JACoW logo

Journals of Accelerator Conferences Website (JACoW)

JACoW is a publisher in Geneva, Switzerland that publishes the proceedings of accelerator conferences held around the world by an international collaboration of editors.


BiBTeX citation export for THBP21: Increasing High Luminosity LHC Dynamic Aperture Using Optics Optimizations

@inproceedings{demaria:hb2023-thbp21,
  author       = {R. De Maria and Y. Angelis and C.N. Droin and S. Kostoglou and F. Plassard and G. Sterbini and R. Tomás García},
% author       = {R. De Maria and Y. Angelis and C.N. Droin and S. Kostoglou and F. Plassard and G. Sterbini and others},
% author       = {R. De Maria and others},
  title        = {{Increasing High Luminosity LHC Dynamic Aperture Using Optics Optimizations}},
% booktitle    = {Proc. HB'23},
  booktitle    = {Proc. 68th Adv. Beam Dyn. Workshop High-Intensity High-Brightness Hadron Beams (HB'23)},
  eventdate    = {2023-10-09/2023-10-13},
  pages        = {507--510},
  paper        = {THBP21},
  language     = {english},
  keywords     = {optics, luminosity, dynamic-aperture, octupole, resonance},
  venue        = {Geneva, Switzerland},
  series       = {ICFA Advanced Beam Dynamics Workshop on High-Intensity and High-Brightness Hadron Beams},
  number       = {68},
  publisher    = {JACoW Publishing, Geneva, Switzerland},
  month        = {04},
  year         = {2024},
  issn         = {2673-5571},
  isbn         = {978-3-95450-253-0},
  doi          = {10.18429/JACoW-HB2023-THBP21},
  url          = {https://jacow.org/hb2023/papers/thbp21.pdf},
  abstract     = {{CERN’s Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is expected to operate with unprecedented beam current and brightness from the beginning of Run 4 in 2029. In the context of the High Luminosity LHC project, the baseline operational scenarios are currently being developed. They require a large octupole current and a large chromaticity throughout the entire cycle, which drives a strong reduction of dynamic aperture, in particular at injection and during the luminosity production phase. Despite being highly constrained, the LHC optics and sextupole and octupole corrector circuits still offer a few degrees of freedom that can be used to reduce resonances and the extent of the tune footprint at constant Landau damping, thereby leading to an improvement of the dynamic aperture. This contribution presents the status of the analysis that will be used to prepare the optics baseline for LHC Run 4.}},
}