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Goals and Status of MICE The International Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment

Goals and Status of MICE The International Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment. Plan. Motivations Muon Cooling MICE Design and Challenges MICE’s current status Beam Line Detectors Simulation and Analysis Software Preparing for the future Conclusion. Motivations: Neutrino Physics.

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Goals and Status of MICE The International Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment

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  1. Goals and Status of MICEThe International Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment J.S. Graulich

  2. Plan • Motivations • Muon Cooling • MICE Design and Challenges • MICE’s current status • Beam Line • Detectors • Simulation and Analysis Software • Preparing for the future • Conclusion J.S. Graulich

  3. Motivations:Neutrino Physics • Fundamental questions raised by neutrinos • Do they conserve the lepton number? • Are they their own anti-particle ? • Do they have Majorana masses ? • Do their oscillations violate CP ? • Why n masses are so small ? • A strong need for precision measurements • Mixing angles, Mass differences, Mass Hierarchy, dCP • Requires a new generation of facilities • Among the options: Super beam, Beta beam and Neutrino factory • Neutrino factory is not the simplest offers the best potential: performance and flexibility See Boris Kayser’s talk: “Seeking CP violation in neutrino oscillation is now a worldwide goal.” J.S. Graulich

  4. Motivation:The Neutrino Factory • High energy & intensity • Very well defined beam content (nm , ne) or (nm , ne) • Start to End Simulation existsIDS ! see A. Cervera • 3 essential R&D needed - High power Target - Muon Cooling- FFAGs Sensitivityto dCP The neutrino factory is the ultimate tool for precise neutrino studies CERN Scientific Policy Committee, March 2010

  5. Muon Cooling • Large divergence >< efficient acceleration • Beam Cooling = Emittance reduction • What is emittance ? ≠ divergence • In the 2D case (oversimplified) a beam is defined by a set of xi(z) x’ = dx/dz = Px/P In the absence of dissipative forces, e is conserved ! J.S. Graulich

  6. Ionization Cooling • How to reduce emittance ? -> Frictions • Standard techniques don’t work for muons • They need >> 2.2 ms • Two steps • Energy loss by ionization (dE/dX) • Forward re-acceleration by RF cavities Cooling is achieved only for low Z material ! Mult. Scat. < dE/dx -> Liquid Hydrogen J.S. Graulich

  7. Cooling Cell • Easy in principle… • In practice, the emittance is so large that • Need to contain the beam • Not single pass -> iterations • Technical Challenges • An extended liquid Hydrogen cryogenic system • High gradient RF cavities in strong magnetic field • Large number of Superconducting coils strongly coupled to each other • That’s why we need R&D -> MICE J.S. Graulich

  8. MICE • Muon Ionisation CoolingExperiment • Design, build and operate a realistic section of coolingchannel • Measure its performances (in different modes) J.S. Graulich

  9. MICE Step By Step Commission beam line & detectors Preciselymeasure incomingemittance & compare trackers Preciselymeasure muon cooling Test sustainable cooling Ultimate MICE goal: operate full coolingchannel Complete ! (This talk) 2012 J.S. Graulich

  10. MICE Status @ RAL • Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, UK • Brand new muon beam line • Obtained from ISIS (800 MeV proton Synchrotron) J.S. Graulich

  11. MICE Beam Line • Design Specifications: • ~ 1 Spill / 2 seconds • ~ 3 ms Spill duration • 100 muons / Spill • Muon momentum between 140 to 240 MeV/c • pD2 = pD1/2 (backward muons) Q1-Q3 D1 D2 Q4-Q6 Q7-Q9 J.S. Graulich

  12. The Beamline is Operational Pion Decay Solenoid (during installation) Mice Target System in ISIS D1 Q1-Q3 Upstream Pion Beam Line D2 Q7-Q9 Q4-Q6 DownstreamMuon Beam Line J.S. Graulich

