511 research outputs found

    A new low intensity beam profiler for SPIRAL2

    Get PDF
    WEPF14International audienceIn the framework of SPIRAL 2 ion beams, several beam profile monitors are presently being developed at GANIL. One of them is a low-intensity beam-profile monitor that works as a secondary electron detector. This Emission-Foil Monitor (EFM) will be used in the radioactive beam lines of SPIRAL2 and in the experimental rooms of this new facility. The ions produce secondary electrons when they are stopped in an aluminium emissive foil. The electrons are then accelerated using an electric field and guided using a magnetic field to a double-stage microchannel plate (MCP). A 2D pixellated pad plane placed below the MCP is used to collect the signals. The magnetic field created by permanent magnets in a closed magnetic circuit configuration permits the beam-profile reconstruction to be achieved with a good resolution. The EFM can visualize beam-profile intensities between only a few pps to as much as 109 pps and with energies as low as several keV. This profiler has been under development since 2009 and is currently manufactured. Recent results of this monitor are presented in this article

    Fast Neutron Detectors Based On Micromegas Technology

    Get PDF
    After a short description of the Micromegas principle, a new concept of neutron detectors based on this technique is presented. The report is illustrated by an overall picture of the possible use of these detectors in different domain such as: nuclear physics, inertial fusion and industrial application. A particular description will be devoted to the compact detector named "PiccoloMicromegas". This detector, able to measure neutron flux in a broad range of energy of neutron (from thermal to several MeV), is developed for the measurements of neutrons flux in-core of the future generations of the nuclear reactors (fast and possibly Accelerator Driven System (ADS))

    Heat deposition by transient beam passage in spoilers

    Get PDF
    Future electron-positron linear colliders must produce bunches of tiny emittance grouped in short bunch trains in order to provide adequately large luminosities. A collimation system must be installed between the end of the main linac and the optical elements of the final focus to protect the detectors from errant beams. With ordinary values of the betatron functions, the transverse beam size is of a few microns. With such sizes, the local deposition of heat of even a single bunch train is so high that no material can survive such an event.The problem is solved by increasing the beam sizes at the location of the collimators. But the use of large betatron functions is costly and can induce strong optical errors. It is therefore important to compute precisely safe beam sizes which allow the survival of the collimators, in order to limit their increase to the minimum needed. The deposition of heat occurs both by ionisation along the path of the particles which traverse the material and by ohmic image current heating at the surface of the collimator, for that fraction of the beam which flies outside the collimator.With small bunches, heat diffusion is substantial even with short bunch trains and helps to reduce the excursion of temperature. The rise of temperature is computed by solving analytically the time-dependent heat equation in two spatial dimensions near an interface with vacuum. Numerical results are given for the CLIC study

    MAD Version 9

    Get PDF
    The program MAD is widely used for accelerator design and beam dynamics studies. For many years, its input language has been the nearest thing to a world-wide standard for describing accelerator structures. The new Version 9 is a complete rewrite using a systematic object-oriented methodology based on the CLASSIC classes [2] for accelerator physics. It provides many improvements over the previous MAD Version 8. These include: (i) support for multiple beam-lines simultaneously, facilitating, for example, matching constraints that couple the two rings of a two-ring collider, (ii) much improved Lie-algebraic map calculations, (iii) a uniform method and format for exchanging many kinds of structured data with other programs, (iv) an improved and more consistent input language. In addition, we report on a parallel 3D Poisson field solver for space charge calculations in high intensity particle beams. Applied to the PSI injector cyclotron, this shows the general nature of MAD Version 9 as a state-of- the-art problem-solving environment. We describe the current status of the program and how to get it, outline future plans and illustrate some of the new features

    Overview of the CLIC Collimation design

    Get PDF
    The collimation system of the Compact Linear Collider (CLIC) should simultaneously fulfill three different functions. It must (1) provide adequate halo collimation to render the detector background acceptable, (2) ensure collimator survival and machine protection against mis-steered beams, and (3) not significantly amplify incoming trajectory fluctuations via the collimator wake fields. We describe the present layout of CLIC post-linac collimation and characterize its potential performance

    Micromegas detector developments for MIMAC

    Full text link
    The aim of the MIMAC project is to detect non-baryonic Dark Matter with a directional TPC. The recent Micromegas efforts towards building a large size detector will be described, in particular the characterization measurements of a prototype detector of 10 ×\times 10 cm2^2 with a 2 dimensional readout plane. Track reconstruction with alpha particles will be shown.Comment: 8 pages, 7 figures Proceedings of the 3rd International conference on Directional Detection of Dark Matter (CYGNUS 2011), Aussois, France, 8-10 June 2011; corrections on author affiliation

    Development of a tracking system of exotic nuclear beams for FAIR

    Get PDF
    New accelerators like SPIRAL2 (GANIL, France) or FAIR (GSI, Germany) will be soon constructed, and they will be able to produce radioactive ion beams (RIB) with high intensities of current (≥106pps). These beams, at low energy, lower than 20 MeV/n, usually have high emittance, which imposes the use of tracking detectors before the target in order to reconstruct the trajectory of the ions. The group of Nuclear Physics at CNA (Centro Nacional de Aceleradores), is in charge of developing a tracking system for the low energy branch of FAIR (the HISPEC/DESPEC project). A collaboration with CEA-SACLAY was established, with the aim of developing, building and testing low pressure Secondary electron Detectors (SeD). Within this proposal we have projected and constructed a new Nuclear Physics Line in the CNA in order to be able to receive any kind of detector tests and the associated nuclear instruments

    Tests of Micro-Pattern Gaseous Detectors for Active Target Time Projection Chambers in nuclear physics

    Get PDF
    Active target detection systems, where the gas used as the detection medium is also a target for nuclear reactions, have been used for a wide variety of nuclear physics applications since the eighties. Improvements in Micro-Pattern Gaseous Detectors (MPGDs) and in micro-electronics achieved in the last decade permit the development of a new generation of active targets with higher granularity pad planes that allow spatial and time information to be determined with unprecedented accuracy. A novel active target and time projection chamber (ACTAR TPC), that will be used to study reactions and decays of exotic nuclei at facilities such as SPIRAL2, is presently under development and will be based on MPGD technology. Several MPGDs (Micromegas and Thick GEM) coupled to a 2×2 mm2 pixelated pad plane have been tested and their performances have been determined with different gases over a wide range of pressures. Of particular interest for nuclear physics experiments are the angular and energy resolutions. The angular resolution has been determined to be better than 1° FWHM for short traces of about 4 cm in length and the energy resolution deduced from the particle range was found to be better than 5% for 5.5 MeV α particles. These performances have been compared to Geant4 simulations. These experimental results validate the use of these detectors for several applications in nuclear physics

    Venerque – La Trinité

    Get PDF
    Lien Atlas (MCC) :http://atlas.patrimoines.culture.fr/atlas/trunk/index.php?ap_theme=DOM_2.01.02&ap_bbox=1.427;43.415;1.499;43.458 L’opération de diagnostic archéologique réalisée à Venerque s’inscrit dans le cadre d’un prochain aménagement d’un lotissement sur plusieurs terrains situés au lieu-dit la Trinité. La prescription de ce diagnostic a été motivée par la proximité immédiate de la nécropole de Loupsaout-La Trinité, découverte dans les années 1950 lors d’un défoncement agricole à quelq..
    corecore