1 / 60

Machine-Detector Interface (MDI) report

Machine-Detector Interface (MDI) report W. Kozanecki, CEA-Saclay Operational issues radiation aborts radiation-dose history injection & stored-beam background history Background characterization characterization experiments long-term projections & vulnerabilities outgassing storms

albert
Télécharger la présentation

Machine-Detector Interface (MDI) report

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Machine-Detector Interface (MDI) report W. Kozanecki, CEA-Saclay • Operational issues • radiation aborts • radiation-dose history • injection & stored-beam background history • Background characterization • characterization experiments • long-term projections & vulnerabilities • outgassing storms • Simulations • Accelerator performance enhancements

  2. Stable-beam “genuine” radiation aborts: • 0.9 / day • ~ 60% of these may actually be sympathetic • “Genuine” injection aborts: 0.4 / day ...to be compared to an average of 7 aborts/day from all sources

  3. HER trickle starts Run-4 radiation-dose history HER trickle starts Outgassing storms

  4. Trickle-injection background Veto windows • The background generated by the trickle injection is concentrated in a narrow time window corresponding to revolutions of the injected bunch. • BABAR vetoes this window during data taking to avoid high dead time • BABAR rejects a larger region at the analysis phase to guarantee good data quality. • The total loss is around 1.5%

  5. Monitor using injection-gated triggers (1 ms x 20 ms) Injection- & trickle- background history DCH trigs LER trickle EMC trigs (always on) LER trickle EMC trigs (always on) HER trickle DCH trigs HER trickle

  6. IDCH, msrd/pred Normalized DCH current Stored-beam background history 20% 20% SVT ocp’cy @ f = p (HEB-sensitive) SVT ocp’cy @ f = 0 (LEB-sensitive) 10%

  7. Background sources in PEP-II • Synchrotron radiation (this bkg negligible in PEP-II, but not in KEKB) • Beam-gas (bremsstrahlung + Coulomb) • HEB only: BHbg ~ IH * (pH0 + PHDyn * IH) Note: p0 = f(T) ! • LEB only: BLbg ~ IL * (pL0 + PLDyn * IL) Note: p0 = f(T) ! • beam-gas x- term: BLHbg ~ cLH * IL * IH (LEB+HEB, out of collision) (?) • Luminosity (radiative-Bhabha debris) – major concern as L  • BP ~ dP * L (strictly linear with L) • Beam-beam tails • from LER tails: BL, bb ~ IL * fL(xL,H+/-) • from HER tails: BH, bb ~ IH * fH(xL,H+/-) • Trickle background: BLi ,BHi(injected-beam quality/orbit + beam-beam) • Touschek: BLT(signature somewhat similar to bremsstrahlung; so far small)

  8. Data: Jan 04 (bef. therrmal outgassing crisis) Background characterization measurements Step 1: Beam-current scans  single-beam terms

  9. Total occupancy • HER single beam • LER single beam • Beam-beam term • present in all subdetectors • fluctuations, short - & long-term •  parametrization optimistic ? Step 2: L & beam-beam terms EMC cluster multiplicity SVT occupancy (FL1 M01-f)

  10. IDCH = DCH Step 3: Background Parametrizations • DCH example: total current & occupancies Step 4: Background Extrapolations 60 L Tracking efficiency drops by roughly 1% per 3% occupancy PEP-II parameter projections LER contribution very small

  11. Luminosity background e+ e- e+e-g • elm shower debris • neutrons! • no contribution from coasting HEB or LEB • maydominate DCH, DIRC rate

  12. Neutron Background Effort underway to measure neutron background in BaBar BF3 counter installed on fwd Q4 Sees large rate (>10 kHz) during colliding beams, not single beam Rate only seen with polyethylene moderator~1MeV neutrons Neutrons thought to be from radiative Bhabhas hitting Q2 septum mask and inside support tube - Shielding of BaBar is being investigated

  13. DCH + TRG When combined with higher trigger rates, long read-out time leads to unacceptable deadtime. A major DCH elx upgrade is now in progress.

