New laser technology shows success in particle accelerators

New laser technology shows success in particle accelerators
David Johnson, left, and Todd Johnson work on the recently installed laser notcher in the Fermilab accelerator complex. The laser notcher, the first application of its kind in an in-production particle accelerator, has helped boost particle beam production at the lab. Credit: Reidar Hahn

Lasers—used in medicine, manufacturing and made wildly popular by science fiction—are finding a new use in particle physics.

Fermilab scientists and engineers have developed a tool called a notcher, which takes advantage of the laser's famously precise targeting abilities to do something unexpected: boost the number of that accelerators send to experiments. It's cranked up the lab's particle output considerably—by an incredible 15 percent—giving scientists more opportunities to study nature's tiniest constituents.

While lasers have been used during tests and diagnostics, this is the first application of its kind used in a fully operational accelerator.

"For such a new design, the laser notcher has been remarkably reliable," said Fermilab engineer Bill Pellico, who manages one of the laboratory's major accelerator upgrade programs, called the Proton Improvement Plan. "It's already shown it will provide a considerable increase in the number of particles we can produce."

The notcher increases particle production, counterintuitively, by removing particles from a particle .

Bunching out

The process of removing particles isn't new. Typically, an accelerator generates a in bunches—compact packets that each contain hundreds of millions of particles. Imagine each bunch in a beam as a pearl on a strand. Bunches can be arranged in patterns according to the acceleration needs. Perhaps the needed pattern is a 80-bunch-long string followed by a three-bunch-long gap. Often, the best way to create the gap is to start with a regular, uninterrupted string of bunches and simply remove the unneeded ones.

But it isn't so simple. Traditionally, beam bunches are kicked out by a fast-acting magnet, called a magnetic kicker. It's a messy business: Particles fly off, strike beamline walls and generally create a subatomic obstacle course for the beam. While it's not impossible for the beam to pass through such a scene, it also isn't smooth sailing.

Accelerator experts refer to the messy phenomenon as beam loss, and it's a measurable, predictable predicament. They accommodate it by holding back on the amount of beam they accelerate in the first place, setting a ceiling on the number of particles they pack into the beam.

That ceiling is a limitation for Fermilab's new and upcoming experiments, which require greater and greater numbers of particles than the accelerator complex could handle previously. So the lab's accelerator specialists look for ways to raise the particle beam ceiling and meet the experimental needs for beam.

The most straightforward way to do this is to eliminate the thing that's keeping the ceiling low and stifling particle delivery—beam loss.

Lasers against loss

The new laser notcher works by directing powerful pulses of laser light at particle bunches, taking them out of commission. Both the position and precision of the notcher allow it to create gaps cleanly —delivering a one-two punch in curbing beam loss.

First, the notcher is positioned early in the series of Fermilab's accelerators, when the particle beam hasn't yet achieved the close-to-light speeds it will attain by the time it exits the accelerator chain. (At this early stage, the beam lumbers along at 4 percent the speed of light, a mere 2.7 million miles per hour.) This far upstream, the beam loss resulting from ejecting bunches doesn't have much of an impact.

"We moved the process to a place where, when we lose particles, it really doesn't matter," said David Johnson, Fermilab engineering physicist who innovated the laser notcher's design and led the project.

Second, the laser notcher is, like a scalpel, surgical in its bunch removal. It ejects bunches precisely, individually, bunch by bunch. That enables scientists to create gaps of exactly the right lengths needed by later acceleration stages.

For Fermilab's accelerator chain, the winning formula is for the notcher to create a gap that is 80 nanoseconds (billionths of a second) long every 2,200 nanoseconds. It's the perfect-length gap needed by one of Fermilab's later-stage accelerators, called the Booster.

A graceful exit

The Fermilab Booster feeds beam to the next accelerator stages or directly to experiments.

Prior to the laser notcher's installation, a magnetic kicker would boot specified bunches as they entered the Booster, resulting in messy beam loss.

With the laser notcher now on the scene, the Booster receives a beam that has prefab, well-defined gaps. These 80-nanosecond-long windows of opportunity mean that, as the beam leaves the Booster and heads toward its next stop, it can make a clean, no-fuss, no-loss exit.

With Booster beam loss brought down to low levels, Fermilab accelerator operators can raise the ceiling on the numbers of particles they can pack into the beam. The results so far are promising: The notcher has already allowed beam power to increase by a whopping 15 percent.

Thanks to this innovation and other upgrade improvements, the Booster accelerator is now operating at its highest efficiency ever and at record-setting beam power.

"Although lasers have been used in proton accelerators in the past for diagnostics and tests, this is the first-of-its-kind application of lasers in an operational proton synchrotron, and it establishes a technological framework for using laser systems in a variety of other bunch-by-bunch applications, which would further advance the field of high-power proton accelerators," said Sergei Nagaitsev, head of the Fermilab Office of Accelerator Science Programs.

Plentiful protons and other particles

The laser notcher, installed in January, is a key part of a larger program, the Proton Improvement Plan (PIP), to upgrade the lab's chain of particle accelerators to produce powerful proton beams.

As the name of the program implies, it starts with protons.

Fermilab sends protons barreling through the lab's accelerator complex, and they're routed to various experiments. Along the way, some of them are transformed into other particles needed by experiments, for example into neutrinos—tiny, omnipresent particles that could hold the key to filling in gaps in our understanding the universe's evolution. Fermilab experiments need boatloads of these particles to carry out its scientific program. Some of the protons are transformed into muons, which can provide scientists with hints about the nature of the vacuum.

With more protons coming down the pipe, thanks to PIP and the laser notcher, the accelerator can generate more neutrinos, muons and other particles, feeding Fermilab's muon experiments, Muon g-2 and Mu2e, and its neutrino experiments, including its largest operating neutrino experiment, NOvA, and its flagship, the Deep Underground Neutrino Experiment and Long-Baseline Neutrino Facility.

"Considering all the upgrades and improvements to Fermilab accelerators as a beautiful cake with frosting, the increase in particle production we managed to achieve with the laser notcher is like the cherry on top of the cake," Nagaitsev said.

"It's a seemingly small change with a significant impact," Johnson said.

As the Fermilab team moves forward, they'll continue to put the notcher through its paces, investigating paths for improvement.

With this innovation, Fermilab adds another notch in the belt of what lasers can do.

Citation: New laser technology shows success in particle accelerators (2018, June 21) retrieved 29 March 2024 from https://phys.org/news/2018-06-laser-technology-success-particle.html
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