Physical Review Accelerators and Beams (Jan 2019)
Magnetic frequency response of High-Luminosity Large Hadron Collider beam screens
Abstract
Magnetic fields used to control particle beams in accelerators are usually controlled by regulating the electrical current of the power converters. In order to minimize lifetime degradation and ultimately luminosity loss in circular colliders, current-noise is a highly critical figure of merit of power converters, in particular for magnets located in areas with high beta-function, like the High-Luminosity Large Hadron Collider (HL-LHC) insertions. However, what is directly acting upon the beam is the magnetic field and not the current of the power converter, which undergoes several frequency-dependent transformations until the desired magnetic field, seen by the beam, is obtained. Beam screens are very rarely considered when assessing or specifying the noise figure of merit, but their magnetic frequency response is such that they realize relatively effective low pass filtering of the magnetic field produced by the system magnet-power converter. This work aims at filling this gap by quantifying the expected impact of different beam screen layouts for the most relevant HL-LHC insertion magnets. A well-defined postprocessing technique is used to derive the frequency response of the different multipoles from multiphysics finite element method (FEM) simulation results. In addition, a well-approximated analytical formula for the low-frequency range of multi-layered beam screens is presented.