  14. Backward: East Top West Bottom Background strongly - dependent By 2007 predict 80% occupancy right in MID-plane In layer 1, 10% will be above 20% occupancy NOW 2004 2005 2006 2007 Forward: East Top West Bottom Integrated dose will be more than 1 Mrad/year by 2007 SVT Background now is ~75% HEB [LEB negligible (!)] In 2007, it will be 50% HER, 50% L • It has recently been realized that • in the SVT (but not in other subdetectors), a large fraction of the “Luminosity”background is most likely due to a HER-LER beam-gas X-term (but: similar extrap’ltn). • the HER single-beam background in run 4 is about 2x what it was in 2002  improve?

  15. Outgassing storms • New (?) major background source: thermally-enhanced beam-gas • in incoming LER straight (exacerbated by NEG activation; OK for now) • sensitive to LER current; several time constants in a time-dependent mix • suspect: NEGs (MS’s talk), ion pumps, collimator jaws, misc. vac. pipe secs •  SVT dose + occupancy (E-MID); minor impact on dead time • in incoming HER straight (triggered the NEG activation; OK for now) • sensitive to HER current, very long time constants •  BaBar dead time + SVT occupancy (W-MID) • in (or very close to) the shared IR vacuum system • sensitive to both beam currents; at least 2 time constants • suspect: NEG + complicated IR ‘cavity’ (Q2L  Q2R) + HOM interference •  BaBar dead time + SVT occupancy (W-MID + E-MID) • HOM dominant heating mechanism • mostly long to very long time constants (30’-3 h): suggests low power • sensitive to: bunch pattern, VRF, collimator settings, Z(IP), hidden var’s • Many “??”(minor, inocuous changes  large effects, good or bad)

  16. Fill: March 28, 12-3 pm mRad/s Data points End of injection Fit 200 VP3044 10 VGCC3027 VP3147 0 1 2 3 h Days in March (April 1=32) Time evolution of the thermal outgassing background • The different time dependences of the pressure readings allowed to fit the background sensor (Backward East diamond) as a linear combination of 4 LER gauges, on a fill by fill basis • The sensitivity coefficients for each gauge were then extracted. They represent the N2-equivalent pressure integral with the same time dependence as the gauge reading. The background problem was not related to a Pressure increase (as indicated by the gauge readings) but to a huge increase in background sensitivy

  17. HOM interference in IR Data: 12 Apr 04 VGCC2187 (HER sensitive) VGCC3027 (incoming LEB) BW diamond [+ dead time] (HEB sensitive) BE diamond (LEB sensitive)

  18. HOM interference in IR VGCC2187 (HER sensitive) VGCC3027 (incoming LEB) Collision phase <ZIP> (BaBar) BE diamond (LEB sensitive) BW diamond (HEB sensitive)

  19. Background simulations Background is coming from: HER & LER beam-gas, luminosity, and beam-beam tails Important to understand/quantify these backgrounds What will be the effect of the IR upgrade on beam-gas (& b-b) bgds? Can the luminosity background be explained by radiative Bhabhas ? Which way does it enter the detector ? What is the n spectrum? Can we shield or reduce this background source ? Can we mitigate beam-beam backgrounds with improved collimation ? Substantial effort in reviving/updating simulation infrastructure! Status: Turtle optics updated to 2003 HER beam line (LER in progress) Description of masks & apertures under detailed review (bugs found) Beam line up to Q5 (mostly) implemented in Geant4 simulation of BaBar detector –validation of geometry & magnetic tracking in progress post-2005 configuration is awaiting a finalized IRdesign Significantly more detailed simulation compared to the old Geant3 simulation used until 2000

  20. Example: Coulomb scattering background in the HER (Turtle level, ’04 config.) Where do scattered e-come from ? Where do scattered e-hit?

