I follow the LHC via their dashboard - http://lhcdashboard.web.cern.ch/lhcdashboard/
and understand the individual graphs except for the "tune" graphs.
Can someone explain what they are and their significance.
On Friday, May 20, 2011 at 5:34:49 AM UTC+1, Lester Welch wrote:
I follow the LHC via their dashboard - http://lhcdashboard.web.cern.ch/lhcdashboard/
and understand the individual graphs except for the "tune" graphs.
Hi Lester, nice to meet you.
On May 22, 8:04 pm, Lester Welch <lester.we...@gmail.com> wrote:
On May 22, 8:48 pm, "Ken S. Tucker" <dynam...@vianet.on.ca> wrote:
On May 21, 11:54 pm, Tom Roberts <tjroberts...@sbcglobal.net> wrote:
Lester Welch wrote:
When I look
at the size of the beams (~1 mm) and knowing the distance they travel it is a technical marvel that they can be steered to collide. But if one beam was off - say - ~1/10 mm then the # of collisions would be significantly reduced. How accurately do they know the concentricity of the beams? What graph shows that? Perhaps the calculation of luminosity takes all of that into account.
I'm not sure what you mean by "concentricity".
At collision, the LHC beams are on the order of 30 microns in diameter [#]. This
depends on the transverse emittance and the beta-star at the collision point --
the latter varies for each experiment, depending on their design and specific
operating mode. I believe they use automatic feedback to align the beams for
maximum collision rate (i.e. maximum luminosity).
[#] This is one sigma. The beams are approximately Gaussian out
to about 3 sigma, but are scraped at larger radius to remove the
tails (aka halo).
The calculation of luminosity certainly takes "all that" into account, plus a
whole lot more. They monitor it continuously. It is plotted in "Fill Luminosity", which has a separate line for each experiment.
Note the ILC is MUCH more challenging to align the beams to collide, as their
beams are less than a micron in size at the collision point. Ditto for CLIC.
Electron machines can achieve much lower emittances due to the damping available
from synchrotron radiation. And the lower momentum of these machines permits a
lower beta-star.
Tom Roberts
I'm still seriously impressed by the focus and sweep angle control
of a CRT monitor (TV) 3 electron beams,RGB.
Furthermore, such an accelerator was affordable to the average
consumer!
That's mass produced 'beam' control.
I think we could do much better than a micron.
Regards
Ken S. Tucker
What is the beta* parameter on the luminosity graph?
You can email LHC with a reasonable question, and they will
either answer or direct you to a site that helps.
(they're the experts about LHC).
As I understand, the Beta is v/c , Beta* is the combined
collision energy of v/c with a beam doing -v/c.
Some authors use a relativistic Beta, and can mean the
increased energy in the 'beams' colliding.
(thats the relativity of inertial mass).
Focusing a beam is a challenge.
(I 1st learned about that using old B&W CRT's, a pin-prick
dot burns off the florescence).
Did you want details?
Regards
Ken S. Tucker
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