On 9/18/15 9/18/15 12:38 PM,
[email protected] wrote:
On Friday, May 20, 2011 at 5:34:49 AM UTC+1, Lester Welch wrote:
I follow the LHC via their dashboard - http://lhcdashboard.web.cern.ch/lhcdashboard/
and understand the individual graphs except for the "tune" graphs.
The tune of a circular accelerator (like the LHC) is how many betatron oscillations occur during one turn of the beam around the ring. These oscillations are transverse, and occur because the ring uses strong focusing (i.e. uses quadrupole magnets to repeatedly focus the beam as it goes around the
ring). Like most accelerators, the LHC keeps vertical and horizontal betatron oscillations separate (uncoupled), so each beam has two tunes.
There are resonances in the accelerator lattice that would cause the beam to be lost if the tune ever hit them. Every integer is such a resonance [#]. There are
other resonances that make up the "dynamic aperture" shown in the plots on that webpage. They have subtracted the integer just below the tune. The two axes are horizontal and vertical tune, and the dot is where the beam is right now (one plot for each beam in the LHC). It looks like there is also some history plotted.
[#] Consider a place in the ring where a small disturbance occurs
that (for example) kicks the beam up a little bit; when it returns
on the next turn, with an integral number of betatron oscillations
it will be in phase with the previous turn, so the same disturbance
will again kick the beam up a little bit; over many turns that will
become a large bit and the beam will hit some magnet aperture and
be lost (and probably melt the magnet). With a fractional tune,
successive turns arrive at this place with different positions and
angles, and the small disturbance does not build up (because the
focusing keeps the beam in the apertures).
Tom Roberts
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