  21. G4 simulation: status • Simulation integrated inside the BaBar standard Geant-4 environment. • magnets added in the region from backward-Q5 to forward-Q5 • background sensors (PIN diodes, diamonds, quartz & CsI) added & validated • beamline elements from -Q5 to +Q5 included • validation of magnetic field description (incl. Q1-Q5) in progress Decision made to import beamline elements from CAD files  tools written to allow automatic translation from Solid Edge files to G4 C++ Correction of some G4 geometry ‘features’ (!) Main steps Retrieval of CAD files: HER OK, LER downstream Q4-Q5 not yet available Simplification & translation of CAD files to C++ source: done on all available parts Debugging of geometry problems : done up to Q2s

  22. Ongoing Background Simulation Studies Beam-gas • Single beam background comes from Coulomb scattering and bremsstrahlung • Study relative contributions at various locations at the IP and where in the ring the original scattering happens So far only studied at Turtle level: HER (2003), LER (1998) Radiative Bhabha background • Where does the electrons/positrons end up after scattering? • What kind of backgrounds are produced and can it be shielded? • How much neutron radiation is generated? What is the neutron spectrum? • Will the 2005 IR upgrade make it worse? This simulation effort is just starting up. Beam-beam collimation • Beam-beam background can be reduced with collimators • LER collimator usage limited by background in IFR end cap • Can the collimators be moved downstream of BaBar? First results look encouraging!

  23. BaBar involvement in Accelerator Performance Improvements (I) • Background analysis & mitigation [BP, MC/TG, NB, JM/JV, RM, LP, WK/GW] • Background simulations [RB, MB, GC, WL, SM, PR/AS, WK + SLAC (TF/GB)] • Fast monitoring of machine backgrounds  available online in PEP-II CS [MW, C’OG, AP, GDF,...] • injection & trickle quality variables: SVT, DCH, EMC • subdetector occupancies: SVT, DCH, EMC, DIRC • BaBar dead time • more operator-friendly displays (& controls) of radiation inhibits/aborts • BaBar-based machine diagnostics • time distribution of injection triggers [LP, BP, ...] • Online centroids & sizes of luminous region using Babar dimuons [C’OG, BV, AP, IN, MB,...]

  24. <xIP > Luminous-region history <yIP > <zIP > <sLx > <sLz >

  25. BaBar involvement in Accelerator Performance Improvements (II) • Beam dynamics • beam-beam simulations [IN (Caltech), YC (Slac ARD), WK] • beam-beam experiments, monitoring of beam-beam performance [WK] • e & b* measurements using dimuons [just starting] • Instrumentation • Gated camera: now operational in both in LER & HER [DD, Slac Exptl Grp C] • LER interferometer software [AO, Orsay] • Development of an X-ray beam-size monitor for the LER [Caltech + LBL + SLAC] • SVTRAD sensor & electronics upgrade [BP et. al. (Stanford); MB/DK et. al. (Irvine) (initiated & funded by BaBar)] • CsI background sensors , n detectors & shielding [JV, Slac Exptl Grp B]

  26. Summary (I) • Stable-beam (genuine) radiation aborts are down to < 1/day • Trickle injection • is a major success in terms of improving • machine stability + abort frequency  integrated L • overall injection quality • accumulated SVT dose • The associated detector backgrounds appear largely negligible (most – but not all – of the time) • Present stored-beam bgds (dose rate, data quality, dead time) • OK most of the time (& better w/ trickle)- for now (thermal outgassing!) • Background characterization experiments • were highly valuable in identifying the origin, magnitude & impact of single- & two-beam backgrounds. • On the long term, the dominant backgrounds are expected to be, in order of decreasing importance: • radiative-Bhabha debris (all subdetectors), incl. a significant neutron flux • HER beam-gas (SVT, TRG), especially if thermal outgassing resurfaces • beam-beam tails & their fluctuations (DCH, EMC, TRG, IFR  wall!)

