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R. Belusevic A Superconducting Proton/Electron Linac for Fixed-Target Experiments at KEK

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A Superconducting Proton/Electron Linac for Fixed-Target Experiments at KEK. R. Belusevic. KEK, July 2014. Main characteristics of the proposed facility. Pulsed SC linac based on ILC-type cavities and rf sources, constructed using the existing KEK accelerator infrastructure. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: R. Belusevic

R. Belusevic

A Superconducting Proton/Electron Linac for Fixed-Target Experiments at KEK

Page 2: R. Belusevic

Main characteristics of the proposed facility

Pulsed SC linac based on ILC-type cavities and rf sources,constructed using the existing KEK accelerator infrastructure.

Both protons and (polarized) electrons can be accelerated,which considerably increases its physics potential.

By avoiding the use of circular machines, the beam power can exceed 10 MW at a linac beam energy of ~20 GeV.

At a later stage, a 120-GeV proton synchrotron could beinstalled inside the Tristan ring.

Page 3: R. Belusevic

Schematic layout of the facility

Page 4: R. Belusevic

KEK site with Tristan ring and electron linacs

Existing linac: blue

Extended tunnels: red

Page 5: R. Belusevic

Front view of linac tunnel & klystron gallery

Page 6: R. Belusevic

Measured accelerating gradients of~200 ILC-type cavities (2. pass)

Because of large ohmic losses, accelerating gradients in a CW linac are limited to about 15 MV/m. A pulsed ILC-type linac would therefore be a factor of two shorter – and cheaper – than a CW linac with the same beam energy!

Page 7: R. Belusevic

Main parameters of the SC linac

Page 8: R. Belusevic

Proton beam power

Power [MW] = E [MV] x I [A] x [s] x R [Hz]

Based on the parameters of the SC linac (see the previous page),

Power = 20,000 MV x 16.5 mA x 1.5 ms x 20 Hz = 10 MW

N = P/E - number of protons per secondNp = N/R - number of protons per pulseI = (Np x 1.6 x 10 C)/ -current per pulse

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Page 9: R. Belusevic

T2HK neutrino oscillation experiment

Page 10: R. Belusevic

CP violation in neutrino oscillations

Page 11: R. Belusevic

Neutrino flux dependence on proton energy

Page 12: R. Belusevic

Kaon yield as a function of proton energy

Page 13: R. Belusevic

The beam power required for a given kaon yield would be lowest at energies between 40 and 100 GeV.

Optimum beam power for a given kaon yield

Page 14: R. Belusevic

Concluding remarks

The proposed facility would be a versatile source of high-intensityproton and electron beams with energies of ~20 GeV;the maximum beam power of the linac could exceed 10 MW.

The facility would be built using the existing KEK acceleratorinfrastructure and J-PARC beam lines.

Neutrino and antineutrino beams produced at the proposed 10MW “proton driver” would yield, within 2 years of data taking, more than10,000 electron neutrino “appearance events” in the 0.5Mt fiducialvolume of the Hyper-Kamiokande detector.

At a later stage, a 120-GeV proton synchrotron could be installedinside the Tristan ring in order to produce high-energy neutrino andkaon beams.