1 / 31

Outline

Fermilab Accelerator Science Program: Overview and Strategy (KA 15 01 02) Vladimir Shiltsev Fermilab Institutional Review June 6-9, 2011. Outline. Introduction: Mission Elements and Organization Accelerator and Beam Physics Advanced Accelerator R&D Advanced Physics for Accelerator Operations

swestcott
Download Presentation

Outline

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. Fermilab Accelerator Science Program: Overview and Strategy(KA 15 01 02)Vladimir ShiltsevFermilab Institutional ReviewJune 6-9, 2011

  2. Outline Introduction: Mission Elements and Organization Accelerator and Beam Physics Advanced Accelerator R&D Advanced Physics for Accelerator Operations Education and training Conclusion Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011

  3. Introduction • The Accelerator Science and Muon Accelerator programs at Fermilab support the long term accelerator based physics mission of Fermilab and of the Department of Energy’s Office of High Energy Physics: • Development of technologies and tools aimed at long term forefront accelerator facilities • Energy frontier colliders (LHC–HL/HE, +-, ILC) • Intensity frontier facilities (Main Injector, Project X, -Factory) • Critical support for ongoing accelerator based programs at the heart of the near term Fermilab research program • Collider and -program at FNAL • LHC at CERN Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011

  4. Fermilab Accelerator Science Program Elements Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011

  5. Relevance of Fermilab’s Accelerator Science Activities and Facilities Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011

  6. Uniqueness of Fermilab Accelerator Science Program • The Fermilab Accelerator Science program is embedded in, and leverages resources and infrastructure from, the much larger operations and general technology development programs: • Accelerator facilities: The Fermilab complex is very flexible in its ability to deliver beam at a variety of energies to a variety of locations, simultaneous with ongoing operations • MuCool Test Area, Meson Area Test Beam, and, since recently, New Muon Lab are current examples • Accelerator personnel: Fermilab staff possess unique capabilities and skills in accelerator design, construction, and operations, and in advanced accelerator R&D. Six prize winners and 10 APS/DPB Fellows take part in the program carried by the Accelerator Sector (APC, TD, AD). Personnel are available to support the Accelerator Science program on temporary/longer term basis via full/part time assignment. Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011

  7. Uniqueness of the Program (cont.) • Accelerator computation/simulations tools: A variety of advanced computation and simulation tools are available in the APC and via the SciDAC sponsored national accelerator computational program. • Accelerator infrastructure: Very substantial cryogenics, electrical, and low conductivity water infrastructure are available within the accelerator complex at Fermilab. • Local Universities and Laboratories: Several local universities (IIT, NIU, UIUC, UofC) plus ANL and ICL, are active participants in the Fermilab’s program • Support functions: Procurement, ESH, QA, accounting, etc. support are available at minimal incremental cost. • Because of our role in the US-HEP, Fermilab is uniquely positioned to provide the leadership in programs aimed at the development of future accelerator facilities in the U.S. • Project X, LARP (LHC Accel. Res. Program), MAP (Muon Accel. Program) Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011

  8. Organization and Collaborators • Activities are conducted within the Fermilab Accelerator Sector • Accelerator Physics Center coordinates Accelerator Science activities ComPASS ANL, BNL, LBL, SLAC Jlab, UCLA, USC, Tech-X Fermilab Computing Division Particle Phys Division Joint Appointments NIU (2), IIT(2), ICL (1) US-LARP & US -MAP CERN, Nat’l Labs, Univ’s ANL , UChicago US-PAS 10 Nat’l Labs, 2 Univ’s Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011 Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011

  9. Statistics of Accelerator Physics Publications INSPIRE r:fermilab collection:published -cn:/.*/ Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011

  10. Fermilab Accelerator Science Highlights in 2010-11 • >20 peer-review publications : • Phys Rev Lett (2) • Phys Rev ST-AB (8) • JINST (3), Mod Phys Lett (1) • 18 invited talks at PAC’11 • 3 at IPAC’10 in NYC and 3 at IPAC’11 • Proceedings : 8 @ AAC2010, 16 @IPAC2010, >40 at other conferences/workshops • 16 publications a year: • (may not look like a lot, but…) • is about 0.5 articles/scientist/yr • compare with CDF & D0 : ~60/600=0.1 articles/sci/year Featured in:

  11. Next 12 slides will cover each KA150102 element : • Mission • Goals • Main Activities • Recent Progress • Future Outlook and Plans since FY11, Muon Accelerator R&D is in a separate B&R category (KA15 02 03) • Steve Geer will report Wednesday Immediately following my talk, additional details will be given by: • Philippe Piot – on Advanced Accelerator R&D program • Alexander Valishev – on Beam Physics and Ops support Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011