  27. Summary (II) • In the medium term (2005-07), the main vulnerabilities are • beam-gas backgrounds from HOM-related thermal outgassing as I+,- • high dead time associated with DCH data volume & trigger rates (addressed by DCH elx upgrade) • high occupancy and radiation ageing in the mid-plane of the SVT, • possibly leading to a local loss of tracking coverage. •  reduce the HER single-beam background back to 2002 levels (/1.5-2) ? • a high flux of ~ 1 MeV neutrons in the DCH (wire aging from large pulses, possibly also contributions to occupancy) • Background simulations • large investment in reviving/updating tools + rebuilding the group • ‘almost’ ready to evaluate backgrounds in IR upgrade • manpower limited • BaBar-based accelerator performance enhancement • common BaBar-PEPII diagnostics greatly improved, starting to pay off • very significant involvement of BaBarians in beam instrumentation & simulation

  28. Spare slides

  29. Run-4 radiation-abort history (automated script) • Stable-beam aborts: 280 • stable beams: 56% of the time • includes trickle • radiation-driven manual aborts (trapped events) not included • Injection aborts & inhibits: 301 • inject: 24% of the time • note: dominated by pre-trickle

  30. Radiation signatures: stable-beam aborts, sympathetic Compiled by B. Petersen  1000 X stored beam  150 X stored beam  5000 X stored beam 15 / 22 6 / 22 1 / 22

  31. Radiation signatures: stable-beam aborts (I), radiation only Compiled by B. Petersen  50 X stored beam  80 X stored beam 3/28 6/28

  32. Radiation signatures: stable-beam aborts (II), radiation only ? Compiled by B. Petersen  10000 X stored beam  10000 X stored beam  1000 X stored beam 7/28 4/28 6/28 Could 17/28 radiation-only aborts be sympathetic?

  33. Typical radiation signatures: injection aborts Most of the recent injection aborts look like this  5000 X stored beam  100 X stored beam  50 X stored beam

  34. Injection aborts: a typical example (EOIC summary for 3/23/04) • tune management • non-reproducibility of thermally-induced IP motion • difficult for 1 operator to “keep all balls in the air”

  35. Stable-beam aborts: remediation avenues • Need better understanding/characterization • 40-50% of the radiation aborts were found to be sympathetic... by manually scanning logs • 60% of the ‘radiation-only’ aborts may be sympathetic as well • < # ‘radiation-only’ aborts > ~ 1/day  2-3 % inefficiency (counting all, and adding manual aborts for trapped events) •  can we learn to use the radiation signature to diagnose the source? •  can we automate the categorization of aborts? • easier (automated?) identification/logging of T/L instabilities • data entry • Improved diagnostics: SVTRAD 1.5 elx upgrade coming soon

  36. Implies replacement of mid-plane modules during 2005 shutdown SVT: projected integrated dose Dose projections assume negligible injection background

  37. HER single-beam background: possible improvements ? • now (Jan 2004) ~ 1.6 x Feb 2002 (@ 1 A) • mostly linear with IH dominated by base pressure (thermal outg’sg) • dynamic pressure term (~ SR  IH2) unchanged since Feb 2002 - no plausible improvement (short of $$) • radial ion pumps repair: regain ~ 20% ? • requires removing support tube ( > July 2005) • feasibility of repair tbc • high-vacuum (TSP) section (PR02 7039 to 7042) • TSP’s flashed on 5 + 27 Jan ’04 – no detectable improvement in pressure (p0 ~ 5E-10) • There may be some to gain from more frequent NEG activation • at best, will return to Feb 2002 levels, but not for long • # NEG cycles is finite  NEG activation expensive

  38. Drift Chamber current as function of Luminosity during a X scan (all currents constant) DCH current (microA) Luminosity

