Title: Muon Collider/Higgs Factory A. Caldwell Columbia University
1Muon Collider/Higgs FactoryA. CaldwellColumbia
University
- Motivation
- Difficulties
- Focus on Cooling (frictional cooling)
2Why a Muon Collider ?
- No synchrotron radiation problem (cf electron)
- Muons are point particles (cf
proton) - We therefore dream of building a high energy
collider. Parameter - sets available up to 100 TeV100 TeV.
- At lower energies, Higgs factory (40000 higher
production cross - section than electron collider). Very fine
energy scans possible since limited radiation
from muons. - Neutrinos from target, muon decay allow wide
range of physics - Low energy muons allow many important condensed
matter, atomic physics experiments
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4Dimensions of Some Colliders under Discussion
5Muon Collider as Higgs Factory
Small beam energy spread allows a precision
measurement of the Higgs mass (few hundred
KeV) The width can also be measured to about 1
MeV
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7HIGH ENERGY MUON COLLIDER PARAMETERS
8Phase Space Reduction
Simplified emittance estimate At end of drift,
rms x,y,z approx 0.05,0.05,10 m
Px,Py,Pz approx 50,50,100
MeV/c Normalized 6D emittance is product divided
by (m?c)3
?drift6D,N ?1.7 10-4 (?m)3 Emittance needed for
Muon Collider ?collider6D,N ? 1.7
10-10(?m)3 This reduction of 6 orders of
magnitude must be done with reasonable efficiency
(luminosity calculation assumes typically few
1012 muons per bunch, 1-4 bunches).
9Some Difficulties
- Muons decay, so are not readily available need
multi MW source. Large starting cost. - Muons decay, so time available for cooling,
bunching, acceleration is very limited. Need to
develop new techniques, technologies. - Large experimental backgrounds from muon decays
(for a collider). Not the usual clean electron
collider environment. - High energy colliders with high muon flux will
face critical limitation from neutrino radiation.
10Muon Cooling
Muon Cooling is the signature challenge of a Muon
Collider
- Cooler beams would allow fewer muons for a given
luminosity, - Thereby
- Reducing the experimental background
- Reducing the radiation from muon decays
- Allowing for smaller apertures in machine
elements, and so driving the cost down
11Cooling Ideas
The standard approach (Skrinsky, Neuffer, Palmer,
) considered to date is ionization cooling,
where muons are maintained at ca. 200 MeV while
passed successively through an energy loss medium
followed by an acceleration stage. Transverse
cooling of order x20 seems feasible (see
feasibility studies 1-2). Longitudinal cooling
is more difficult, and remains an unsolved
problem. There are significant developments in
achieving 6D phase space via ionization cooling
(see R. Palmer talk). Here, I focus on an
alternative called frictional cooling. First
studied by Kottmann et al., PSI. See talk by R.
Galea.
12Frictional Cooling
- Bring muons to a kinetic energy (T) where dE/dx
increases with T - Constant E-field applied to muons resulting in
equilibrium energy - Big issue how to maintain efficiency
-
13Problems/Comments
- large dE/dx _at_ low kinetic energy
- low average density
- Apply to get below the dE/dx peak
- m has the problem of Muonium formation
- s(Mm) dominates over e-stripping s in all gases
except He - m- has the problem of Atomic capture
- s small below electron binding energy, but not
known - Slow muons dont go far before decaying
14Frictional Cooling particle trajectory
- In 1tm dm10cmsqrtT(eV)
- keep d small at low T
- reaccelerate quickly
Using continuous energy loss
15Frictional Cooling stop the m
- High energy ms travel a long distance to stop
- High energy ms take a long time to stop
Start with low initial muon momenta
16Cooling scheme
Phase rotation is E(t) field to bring as many ms
to 0 Kinetic energy as possible (performed in
cooling ring.
17Detailed Simulation
- Full MARS target simulation, optimized for low
energy muon yield 2 GeV protons on Cu with
proton beam transverse to solenoids (capture low
energy pion cloud). - Optimized drift length (28m).
- Simple phase rotation parameters, optimized to
bring muons to Pzlt50 MeV/c. Phase rotation is
combined with cooling channel. - He gas is used for ?, H2 for ?-. There is a
nearly uniform 5T Bz field everywhere, and Ex 5
MeV/m in gas cell region. - Electronic energy loss treated as continuous,
individual nuclear scattering taken into account
since these yield large angles.
18Detailed Simulation - continued
- Barkas effect (reduced energy loss for ?-
relative to ?) included - ?- capture cross section included
- Windows for gas cells NOT included so far
- Time window for accepting muons into cooling
channel consistent with rotation time - Muons(pions) are tracked from the target through
to the edge of the gas cell.
19Target System
- cool m m- at the same time
- calculated new symmetric magnet with gap for
target
200.4m
28m
ps in red ms in green
View into beam
21Target Drift Optimize yield
- Maximize drift length for m yield
- Some ps lost in Magnet aperture
22Cooling Cell Phase Rotationsimplified version
Phase Rotation
Drift region
Cooling cell
Transverse view of cooling cell region. Cooling
cell is 20 cm radius cylinder embedded in 11m
solenoid with Bz5T. Ex5 MV/v in ylt0.7 m, and
Ez100 kV/m for 0.3ltylt0.5 m.
23Phase Rotation
- First attempt simple form
- Vary t1,t2 Emax for maximum low energy yield
24Scattering Cross Section
- Individual nuclear scatters are simulated
crucial in determining final phase space,
survival probability. - Incorporate scattering cross sections into the
cooling program - Born Approx. for Tgt2KeV
- Classical Scattering Tlt2KeV
- Include m- capture cross section using
calculations of Cohen (Phys. Rev. A. Vol 62
022512-1)
25Scattering Cross Sections
- Scan impact parameter and calculate q(b), ds/dq
from which one can get lmean free path - Use screened Coulomb Potential (Everhart et. al.
Phys. Rev. 99 (1955) 1287) - Simulate all scatters qgt0.05 rad
26Barkas Effect
- Difference in m m- energy loss rates at dE/dx
peak - Due to extra processes charge exchange
- Barkas Effect parameterized data from Agnello et.
al. (Phys. Rev. Lett. 74 (1995) 371) - Only used for the electronic part of dE/dx
27Energy Fluctuations around Equilibrium
28Motion in Transverse Plane
Lorentz angle
29Longitudinal profile for m
- At cooling cell boundary
- Flat in Z
- rms ?ct ? 1m
30Plong vs Ptrans for m
31Rf vs z for m
32Yields Emittance
Look at muons coming out of 11m cooling cell
region after initial reacceleration. Yield
approx 0.002 ? per 2GeV proton after cooling
cell. Need to improve yield by factor 3 or
more. Emittance rms x 0.015 m
y 0.036 m z 30 m (
actually ?ct) Px 0.18 MeV Py 0.18
MeV Pz 4.0 MeV ?6D,N 5.7 10-11 (?m)3
33Problems/Things to investigate
- Extraction of ms through window in gas cell
- Must be very thin to pass low energy ms
- Must be gas tight and sustain pressures
O(0.1-1)atm - Can we applied high electric fields in small gas
cell without breakdown? - Reacceleration bunch compression for injection
into storage ring - The m- capture cross section depends very
sensitively on kinetic energy falls off sharply
for kinetic energies greater than e- binding
energy. NO DATA simulations use theoretical
calculation - Critical path items - intend to make measurement
on all these.
34Conclusions
- Muon Collider complex would be a boon for physics
- We need to solve the muon cooling problem
- Different schemes should be investigated