 ? 2 processes in the SLD calorimeter
    to measure luminosity
  • ee- ? ee-
  • eg ? eg
  • gg ? ee-

Particles
g
e
GeV/c
29
Summary
  • The optimization of the IR is not complete
  • Understanding and mitigation of backgrounds
  • Realistic engineering of the machine / detector
    interface
  • A photon collider presents new challenges
  • Detector backgrounds are worse
  • The impact on physics reconstruction must be
    studied
  • Additional detector constraints must be
    understood
  • SLC has great potential as a test facility
  • Proof-of-principle for colliding nm beams
  • Beam halo reduction through non-linear optics
  • Photon collider demonstration
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