Hilary Term 2021 Seminars
from
Thursday 21 January 2021 (08:25)
to
Thursday 11 March 2021 (17:15)
Monday 18 January 2021
Tuesday 19 January 2021
Wednesday 20 January 2021
Thursday 21 January 2021
16:15
The eSPS facility at CERN
-
Steinar Stapnes
(
CERN
)
The eSPS facility at CERN
Steinar Stapnes
(
CERN
)
16:15 - 17:15
Room: Zoom
The design of a primary electron beam facility at CERN will be described. It re-enables the Super Proton Synchrotron (SPS) as an electron accelerator, and leverages the development invested in Compact Linear Collider (CLIC) technology for its injector and as an accelerator research and development infrastructure. This would be a facility relevant for several of the key priorities in the 2020 update of the European Strategy for Particle Physics, such as an electron-positron Higgs factory, accelerator R&D, dark sector physics, and neutrino physics. In addition, it could serve experiments in nuclear physics. The electron beam delivered by this facility would provide access to light dark matter production significantly beyond the targets predicted by a thermal dark matter origin, and for the nature of dark matter particles that are not accessible by direct detection experiments. It would also enable electro-nuclear measurements crucial for precise modelling the energy dependence of neutrino-nucleus interactions, which is needed to precisely measure neutrino oscillations as a function of energy. The facility is a natural next step in the development of X-band high-gradient acceleration technology as pursued within the CLIC collaboration. The facility also allows studies of a number of components and phenomena for a future electron-positron Higgs and electroweak factory as the first stage of a next circular collider at CERN, and its cavities in the SPS would be the same type as foreseen for such a future collider. It’s X-band injector linac would become a facility with multi-GeV drive bunches and truly independent electron witness bunches for plasma wakefield acceleration. A second phase capable to deliver positron witness bunches would make it a complete facility for plasma wakefield collider studies and studies of positron production.
Friday 22 January 2021
Saturday 23 January 2021
Sunday 24 January 2021
Monday 25 January 2021
Tuesday 26 January 2021
Wednesday 27 January 2021
Thursday 28 January 2021
16:15
The FCC-ee Higgs and Electroweak Factory
-
Frank Zimmermann
(
CERN
)
The FCC-ee Higgs and Electroweak Factory
Frank Zimmermann
(
CERN
)
16:15 - 17:15
Room: Zoom
The Future Circular Collider (FCC) integrated project consists, in a first stage, of an energy- and luminosity-frontier electron-positron collider, FCC-ee. The FCC-ee is a precision instrument to study the Z, W, and Higgs boson, and the top quark, and offers unprecedented sensitivity to signs of new physics. Its beam parameters are limited by several, partly new effects, such as beamstrahlung in collision, a coherent beam-beam instability with large crossing angle, the available top-up injection rate, and instabilities related to the large ring circumference. The FCC-ee should also be designed with maximum energy-efficiency, regarding hardware, operational scenarios, and parameters. In a second stage, most of the FCC-ee infrastructure could be reused for a subsequent hadron collider, FCC-hh, which shall provide proton-proton collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of 100 TeV. In this seminar, I will present selected highlights and key accelerator challenges from the FCC-ee design, near-term study targets, and the longer-term FCC schedule.
Friday 29 January 2021
Saturday 30 January 2021
Sunday 31 January 2021
Monday 1 February 2021
Tuesday 2 February 2021
Wednesday 3 February 2021
Thursday 4 February 2021
16:15
The International Linear Collider
-
Shinichiro Michizono
The International Linear Collider
Shinichiro Michizono
16:15 - 17:15
Room: Zoom
The International Linear Collider (ILC) is an electron–positron collider with a total length of around 20 km for a Higgs factory (a centre-of-mass energy of 250 GeV). Key technologies at ILC are superconducting RF (SRF) acceleration at main linacs and nano-beam technology at the interaction point (IP). Prior to the actual construction, a four-year period of preparation (under ILC Pre-Lab, an international preparatory body) would be necessary. International development team (IDT) was established on August, 2020 and IDT has been working for the organization design of the ILC Pre-Lab. Based on international agreements, the Pre-Lab will start its operation and complete the necessary preparation to start the construction. The construction would take around 10 years and the experiments could be conducted for twenty years.
Friday 5 February 2021
Saturday 6 February 2021
Sunday 7 February 2021
Monday 8 February 2021
Tuesday 9 February 2021
Wednesday 10 February 2021
Thursday 11 February 2021
16:15
Superconducting Magnets: An Enabling Technology for Physics Research and Society
-
Lucio Rossi
(
Università degli Studi e INFN Milano (IT)
)
Superconducting Magnets: An Enabling Technology for Physics Research and Society
Lucio Rossi
(
Università degli Studi e INFN Milano (IT)
)
16:15 - 17:15
Room: Zoom
Fundamental science has nurtured superconducting magnet technology for a long time in order to explore the high energy regime. The discovery of the long-awaited Higgs boson at CERN's Large Hadron Collider, based on thousands of powerful superconducting magnets, is maybe the most famous outcome. However, technologies that are only possible due to the invention of large superconducting magnets, such as magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) scanners, have made important impacts on our lives. The quest for even higher magnetic fields, necessary for the next generation energy frontier colliders, is generating a vigorous effort toward the 20 tesla dipole field frontier (doubling the LHC range). New materials are being engineered, like rare earth and iron-based superconductors to build the magnets from. In addition new paradigms for coil technology are being tested, for example, conductor windings with no electrical insulation. In the meanwhile, magnet designers are exploring new magnet topology to take advantage of new superconductors and new technologies. The talk will illustrate the recent achievement in this domain and discuss the possible reverberation on society.
