Jump to content

High Luminosity Large Hadron Collider

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected from Super Large Hadron Collider)

The High Luminosity Large Hadron Collider (HL-LHC; formerly referred to as HiLumi LHC, Super LHC, and SLHC) is an upgrade to the Large Hadron Collider, operated by the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN), located at the French-Swiss border near Geneva. From 2011 to 2020, the project was led by Lucio Rossi. In 2020, the lead role was taken up by Oliver Brüning.[1][2][3]

The upgrade started as a design study in 2010, for which a European Framework Program 7 grant was allocated in 2011,[4][5] with goal of boosting the accelerator's potential for new discoveries in physics. The design study was approved by the CERN Council in 2016 and HL-LHC became a full-fledged CERN project.[6][7] The upgrade work is currently in progress and physics experiments are expected to start taking data at the earliest in 2028.[8][9]

The HL-LHC project will deliver proton-proton collisions at 14 TeV with an integrated luminosity of 3 ab−1 for both ATLAS and CMS experiments, 50 fb−1 for LHCb, and 5 fb−1 for ALICE. In the heavy-ion sector, the integrated luminosities of 13 nb−1 and 50 nb−1 will be delivered for lead-lead and proton-lead collisions, respectively.[10] The inverse femtobarn (fb−1) unit measures the time-integrated luminosity in terms of the number of collisions per femtobarn of the target's cross-section. The increase in the integrated luminosity for the aforementioned major LHC experiments will provide a better chance to see rare processes and improving statistically marginal measurements.[11][12]

Introduction

[edit]
Members of the 5th High Luminosity LHC Collaboration Board and Participants of the 5th Joint HiLumi LHC-LARP Annual Meeting gathered at CERN in October 2015.

Many different paths exist for upgrading colliders. A collection of different designs of the high luminosity interaction regions is being maintained by the European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN).[13] A workshop was held in 2006 to establish the most promising options.[14][15]

Increasing LHC luminosity involves reduction of the beam size at the collision point, and either the reduction of bunch length and spacing, or significant increase in bunch length and population. The maximum instantaneous luminosity increase of the existing nominal LHC luminosity (1⋅1034 cm−2⋅s−1) is about a factor of 4 higher than the LHC's performance at its peak luminosity of 2⋅1034 cm−2⋅s−1, unfortunately far below the LHC upgrade project's initial ambition of a factor of 10. However, at the LUMI'06 workshop,[14] several suggestions were proposed that would boost the LHC peak luminosity by a factor of 10 beyond nominal towards 1⋅1035 cm−2⋅s−1.

The peak luminosity at LHC was limited due to the cooling capacity of its triplet magnets and secondly due to the detector limits. The resultant higher event rate posed challenges for the particle detectors located in the collision areas.[16] Through the ongoing upgrades, HL-LHC's peak luminosity is expected to be 5⋅1034 cm−2⋅s−1 and would most likely be pushed to 7.5⋅1034 cm−2⋅s−1.[9]

Physics goals

[edit]

The HL-LHC upgrade being applicable to almost all major LHC experiments has a wide range of physics goals. Increasing the number of collisions to 140—each time the proton particle beams meet at the center of the ATLAS and CMS detectors—from the current number of 30, will open a number of new avenues for observing rare processes and particles. The boost in the integrated luminosity, or evidently the larger collision event datasets that would be accumulated through HL-LHC in case of all the LHC experiments, is the most significant aspect towards achieving the goals described below. The motivation for the construction of large underground infrastructure at HL-LHC therefore, is to have a high efficiency and highly reliable machine which can deliver the required integrated luminosity.

Major goals of HL-LHC thus belong to the following five categories; improved Standard Model measurements, searches for beyond the Standard Model (BSM) physics, flavor physics of heavy quarks and leptons, studies of the properties of the Higgs boson, and the studies of QCD matter at high density and temperature.[17][10]

In September 2019, CERN opened its doors to the public for two special days at the heart of one of the world's largest particle-physics laboratories. At this occasion CERN specialists presented the High Luminosity LHC project to members of the general public.