  12. Accelerator Theory and Beam Physics Mission: contribute to the fundamental understanding of beam dynamics through experiment , simulation and theory Five-year Goals: • Improve understanding of beam instabilities due to space-charge, beam-beam, impedance and electron cloud effects and their control through development of fundamental theory and experimental studies • Complete analysis of beam physics of the Tevatron Collider and summarize in a comprehensive publication (book) • Support and further develop accelerator codes the lab provides to community (MARS,OPTIM, CHEF, ESME, etc) • Lead and expand COMPASS (Community Petascale for Accelerator Science and Simulation) • Develop and install hollow electron beam collimators for LHC Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011

  13. Beam Theory and Modeling Activities • Energy Deposition simulations: • MARS code development and support • 200 registered users in US (290 world-wide) • Collimation design &modeling (crystals) • General accelerator theory: • Instabilities due to space-charge and electron clouds • Strongly nonlinear rings (IOTA) • Leading COMPASS (part of SciDAC) • Beam-beam simulations: • LIFETRAC code has predictive power • Tev, LHC, beam-beam compensation • Hollow e-beam collimator simulation • Advanced Vlasov solver development

  14. Experimental Beam Physics Studies • Tevatron Beam Physics Studies program: • Approved to take place before the end of the Collider Run II • Unique opportunity for in-depth exploration of the physics of colliders • Several periods of studies in 2011 • beam-beam effects and compensation, diffusion and halo, novel collimation schemes, luminosity leveling, instabilities, nonlinear effects, etc • Other studies: • Ground motion measurements on site and in South Dakota • Electron cloud studies in CESRTA Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011

  15. Advanced Accelerator R&D Mission: develop and explore the transformative concepts and technologies for beyond next-generation accelerators Five-year Goals: • Develop NML into a flexible, powerful, proposal-driven user facility for Advanced Accelerator R&D • conclude transverse-to-longitudinal emittance exchange demonstration experiments at A0 Photoinjector • transform A0 high-brightness electron sources and novel beam diagnostics development lab (joint with NIU) • Build a small low energy electron ring for proof-of-principle demonstration of novel integrable nonlinear beam optics Activities: • Pioneering on round-to-flat beam transformation and transverse-to-longitudinal emittance exchange (EEX) demo experiments at A0 • Microbunch train generation demo by EEX Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011

  16. NML Expansion (AARD) Building Construction Finished Digging Tunnel Finished Tunnel Electrical Service Building Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011

  17. Planning Advanced Accelerator R&D in NML The NML AARD facility will be unique: • Variable energy from ~40 MeV (injector beamlines) to ~1 GeV • High repetition rate (3000 bunches every 0.2 s) • Low emittance source and tailored change distribution We have set up a Joint Fermilab–Argonne Working Group on Scientific Opportunities for Advanced Accelerator R&D at Fermilab’s New Muon Laboratory Facility In April 2011, the WG identified 3 high priority experiments : • longitudinal bunch shape manipulation with double-emittance exchange line (in collaboration with ANL) • IOTA (integrable optics test accelerator) ring and advanced beam cooling tests (in collaboration with ORNL) • test of a crystal-based high-brightness X-ray radiator (in collaboration with NIU, Vanderbilt University, Tech-X and RadiaBeam Technologies) Plan to prepare full proposal by the end of 2011 Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011

  18. Beam Physics Support of Operational Programs Mission: to provide advanced beam dynamics support for the operating accelerator complex at Fermilab, and the Large Hadron Collider at CERN Five-year Goals: • Improve performance of operating accelerators through in-depth beam-dynamics understanding at both FNAL and LHC • Provide scientific support to PIP (Proton Improvement Plan) Activities: • energy deposition simulations for operationally critical systems • development of improved beam diagnostics tools (eg for beam optics and tunes) • methods to control beam optics imperfections • exploration of the performance limiting factors such as efficiency of collimation system in MI and LHC, generation and control of DC beam • modeling and optimization of stochastic and electron cooling systems Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011

  19. Two Examples of Physics Support of Operations Booster Phasor Tune Monitor B38 Console Application • Support of LHC : • Beam optics measurements analysis and correction • Abort gap monitoring and control • Collimation efficiency analysis • HL/HE-LHC design contributions • With partial support from and overall coordination from LARP before after

  20. Accelerator Education Mission: educate the next generation of accelerator designers and builders through the USPAS and Fermilab programs Five-year Goals: • Expand Accelerator PhD program to over 10 students • Increase number of PhD graduates to more than 2/yr • Establish joint University-FNAL program for Masters students Activities: • the Lee Teng Internship in accelerator science and technology for undergraduate students (joint with Argonne Nat’l Lab) • Summer internship in accelerator physics and technology for international students (PARTI) • a Joint University-Fermilab Accelerator Ph.D. program • the Peoples Fellowship in accelerator science for post-graduates • Fermilab hosts the U.S. Particle Accelerator School, a national consortium, which holds two sessions a year for undergraduate and graduate students. Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011