Friday 12 February 2021
Saturday 13 February 2021
Sunday 14 February 2021
Monday 15 February 2021
Tuesday 16 February 2021
Wednesday 17 February 2021
Thursday 18 February 2021
16:15
The SuperKEKB Collider
-
Makoto Tobiyama
(
KEK
)
The SuperKEKB Collider
Makoto Tobiyama
(
KEK
)
16:15 - 17:15
Room: Zoom
SuperKEKB is an asymmetric energy collider, colliding a 4 GeV positron beam with a 7 GeV electron beam at the KEK Tsukuba campus. It has been built to search for new physics beyond the standard model of the particle physics in the B meson regime. The SuperKEKB collider has been designed to achieve a luminosity that is more than an order of magnitude higher than the KEKB collider. It achieves this by employing a nano-beam scheme originally proposed by P. Raimondi for the SuperB collider. In this talk, the key architecture of the upgrade from KEKB to SuperKEKB will be shown, as well as the challenges currently faced by researchers in order to achieve higher luminosities.
Friday 19 February 2021
Saturday 20 February 2021
Sunday 21 February 2021
Monday 22 February 2021
Tuesday 23 February 2021
Wednesday 24 February 2021
Thursday 25 February 2021
16:15
Physics vs. Cancer: What are the Hot Topics in Particle Therapy Accelerator Development?
-
Alexander Gerbershagen
(
CERN
)
Physics vs. Cancer: What are the Hot Topics in Particle Therapy Accelerator Development?
Alexander Gerbershagen
(
CERN
)
16:15 - 17:15
Room: Zoom
The presentation provides an overview over the recent developments in the field of accelerators and beamlines for proton, ion and high-energy electron therapy. It describes the rising use of the superconducting technology, in particular to its application to the gantry magnets. The advantages and disadvantages of the superconducting technology use are discussed in regards to both proton and ion beam therapy systems. This includes the delineation of the new treatment modalities enabled by the use of superconducting magnets. Furthermore, the principle of FLASH therapy with electron and proton beams is introduced and its challenges in regards to dose distribution, beam stability and dosimetry are discussed. As a conclusion, the outlook for the potential solutions is presented.
Friday 26 February 2021
Saturday 27 February 2021
Sunday 28 February 2021
Monday 1 March 2021
Tuesday 2 March 2021
Wednesday 3 March 2021
Thursday 4 March 2021
16:15
Upgrade of the ISIS Facility
-
John Thomason
(
STFC-RAL
)
Upgrade of the ISIS Facility
John Thomason
(
STFC-RAL
)
16:15 - 17:15
Room: Zoom
The ISIS Neutron and Muon Source accelerators have been studied, improved and refined over many years, but recently a feasibility study was launched to explore ISIS-II, the next generation source for the UK. The aim is to refocus facility upgrades in light of the advent of the European Spallation Source (ESS) in Sweden and new forecast scenarios for neutron and muon provision in Europe. A working group was set up consisting of ISIS experts on accelerators, targets, neutronics, instrument science, detectors and engineering, to reflect the ambition of a full facility upgrade, not simply an accelerator upgrade. This working group has produced a comprehensive roadmap for the feasibility and design studies and associated R&D to enable a fully informed decision on the optimal proton driver and target system architecture to build a Megawatt-class short pulse neutron and muon facility on the Harwell campus with the best balance of technical capability and lifetime cost — ‘ISIS-II’. This could either be a stand-alone facility, or make use of existing ISIS infrastructure. This challenging and ambitious project aims to gather enough detailed knowledge to enable a decision by 2027 and start construction by 2030 on a machine that will support the international research community for decades to come.
Friday 5 March 2021
Saturday 6 March 2021
Sunday 7 March 2021
Monday 8 March 2021
Tuesday 9 March 2021
Wednesday 10 March 2021
Thursday 11 March 2021
16:15
Student Design Project: The eSPS at CERN
-
JAI Graduate Students
(
JAI
)
Student Design Project: The eSPS at CERN
JAI Graduate Students
(
JAI
)
16:15 - 17:15
Room: Zoom
The aim of this year’s JAI student project is to prepare a design of the primary electron beam for the electron-Super Proton Synchrotron (eSPS) at CERN. The facility re-enables the SPS as an electron accelerator, and leverages the development invested in the Compact Linear Collider (CLIC) technology for its injector and accelerator R&D infrastructure. The SPS has, in the past, accelerated electrons and positrons from 3.5 GeV to 22 GeV when it was used as the injector to the Large Electron Positron (LEP) collider. It is now proposed to use the SPS simultaneously as an accelerator and as a very long pulse stretcher to provide an electron beam to a new experimental area. The electron injector would be a 3.5 GeV compact high-gradient linac based on CLIC technology injecting pulses into the SPS. The beam would then be accelerated to 16 GeV, using an 800 MHz superconducting radiofrequency (RF) system, similar to what is needed for the future electron-positron Future Circular Collider (FCC-ee). The electrons would then be extracted at 16 GeV using a slow resonant extraction. The extracted beam will be transported to a new experimental area where the particle detectors will be located. The student work concerns the eSPS and the investigation of this new electron beam facility, focusing on the general lay-out, the lattice design and the choice of magnets & magnet design for the transfer line from the 3.5. GeV compact linac to the SPS, and the design of the RF system in the SPS.