Title :
Plasma lens for US based super neutrino beam at either FNAL OR BNL
Author :
Hershcovitch, A. ; Weng, W. ; Diwan, M. ; Gallardo, J. ; Kirk, H. ; Johnson, B. ; Kahn, S. ; Garate, E. ; Van Drie, A. ; Rostoker, N.
Author_Institution :
Brookhaven Nat. Lab., Upton
Abstract :
The plasma lens concept is examined as an alternative to focusing horns and solenoids for a neutrino beam facility. The concept is based on a combined high-current lens/target configuration. Current is fed at an electrode located downstream from the beginning of the target where pion capturing is needed. The current is carried by plasma outside the target. A second plasma lens section, with an additional current feed, follows the target. The plasma is immersed in a relatively small solenoidal magnetic field to facilitate its current profile shaping to optimize pion capture. Simulations of the not yet fully optimized configuration yielded a 25% higher neutrino flux at a detector situated at 3 km from the target than the horn system for the entire energy spectrum and a factor of 2.47 higher flux for neutrinos with energy larger than 3 GeV. A major advantage of plasma lenses is in background reduction. In anti-neutrino operation, neutrino background is reduced by a factor of close to 3 for the whole spectrum, and for and for energy larger than 3 GeV, neutrino background is reduced by a factor of 3.6. Plasma lenses have additional advantages: larger axial currents, high signal purity, and minimal neutrino background in anti-neutrino runs. The lens medium consists of plasma, consequently, particle absorption and scattering is negligible. Withstanding high mechanical and thermal stresses in a plasma is not an issue.
Keywords :
Z pinch; electrodes; linear accelerators; magnetic fields; neutrinos; particle beam focusing; plasma accelerators; proton accelerators; solenoids; BNL; FNAL; Super Neutrino Beam facility; antineutrino operation; axial currents; distance 3 km; electrode; enegry spectrum; focusing horns; focusing solenoids; high-current lens-target configuration; magnetized Z-pinch; mechanical stress; neutrino flux; particle absorption; particle scattering; plasma lens; solenoidal magnetic field; thermal stress; Electrodes; Feeds; Lenses; Magnetic fields; Mesons; Neutrino sources; Particle beams; Plasma simulation; Solenoids; Thermal stresses;
Conference_Titel :
Particle Accelerator Conference, 2007. PAC. IEEE
Conference_Location :
Albuquerque, NM
Print_ISBN :
978-1-4244-0916-7
DOI :
10.1109/PAC.2007.4440709