Measurements of the Higgs boson and understanding its connection to the electroweak symmetry breaking remains the primary goal. In the domain of flavour physics; LHCb, ATLAS and CMS together will test the unitarity of the Cabibbo–Kobayashi–Maskawa matrix, and ATLAS and CMS will measure the properties of the top quark, the fermion with the largest known mass and largest Yukawa coupling. HL-LHC will also add to the knowledge of parton distribution functions (PDFs) by measuring several Standard Model processes with the jets, top quarks, photons and electroweak gauge bosons in their final state. The jet and photon production in the heavy ion collisions forms the basis of QCD perturbation theory probes, and HL-LHC will measure this at very high energy scales. Owing to these high energy collisions, there is also a possibility for HL-LHC to detect BSM phenomena such as baryogenesis, dark matter, answers to the flavour problem, neutrino masses and insights into the strong CP problem.[17][10][18][19]

The upgrades to the heavy-ion injectors are also in progress and would bring up even more opportunities to observe very rare phenomena and to search for BSM physics.

Project timeline

[edit]
Collimator installation in the LHC ring at Point 1, 2018

The HL-LHC project was initiated in 2010, and the following has been the timeline till 2020, followed by the tentative future stages.[7]

2010: HL-LHC was established at CERN as a design study.

2011: The FP7 HL-LHC design study was approved and started.[4]

2014: The first preliminary report on the design study was published.[20]

2015: Budget and schedule along with technical design report was made available.[21]

2016: CERN Council approved the HL-LHC project with its initial budget and schedule.[7] Followed by which the hardware parts consisting of components and models were validated.

Between 2018 and 2020: The prototypes were tested and final Technical Design report was published.[7] The underground excavation work was also carried out. Although the civil engineering work and prototyping process would continue till the end of 2021.

High Luminosity LHC – clusterD test station vertical cryostat installation seen in CERN's magnet test facility (SM18).

Between 2019 and 2024: The construction and testing of hardware parts is planned.

2021-2023: All surface bindings would be delivered.

2022-2024: The inner triplet string will be installed followed by its operation test.

2025-2027: New magnets, crab-cavities, cryo-plants, collimators, superconducting links, ancillary equipment, and absorbers are planned to be installed.[7]

If all above planned activities are completed according to the timeline, HL-LHC would be able to start its physics operation in 2028.[9]

Accelerator upgrades

[edit]

The following upgrades to machine systems forms the core of the new HL-LHC.

Installation of the crab cavity test facility for High Luminosity LHC in the Super Proton Synchrotron tunnel

Quadrupole magnets: The strong magnets along with the huge rings are a necessary aspect of LHC's functionality. HL-LHC will have quadrupole magnets with the strength of 12 tesla as opposed to 8 tesla in LHC. Such superconducting magnets made up of inter-metallic niobium-tin (Nb3Sn), compound would be installed around the CMS and ATLAS detector. A ten-year-long joint project between CERN, Brookhaven National Laboratory, Fermilab, and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory known as United States Department of Energy LHC Accelerator Research Program (US–LARP) successfully built and tested such quadrupole magnets.[22][23][24][25] 20 inner triplet quadrupoles are in the production phase at CERN and in the US.[26]

Dipole magnets: For inserting the new collimators, two of the LHC's dipole magnets will have to be replaced with smaller ones. They would be stronger (11 tesla) than LHC's dipole magnets (8.3 tesla) and be more powerful in bending the beam trajectories. As of now six 11 T dipoles are in the production phase.[26] These magnets would probably be installed only after HL-LHC is fully implemented, although the final decision is yet to come.

Installation of two High Luminosity LHC connection cryostats, November 2019.