  39. DCH/TRG background extrapolations • HER single-beam & lumi (bkg + physics) terms dominate • Trickle: only average shown. Must be able to accomodate large fluctuations. • Beam-beam: only best case shown. Data taken since then show beam-beam can easily be 2 x larger – not counting short-term fluctuations. • LER single beam: small (mostly beam-gas), no fluctuations expected

  40. EMC Looked at number of crystals with any/significant energy and clusters Small quadratic term from single beam data # of crystals used in cluster finding Currently physics events have ~110 digis and 8 clusters Long term impact on physics analysis not clear yet

  41. 12 hours Thermal time constants VGCC3027  (incoming LEB) BE diamond  (LEB sensitive) LER current VGCC2187 (HER sensitive)  BW diamond [+ BBR dead time] (HEB sensitive)

  42. Detailed study of the time evolution of the thermal outgassing related background Fill March 28, 12pm-3 pm • The different time dependences of the pressure readings allowed to fit the background sensor (Bacward East diamond) as a linear combination of 4 Pumps*LER, on a fill by fill basis • The 4 pumps are located on the incoming LER straight and all exhibit HOM related thermal outgassing (eg, change of pressure associated with change of bunch length) • A very satisfactory description of the background was thus obtained in all cases • The sensitivity coefficients for each pump were then extracted. They represent the N2-equivalent pressure integral with the same time dependence as the pump reading. mRad/s Data points End of injection Fit VP3044 VGCC3027 VP3147 0 1 2 3 hours

  43. Evolution of the sensitivity coefficients • The coefficients are normalised to their pre-NEG activation values , indicated by the red line (1 point per long fill) • The background problem was not related to a Pressure increase (as indicated by the pump readings) but to a huge increase in background sensitivy • The problem was solved by: • -continued processing • Collimator jaw opening • Change in bunch pattern These changes has different actions on the various background drivers VP3044 VGCC3027 200 10 Days in March (April 1=32) Days in March (April 1=32)

  44. BE diamond (LEB sensitive) VGCC3027 (incoming LEB) NEG actvtd NEG actvtd NEG actvtd NEG actvtd BW diamond (HEB sensitive) VGCC2187 (HER sensitive) Mismatch (x 10-100) betw. time evolution of msrd p and of bkgd demonstrated by detailed analysis of local pressure contributions to background signals

  45. NEG actvtd NEG actvtd NEG actvtd NEG actvtd Large variety of processing times, mechanisms, & bkg sensitivities

  46. Backgrounds: long-term projections II SR simulations (an intrinsic part of the new-IR design) • Beam-gas simulations • ring: Turtle • IR  Geant4 Beam-beam? Lattice mods? (dynamic aperture) • 2 themes... • validate IR upgrade design • make sure that what we install in ’05 does not suffer from built-in flaws... • ...at least for those processes we can calculate (SR, beam-gas) • understand / improve backgrounds in present machine • ...that are intimately intertwined • validation requires credibility • update “old” simulations to incorporate what we learnt • simulations of present machine/detector configuration better get the ‘right’ answer (when confronted with measurements)... • ...if we want to believe predictions for the upgraded IR • improve those backgrounds we canNOT calculate • both for today’s and for tomorrow’s sake!

  47. Architecture of background simulations (1) • Synchrotron Radiation • MAGBENDS / QSRAD: stand-alone programs • SR background calculations: an intrinsic component of IR re-design • shouldn’t these be interfaced to GEANT? • Beam-gas • step 1: LP-TURTLE transports particles around 1 ring turn • full model of ring optics (treated as transport line) • start with ‘nominal’ beam at IP • beam-gas scattering randomly around ring (bremsstrahlung or Coulomb scattering)  transport ‘secondaries’ (e’, g) • simplified model of IR apertures (simple geometry, no showering!) • those particles lost ‘near’ the IP are • saved @ scoring plane • input to step 2 • step 2: full GEANT simulation of detector + near-IR (+- 8.5 m) • see Mario Bondioli’s talk

More Related