  21. Engage highly promising post-junior undergrads to study accelerator S&T Interns study “Fundamentals” at USPAS, undertake research project at the labs for ~2 mos in the summer ANL&FNAL selected 10 interns (2010) Committee chaired by E.Prebys Undergraduate outreach: Teng Internship at FNAL and ANL Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011

  22. FNAL Hosts US-PAS Office Old Dominion Jan 2011 Stony Brook June 2011 UT-Austin Jan 2012 Two PAS sessions a year ~130 students/school Attendance numbers show that there is a steady interest in accelerator science Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011

  23. US PAS Office and Fermilab Lecturers Teachers (recent) Nikolai Mokhov Panagiotis Spenzouris Elvin Harms Jim Amundson William Barletta Eric Prebys Arden Warner Don Cossairt Diane Reitrzner Mike Syphers Dave McGinnis Ralph Pasquinelli Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011 US-PAS Office (part of APC) William Barletta (Director) Susan Winchester Irina Novitskaya

  24. 37 graduates since inception in 1987 M.Syphers was the 1st 19 graduates in 2000-2010 On average, slightly less than 1/yr 2 in 2010: W.M.Tam (Indiana) “HINS H- Source and Diagnositics” D.McCarron (IIT) “Booster Beam Impedance” 7 PhD students in the program now Topics from technology to experiment to modeling Plan to expand by 1-2 students in 2011-2012 Typically, 4-6 applications per 6 mos cycle Committee, chaired by E.Prebys (2010-2012) Joint University-Fermilab Accelerator PhD Program Current students Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011

  25. Summary • The Fermilab Accelerator Science program supports the development of tools and technologies required for future accelerator facilities on the energy and intensity frontiers • Well aligned with the OHEP strategic plan and associated Accelerator Science thrusts • Over the past year, all elements of the KA 15 01 02 Programs have shown significant progress: • Accelerator and Beam Physics • Advanced Accelerator R&D • Advanced Physics for Accelerator Operations • Education and Training • Ambitious plans are set for the next several years Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011

  26. Back up slides Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011

  27. Fermilab Accelerator Science Program ElementsAlignment with OHEP Thrusts • Accelerator and Beam Physics • Development of beam optics and dynamics simulation and modeling tools (including large scale energy deposition simulations); • Theory of beam instabilities in current & future accelerator facilities; • Development of new techniques of beam-beam compensation; • Theory and experimentation on new collimation and cooling methods; • Experimental studies of e-cloud effects in high intensity proton facilities; • Development of new components for energy efficient accelerator concepts; • Experimental studies of ground motion effects in accelerators; • Beam studies at the LHC, Tevatron, Main Injector and Booster accelerators in support of optimizing performance of the LHC, Collider Run II, and current and future neutrino program; • Training of the next generation of accelerator scientists and engineers Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011

  28. Fermilab Accelerator Science Program ElementsAlignment with OHEP Thrusts • Muon Collider/Neutrino Factory • Leadership of the US National Muon Accelerator Program (MAP) – which includes several Nat’l Labs and many University groups • Design concepts, and major subsystem simulations and technology demonstrations for muon-based facilities; • Strong cooperation with international partners and companies funded via the DOE Small Business Innovation Research program • Beam Sources and Instrumentation • Together with ANL, establishment of the experimental AARD program at the NML User’s Facility; • Activities at the A0 Photoinjector, in collaboration with a variety of outside laboratories and universities (NIU); • High performance electron source and diagnostics development; • Development of phase-space beam manipulation methods Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011

  29. Accelerator Science Collaborations • Accelerator and Beam Physics: • Theory and Simulations: CERN, ORNL, BNL, SLAC, LBNL, ANL • Modeling: ComPASS collaboration (6 labs, UCLA, UM, USC, Tech-X) • Advanced Accelerator R&D: • A0 Photoinjector: NIU(Joint Appointment), ANL, RadiaBeams • NML Facility: ANL, UC, Vanderbult U, SLAC, NIU • Muon Accelerator Program: • National: 7 Labs, 8 Universities, Muons.,Inc (SBIR);Int’l: MICE collab • Joint Appointments with IIT, Imperial College (London) • Physics Support of Operations: • CERN, LARP • Education and Training in Accelerator Physics: • USPAS: 10 Labs and 2 Universities • Lee Teng Internship: joint with Argonne National Lab Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011

  30. Accelerator Science PersonnelAwards and Recognitions • Wilson Prize • A. Tollestrup • H. Edwards • National Medal of Technology • H. Edwards • European Accelerator Prize • V. Shiltsev • USPAS Prize • H. Edwards • S. Nagaitsev • National Academy of Sciences • A. Tollestrup • APS Fellows • A. Bross • H. Edwards • S. Geer • S. Holmes • N. Mokhov • S. Nagaitsev • D. Neuffer • V. Shiltsev • A. Tollestrup • V. Yarba Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011

  31. Tevatron Accelerator Physics: Special Issue Fermilab Institutional Review, June 6-9, 2011

More Related