Crab cavities: The function of the crab cavities is to tilt and project the beams in the required direction. This tilting maximizes the overlap between the colliding bunches, leading to an increase in the achievable instantaneous luminosity. ATLAS and CMS together will have 16 crab cavities; which will give transverse momentum to the beams to increase the collision probability.[27][28][29]

Beam optics: As per the current HL-LHC design the beam intensity will decrease due to the burn-off of the circulating proton beams inside the collider. Maintaining the intensity at a constant level throughout the lifespan of beam is thus a major challenge. Nevertheless, plan is to at least have a system that would allow beam focusing or the concentration of the beams before the collision to remain constant.[6][27]

Cryogenics: Implementation of HL-LHC would require larger cryogenic plants, plus larger 1.8 Kelvin refrigerators, along with sub-cooling heat exchangers. New cooling circuits are also to be developed. The majority of these upgrades are for interaction points, P1, P4, P5, and P7. While P1, P4, and P5 will receive new cryogenic plants, P7 will have new cryogenic circuits.[27][29]

Machine protection and collimators: The collimators are responsible for absorbing any extra particles that deviate from the original beam trajectory and can potentially damage the machines. The higher luminosities are bound to generate such highly energetic particles. HL-LHC design thus contains ways to prevent damages by replacing 60 out of 118 collimators and adding about 20 new ones. The upgraded collimators will also have lower electromagnetic interference with beams.[27][29]

Superconducting power lines: To meet the HL-LHC accelerator requirements, superconducting power transmission lines made of magnesium diboride (MgB2) will be used to transmit the current of about 100,000 amperes.[27][29]

Injector upgrades

[edit]
New long-coils for the Nb3Sn quadrupole magnets for High Luminosity LHC, June 2017

As part of the HL-LHC, significant changes will be made to the proton injector. The beams that come to LHC are pre-accelerated by following 4 accelerators.

  1. Linear Accelerator (Linac4)
  2. Proton Synchrotron Booster (PSB)
  3. Proton Synchrotron (PS)
  4. Super Proton Synchrotron (SPS)

All four of these accelerators, together known as the Injectors will be upgraded through the LHC Injector Upgrade (LIU) project during the Long Shutdown 2 (LS2).[30][31] The LIU is responsible for delivering beams of very high brightness to HL-LHC. The proton injectors will be upgraded to produce proton beams with double the original luminosity and 2.4 times the brightness.

The replacement of Linear Accelerator 2 (Linac2 - which delivered the proton beams) with Linear Accelerator 4 (Linac4) was achieved in 2020.[32] The Linac4 is a 160 MeV linear accelerator and delivers H beams with twice the beam brightness compared to its older counterparts.[9][29][30] LIU also upgraded the cesiated radiofrequency-plasma H ion source that feeds Linac4. The challenge here was to have a high current, low emittance source beam.[33]

Heavy-ion injector upgrades through the upgrades to the Low Energy Ion Ring (LEIR) and Linac3 are also being designed.[31][34] The source extraction system of Linac3 was re-designed, and by the end of LS2 it successfully increased the extracted source beam intensity by 20%.[35]

Upgrade program of the experiments

[edit]

To handle the increased luminosity, number of simultaneous particle interactions, massive amount of data, and radiation of the HL-LHC environment, the detectors will be upgraded.

ALICE: The upgrade will increase the lifetime of the Tile Calorimeter (TileCal), which is a hadronic calorimeter sensitive to charged particles, by 20 years. The beam pipe at ALICE will also be replaced by one with a smaller diameter. The tracking system and the time projection chambers will be upgraded along with a new faster interaction trigger detector.[29][10]

Concrete coating of underground area close to LHC Point 1 (P1 - ATLAS) to prepare for High Luminosity LHC, November 2019

ATLAS: The liquid argon calorimeter at ATLAS will be upgraded to identify the electrons and photons more effectively. The main readout electronics of the calorimeter will be completely replaced to let the detector identify rare particle interactions. These changes are planned for Long Shutdown 3 (LS3) of LHC.[36][29][10]

CMS: CMS will carry out numerous upgrades to its inner tracking system, the trigger system, the calorimeter, and the muon detection systems during Long Shutdown 2 (LS2) and LS3. These changes are based on the expected pile-up densities and increase in radiation due to the higher luminosity. Similar changes are also planned for the ATLAS experiment.[29][10]

