1 / 12

Legend: (M)EIC@JLab 1 low-energy IP (s ~ 300) 2 medium-energy IPs (s < 3000)

MEIC/ELIC Design Process at JLab. E cm 2 = s = 4E e E p. E e = 3 – 11 GeV (upgradeable to 20+ GeV) E p = 20 – 60+ GeV (12 GeV injection energy) (upgradeable to 250 GeV). Legend: (M)EIC@JLab 1 low-energy IP (s ~ 300) 2 medium-energy IPs (s < 3000) ELIC = high-energy EIC@JLab

njennifer
Télécharger la présentation

Legend: (M)EIC@JLab 1 low-energy IP (s ~ 300) 2 medium-energy IPs (s < 3000)

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. MEIC/ELIC Design Process at JLab Ecm2 = s = 4EeEp Ee = 3 – 11 GeV (upgradeable to 20+ GeV) Ep = 20 – 60+ GeV (12 GeV injection energy) (upgradeable to 250 GeV) Legend: (M)EIC@JLab 1 low-energy IP (s ~ 300) 2 medium-energy IPs (s < 3000) ELIC = high-energy EIC@JLab (s = 20000?) (Ep ~ 250 limited by JLab site) Use CEBAF “as-is” after 12-GeV Upgrade

  2. MEIC Design Choices Achieving high luminosity • Very high bunch repetition frequency (1.5 GHz) • Very small β* to reach very small spot sizes at collision points • Short bunch length (σz~ β*) to avoid luminosity loss due to hour-glass effect (unless other mitigation schemes used) • Relatively small bunch charge for making short bunch possible • High bunch repetition restores high average current and luminosity This luminosity concept has been tested at two B-factories very successfully, reaching luminosity above 1034 cm-2/s-1 • MeRHIC • Low repetition rate • High bunch charge • Long bunch length (but…) • Large β* (but…) • MEIC • High repetition rate • Small bunch charge • Short bunch length • Small β* • VS.

  3. Current Ideas for a Collider Design Goals for Colliders Under Consideration World-wide Present focus of interest (in the US) are the (M)EIC and Staged MeRHIC versions, with s up to ~3000 and ~5000, resp.

  4. Both laboratories are working together to get advice on the best steps towards a US Electron-Ion Collider. Sam Aronson and Christoph Lehmann/Hugh Montgomery have named an international EIC Advisory Committee: Joachim Bartels Allen Caldwell Albert De Roeck Walter Henning (chair) David Hertzog Xiangdong Ji Robert Klanner Alfred Mueller Katsunobu Oide Naohito Saito Uli Wienands 1st meeting Feb. 16, 2009 at SURA headquarters, D.C. 2nd meeting Nov. 2&3, 2009 at Jefferson Lab 3rd meeting around September???, 2010 At BNL??? Concrete design for EIC@Jlab requested by this meeting Internal reviewed cost estimate requested by this meeting

  5. Near-Term MEIC Design Parameters Luminosity expected to be around 1 x 1034 e-nucleons/s/cm2 around 60x5 GeV2, and be well above 1033 at “s edges”

  6. (M)EIC@JLab: Plan and Deliverables Slide from Yuhong Zhang • Accelerator Design “Contract” • Medium energy with scaled down parameters (ELIC version M.1) • “Contract” revision (end of 2010), after user workshops and the next EIC AC meeting • “Design Manual” • A 20 to 30 page document, archived in web • Explanation of high level design choices • Main and secondary parameters, schemes • Major components, and interfaces between them • Action items • Finish “action items/decision points” in about a week each • Work scope • Collecting information/references • Performing estimations/calculations if applicable • Formulate a solution/recommendation • Present in ELIC R&D meeting • Write a (minimum) half page on each item for the “design manual” • Similar Action Item: Detector/IR document

  7. MEIC/ELIC Design Process - Status • Near-term design concentrates on parameters that are within state-of-the-art (exception: small bunch length & small vertical b* for proton/ion beams) • Detector/IR design has concentrated on maximizing acceptance for deep exclusive processes and processes associated with very-forward going particles • (detect remnants of struck quark & spectator quarks!) • Exact energy/luminosity profile still a work in progress • Summer 2010: MEIC design review followed by internal cost review (and finalizing input from user workshops) • Many parameters related to the detector/IR design seem to be well matched now (crossing angles, magnet apertures/gradients/peak fields, field requirements), such that we do not end up with large “blind spots”.

  8. Electron-Ion Collider – Roadmap beyond JLab user EIC workshops • EIC (eRHIC/ELIC) webpage: http://web.mit.edu/eicc/ • Weekly meetings at both BNL and JLab • Wiki pages at http://eic.jlab.org/ & https://wiki.bnl.gov/eic • EIC Collaboration has biannual meetings since 2006 • Last EIC meeting: January 10-12, 2010 @ Stony Brook • Next meeting: July 29-31, 2010 @ Catholic University, DC • Long INT10-03 program @ Institute for Nuclear Theory, centered • around spin, QCD matter, imaging, electroweak Sept. 10 – Nov. 19, 2010 • Periodic EIC Advisory Committee meetings (convened by BNL & JLab) • After INT10-03 program (2011 – next LRP) • need to produce single, community-wide White Paper • laying out full EIC science program in broad, compelling strokes • and need to adjust EIC designs to be conform accepted • energy-luminosityprofile of highest nuclear science impact • followed by an apples-to-apples bottom-up cost estimate comparison • for competing designs, folding in risk factors • and folding in input from ongoing Accelerator R&D, EICAC &community

  9. Backup

  10. Quotes from EICAC Report on Accelerator R&D Priorities • Highest priority: • Design of JLab EIC • High current (e.g. 50 mA) polarized electron gun • Demonstration of high energy – high current recirculation ERL • Beam-Beam simulations for EIC • Polarized 3He production and acceleration • Coherent electron cooling • High priority, but could wait until decision made: • Compact loop magnets • Electron cooling for JLab concepts • Traveling focus scheme (it is not clear what the loss in performance would be if it doesn’t work; it is not a show stopper if it doesn’t) • Development of eRHIC-type SRF cavities Medium Priority: • Crab cavities • ERL technology development at JLAB Slide from Steve Vigdor

  11. EIC – JLab User Meetings Roadmap • March 12 + 13 @Rutgers: Electron-Nucleon Exclusive Reactions • March 14 + 15 @Duke: Partonic Transverse Momentum in Hadrons: • Quark Spin-Orbit Correlations and Quark-Gluon Interactions • April 07, 08, 09 @ANL: Nuclear Chromo-Dynamic Studies • May 17 +18 @W&M: Electroweak Studies • June 04 + 05 @JLab: MEIC Detector Workshop • June 07,08,09 2010 JLab Users Group Meeting • In parallel: MEIC/ELIC design worked out following highest EICAC • (Nov. 2010 meeting) recommendation related to accelerator • Energy-Luminosity profile of EIC design will likely be optimized over time to adjust to novel accelerator science ideas & the nuclear science case • For now we assume a base luminosity, say 1034e-ions/cm2/s • Fold in what energies are needed for e.g. L/T separations, imaging, • range in Q2 required at fixed x given y cuts, etc. • Study what luminosity is required at what energies to optimize the • science output, and fold in implications for the detector/acceptance

  12. EIC Project - Roadmap

More Related