  13. The Target is pulsing ISIS cycle • Critical active part • Parasitic mode: no perturbation to ISIS Users • 80 g acceleration ! • Magnetic “gun” • 570 000 dips@ 0.4 Hz extraction injection 10 ms Positionreading target depth Stator Beam Loss MICE Ti Target inside the ISIS beam pipe Bearing WaterCooling Acq. Gate ~ 3 ms Ti Target

  14. Instrumentation for Step 1 • All detectors for Step 1 are operationalTOF0 after the 2nd triplet • TOF1 after the 3rd triplet • TOF2 at the very end (will move) Luminosity Monitors 3 Time of Flight Stations Beam Profile Monitors Calorimeter Downstream Monitor (GVA1) 2 Cherenkovs

  15. Detector Rates Detector Rates scale linearly with Beam Loss J.S. Graulich

  16. All TOF installed TOF1 installed at RAL TOF Scintillator • Two crossed layers of scintillator slabs, 1” thick • Fast PMTs on both sides • Muon/pion/electron PID • Measure the RF phase when muon arrives • Magnetic shielding is crucial for TOF1/2

  17. TOF Resolution J.S. Graulich

  18. Particle Identification m- Very precise Time of Flight measurement between TOF0 and TOF1 Allows separation between Electrons / muons / pions / For all momentaup to 280 Mev/c p- e- Time of Flight (ns) J.S. Graulich

  19. Selecting Backward Muons m We want a muon beam ! We tune the second dipole (D2) to select muons going backward (in C.M. frame) w.r.t. to the original pions’ direction Pm ≈ Pp / 2 p J.S. Graulich

  20. Pure muon Beam Selecting backward muons Pions are not transported Electrons are depleted MICE has a muon beam ! ~ 30 muons/spill/ V.ms m- No morep- here e- Time of Flight (ns) J.S. Graulich

  21. Simulation and Analysis Software: G4MICE • Based on GEANT 4 for the simulation • A deliverable by itself • Also used for beam transport optimization • In competition with G4Beamline • Reconstruction of events from both simulation and data • Calculate elaborated quantity like e • In particular: momentum G4BeamLine Transport G4Mice Simulation and Analysis Jean-Sébastien Graulich

  22. J.S. Graulich

  23. Data Phase Space and Momentum Reconstruction: Q789 scan runs Simulation Q789 = -30%

  24. Data Phase Space and Momentum Reconstruction: Q789 scan runs Simulation Q789 = -20%

  25. Data Phase Space and Momentum Reconstruction: Q789 scan runs Simulation Q789 = -10%

  26. Step 1 Program: beam optics • 3 momenta 140, 200, 240 MeV/c • 3 input emittances 3, 6 10 pmrad • A lot of data on tape • Next run in June 2011 J.S. Graulich

  27. Next Step: Spectrometer Construction problems with the superconducting solenoids Tracker Ready, tested with cosmics, meet resolution specs Installation scheduled for 2012

  28. Absorbers - FC • Each Absorber contains 20 L of Hydrogen • Produced at KEK, Japan • Thin Aluminum widows, all doubled for safety • The module integrates the absorber with the superconduction focus coil in production at Tesla • Integration to Step IV in 2012 1st absorber complete at Mirapro Jean-Sébastien Graulich

  29. RFCC Module • Each module contains 4 RF cavities and a superconducting coupling coil • Water cooled copper cavities, 201 MHz • Each module compensates for 11-12 MeV energy loss in the absorbers • High Gradient (8 MV/m) in strong magnetic field (~4 Tesla) • Manufacturing in progress • Expected for 2013 Jean-Sébastien Graulich

  30. Summary • The Neutrino factory is the best tool for future precise neutrino studies • MICE is exploring muon ionization cooling which is a key R&D toward the NF • MICE has completed its first step at RAL, UK • The muon beam and the detectors have been successfully commissioned • A particle by particle analysis has already been used to measure the beam emittance, using TOFs • The spectrometers and the first absorber will be installed in 2012 • MICE could be completed by 2013 J.S. Graulich

  31. J.S. Graulich

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