FASER-2: LHC's FASER experiment will undergo several upgrades and be turned into FASER-2 to fully utilize HL-LHC's capabilities. It will have a decay volume of 10 m3, which is 3 orders of magnitude higher than FASER and will increase the sensitivity range by 4 orders of magnitude. It will probe into the regime of dark photons, dark Higgs bosons, heavy neutral leptons, and weak gauge boson coupling. It will also have the subdetector FASERnu for neutrino and antineutrino observations.[37]

LHCb: LHCb will receive reduced aperture central vacuum chambers during LS2. The Vertex Locator (VELO) detector which measures the primary and displaced vertices of short-lived particles will be enhanced to meet the increased radiation and particle interaction rates.[29][10]

MoEDAL: For LHCs Run-3 MoEDAL will implement a new sub-detector called MoEDAL's Apparatus for the detection of Penetrating Particles (MAPP). For HL-LHC MAPP-1 would be upgraded to MAPP-2.[38]

Scattering and Neutrino Detector (SND): SND and will begin its first operation only in 2022, during the LHC Run-3. The upgrade plan for SND at HL-LHC is to continue developing the detector with the aim of improving the statistics of collision events, and expand its pseudorapidity range for studies of heavy-quark production and neutrino interactions.[39]

TOTEM: The TOTEM-CMS collaboration which has been operating the Proton Precision Spectrometer (PPS) since 2016, will measure the central-exclusive production events at the HL-LHC with an upgraded version of the near-beam PPS.[40]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ "Oliver Brüning becomes the new HL-LHC project leader". CERN. Retrieved 22 April 2021.
  2. ^ "Faces and places: Lucio Rossi is named 2013 IEEE fellow". CERN Courier. 53 (1): 37. January 2013.
  3. ^ Rossi, Lucio (7 September 2018). "Lessons from the accelerator frontier". CERN Courier. Vol. 58, no. 7. pp. 5–6. Retrieved 24 February 2020.
  4. ^ a b "FP7 High Luminosity Large Hadron Collider Design Study: Grant agreement ID: 284404". CORDIS: EU research results. Retrieved 2 July 2021.
  5. ^ "Status of the European Strategy for Particle Physics - CERN Document Server". cds.cern.ch. Retrieved 15 July 2021.
  6. ^ a b The HiLumi LHC Collaboration, ed. (2014). HL-LHC Preliminary Design Report: Deliverable: D1.5. HiLumiLHC.
  7. ^ a b c d e Brüning, O.; Rossi, L. (17 December 2020). "Chapter 1: High-Luminosity Large Hadron Collider". CERN Yellow Reports: Monographs. 2020–010: 1–16. doi:10.23731/CYRM-2020-0010.1. ISSN 2519-8076.
  8. ^ "A new schedule for the LHC and its successor". 13 December 2019.
  9. ^ a b c d Béjar Alonso, I.; Brüning, O.; Fessia, P.; Lamont, M.; Rossi, L.; Tavian, L.; Zerlauth, M. (17 December 2020). "High-Luminosity Large Hadron Collider (HL-LHC): Technical design report". CERN Yellow Reports: Monographs. CERN-2020-010: 378. doi:10.23731/CYRM-2020-0010.
  10. ^ a b c d e f g Galan, F. Sanchez; Burkhardt, H.; Cerrutti, F.; Gaddi, A.; Grenard, J. L.; Krzempek, L.; Santos, M. Lino Diogo dos; Espinos, J. Perez; Raymond, M.; Diaz, P. Santos (17 December 2020). "Chapter 8: Collider-experiment interface". CERN Yellow Reports: Monographs. 2020–010: 169–188. doi:10.23731/CYRM-2020-0010.169. ISSN 2519-8076.
  11. ^ Arduini, G.; Bruce, R.; Maria, R. De; Giovannozzi, M.; Iadarola, G.; Jowett, J.; Métral, E.; Papaphilippou, Y.; Garcia, R. Tomás (17 December 2020). "Chapter 2: Machine layout and performance". CERN Yellow Reports: Monographs. 2020–010: 17–46. doi:10.23731/CYRM-2020-0010.17. ISSN 2519-8076.
  12. ^ Brüning, Oliver; Rossi, Lucio (April 2019). "The High-Luminosity Large Hadron Collider". Nature Reviews Physics. 1 (4): 241–243. Bibcode:2019NatRP...1..241B. doi:10.1038/s42254-019-0050-6. ISSN 2522-5820. S2CID 126892524.
  13. ^ "SuperLHC IR optics collection". care-hhh.web.cern.ch. Retrieved 30 June 2021.
  14. ^ a b "CARE-HHH-APD LHC-LUMI-06 Workshop, Valencia, 16-20 October 2006". care-hhh.web.cern.ch. Retrieved 30 June 2021.
  15. ^ Bordry, F.; Zimmermann, F. (2015). Chamonix 2014 Conclusions: Main Points and Actions. Geneva: CERN. doi:10.5170/cern-2015-002.1.
  16. ^ ATLAS upgrade web page
  17. ^ a b CERN (3 December 2019). "CERN Yellow Reports: Monographs, Vol 7 (2019): Physics of the HL-LHC, and Perspectives at the HE-LHC": 70.24 MB. doi:10.23731/CYRM-2019-007. {{cite journal}}: Cite journal requires |journal= (help)
  18. ^ "Report reveals full reach of LHC programme". CERN. Retrieved 14 June 2021.
  19. ^ Schmidt, Burkhard (2016). "The High-Luminosity upgrade of the LHC: Physics and Technology Challenges for the Accelerator and the Experiments". Journal of Physics: Conference Series. 706 (2): 022002. Bibcode:2016JPhCS.706b2002S. doi:10.1088/1742-6596/706/2/022002. S2CID 123769746.
  20. ^ The HiLumi LHC Collaboration, ed. (2014). HL-LHC Preliminary Design Report: Deliverable: D1.5. HiLumiLHC.
  21. ^ Apollinari, G; Béjar Alonso I; Brüning O; Lamont M; Rossi L (2015). "High-Luminosity Large Hadron Collider (HL-LHC) Preliminary Design Report". CERN Reports. 2015–005. doi:10.5170/CERN-2015-005.
  22. ^ "HL-LHC magnets enter production in the US". CERN Courier. 13 January 2021. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
  23. ^ Bermudez, Susana Izquierdo; Ambrosio, Giorgio; Apollinari, Giorgio; Bajko, Marta; Bordini, Bernardo; Bourcey, Nicolas; Ramos, Delio Duarte; Ferracin, Paolo; Fiscarelli, Lucio; Feher, Sandor; Fleiter, Jerome (August 2021). "Progress in the Development of the Nb 3 Sn MQXFB Quadrupole for the HiLumi Upgrade of the LHC". IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity. 31 (5): 1–7. Bibcode:2021ITAS...3161352B. doi:10.1109/TASC.2021.3061352. ISSN 1051-8223. S2CID 232372971.
  24. ^ "Taming the superconductors of tomorrow". CERN Courier. 11 May 2020. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
  25. ^ Schoerling, Daniel; Zlobin, Alexander V., eds. (2019). "Nb3Sn Accelerator Magnets". Particle Acceleration and Detection. doi:10.1007/978-3-030-16118-7. ISBN 978-3-030-16117-0. ISSN 1611-1052. S2CID 239254870.
  26. ^ a b Todesco, E; Bajas, H; Bajko, M; Ballarino, A; Bermudez, S Izquierdo; Bordini, B; Bottura, L; De Rijk, G; Devred, A; Duarte Ramos, D; Duda, M (1 May 2021). "The High Luminosity LHC interaction region magnets towards series production". Superconductor Science and Technology. 34 (5): 053001. Bibcode:2021SuScT..34e3001T. doi:10.1088/1361-6668/abdba4. hdl:2434/841576. ISSN 0953-2048. S2CID 234160825.
  27. ^ a b c d e "New technologies for the High-Luminosity LHC". CERN. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
  28. ^ "Crab kicks for brighter collisions". CERN Courier. 19 April 2018. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
  29. ^ a b c d e f g h i Brüning, Oliver; Rossi, Lucio (12 February 2015). "The High Luminosity Large Hadron Collider". Advanced Series on Directions in High Energy Physics. 24. doi:10.1142/9581. hdl:20.500.12657/90084. ISBN 978-981-4675-46-8. ISSN 1793-1339.
  30. ^ a b Damerau, H.; Funken, A.; Garoby, R.; Gilardoni, S.; Goddard, B.; Hanke, K.; Lombardi, A.; Manglunki, D.; Meddahi, M.; Mikulec, B.; Rumolo, G.; Shaposhnikova, E.; Vretenar, M.; Coupard, J. (2014). Damerau, Heiko; et al. (eds.). LHC Injectors Upgrade, Technical Design Report. Vol. v.1 : Protons. Geneva: CERN. doi:10.17181/CERN.7NHR.6HGC.
  31. ^ a b Coupard, Julie; Damerau, Heiko; Funken, Anne; Garoby, Roland; Gilardoni, Simone; Goddard, Brennan; Hanke, Klaus; Manglunki, Django; Meddahi, Malika; Rumolo, Giovanni; Scrivens, Richard; Chapochnikova, Elena (2016). Coupard, Julie; et al. (eds.). LHC Injectors Upgrade, Technical Design Report. Vol. v.2 : Ions. Geneva: CERN. doi:10.17181/CERN.L6VM.UOMS.
  32. ^ "Linear accelerator 2". CERN. Retrieved 15 July 2021.
  33. ^ Fink, D.A.; Kalvas, T.; Lettry, J.; Midttun, Ø.; Noll, D. (October 2018). "H − extraction systems for CERN's Linac4 H − ion source". Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A: Accelerators, Spectrometers, Detectors and Associated Equipment. 904: 179–187. Bibcode:2018NIMPA.904..179F. doi:10.1016/j.nima.2018.07.046. S2CID 125196484.
  34. ^ Shaposhnikova, Elena; Coupard, Julie; Damerau, Heiko; Funken, Anne; Gilardoni, Simone; Goddard, Brennan; Hanke, Klaus; Kobzeva, Lelyzaveta; Lombardi, Alessandra; Manglunki, Django; Mataguez, Simon (2016). "LHC Injectors Upgrade (LIU) Project at CERN". Proceedings of the 7th Int. Particle Accelerator Conf. IPAC2016. Petit-Jean-Genaz Christine (Ed.), Kim, Dong Eon (Ed.), Kim, Kyung Sook (Ed.), Ko, In Soo (Ed.), Schaa, Volker RW (Ed.): 4 pages, 0.522 MB. doi:10.18429/JACOW-IPAC2016-MOPOY059.
  35. ^ Bellodi, G. (12 December 2017). "SOURCE AND LINAC3 STUDIES". CERN Proceedings. 2: 113. doi:10.23727/CERN-PROCEEDINGS-2017-002.113.
  36. ^ "New schedule for CERN's accelerators and experiments". CERN. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
  37. ^ "Snowmass21 documents". www.snowmass21.org. Retrieved 13 June 2021.
  38. ^ Staelens, Michael (13 October 2019). "Recent Results and Future Plans of the MoEDAL Experiment". arXiv:1910.05772 [hep-ex].
  39. ^ "SND@LHC - Scattering and Neutrino Detector at the LHC - CERN Document Server". cds.cern.ch. Retrieved 2 July 2021.
  40. ^ CMS Collaboration (3 March 2021). "The CMS Precision Proton Spectrometer at the HL-LHC -- Expression of Interest". arXiv:2103.02752 [physics.ins-det].
[edit]