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Racing
Ahead at the Speed of Light
Wednesday, February 6, 2008
Accelerator physicists
correct beam scattering, increase collision rates of speeding
particles
RHICs
2.4 mile ring has six intersection points where its two
rings of accelerating magnets cross, allowing the particle
beams to collide. The collisions produce the fleeting
signals that, when captured by one of RHICs experimental
detectors, provide physicists with information about the
most fundamental workings of nature.
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Credit:
Brookhaven National Laboratory
Imagine trying to catch up
to something moving close to the speed of light - the fastest
anything can move - and sending ahead information in time to make
mid-path flight corrections. Impossible? Not quite. Physicists at
the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC), a particle
accelerator at the U.S. Department of Energy's Brookhaven
National Laboratory, have achieved this tricky task - and the
results may save the Lab money and time in their quest to
understand the inner workings of the early universe.
The physicists have developed a
way to measure subtle fluctuations in RHIC's particle beams as
they speed around their 2.4-mile-circumference high-tech
racetrack - and send that information ahead to specialized
devices that smooth the fluctuations when the beam arrives.
"These corrections help to
keep the beams focused and colliding, recreating thousands of
times a second the conditions that existed just after the Big
Bang," said Steven Vigdor, Brookhaven Lab's Associate
Laboratory Director for Nuclear and Particle Physics, who manages
the RHIC program.
Already, RHIC scientists have
learned that mere microseconds after the Big Bang, the universe
was more interesting than imagined - a nearly "perfect"
liquid with virtually no viscosity and strong interactions among
its constituents. With the ability to race ahead of RHIC's beams
and keep them focused, the scientists will be able to create many
more "mini-Bangs" for study. The increase in data will
help them investigate and measure the detailed properties of this
"perfect" liquid, and test certain predictions
stimulated by an unanticipated link between RHIC findings and
"string theory," an appealing approach to incorporate
gravity into a unified theory that describes all of Nature's
forces.
The beam-correcting technique,
called stochastic cooling, has been implemented at accelerators
where the beams are made of a continuous stream of particles -
but never before at a facility where the particles travel in
discrete bunches, as is necessary for the beam-on-beam collisions
that take place at RHIC. "Its successful demonstration at
RHIC provides an alternative path to the goal of increased
collision rates, which would be much more costly and take longer
to achieve via other proposed means," Vigdor said.
How it works
Schematic
layout of "pickups" (for measuring beam
fluctuations) and "kickers" (for applying
electrical fields to correct the fluctuations) -- and the
fiber optic and microwave links between the two -- when
longitudinal and transverse stochastic cooling are
implemented for both beams at RHIC.
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Credit:
Brookhaven
National Laboratory
RHIC circulates two beams
of ions - electrically charged particles - moving in opposite
directions in two separate rings at 99.995 percent the speed of
light. Within each beam, the ions travel in discrete groups, or
"bunches," each containing more than a billion ions.
In the highest-energy
experiments, the ions are the nuclei of gold atoms, composed of
protons and neutrons that slam together where the two beams cross
to produce a tiny speck of extremely hot, dense matter that
mimics the conditions of the early universe.
But like all charged particle
beams, RHIC's ions tend to spread out (heat up) as they
circulate. As the ions spread, the number of protons and neutrons
colliding - and the amount of useful data - declines.
So RHIC physicists are taking
advantage of RHIC's circular shape and the ability to send
signals as fast as the near-light-speed beam to cool the ions
down - that is, keep them tightly bunched.
The technique includes the term
stochastic (derived from statistics, meaning random) because it
relies on measuring the random fluctuations in the beam shape and
size. The measurements are made at one point on the accelerator
by devices that generate signals proportional to how far the
particles are straying from their ideal positions. These devices
then send the signals via fiberoptic or microwave links to a
position ahead of the speeding beam, where electric fields are
generated to "kick" the charged particles back toward
their ideal positions. The result: more tightly squeezed, cooler
ion bunches.
The signals stay ahead of the
beam by taking one of two shortcuts - either traveling from one
point to another across the circular accelerator, or by
backtracking along the circle to meet the speeding beam about
halfway around on its next pass.
So far the RHIC physicists have
tested stochastic cooling in the longitudinal direction - along
the direction of the beam - in one of RHIC's two rings.
Longitudinal cooling compensates for the ion bunches' tendency to
lengthen as they circulate. This improvement has already
increased RHIC's heavy-ion collision rate by 20 percent. Next,
the physicists will test the same cooling system in RHIC's other
ring.
With $7 million in additional
funding, the physicists will design and build a similar system
for correcting the tendency of RHIC's ion bunches also to become
"fatter" as they circulate. Computer simulations, which
have accurately predicted the achievements of the longitudinal
cooling system, predict that combining this new transverse
cooling system with longitudinal cooling in both rings and some
additional equipment could increase collision rates overall by
500 percent.
"This achievement would
compare quite favorably with the goals of our original plan for
upgrading collision rates based on a system known as electron
cooling, which we estimate would have cost $95 million,"
said Vigdor. Plus, stochastic cooling can be implemented much
more quickly than adding an electron-cooling accelerator because
no new construction is required.
"Barring unforeseen budget
or technical problems, we hope to implement the full stochastic
cooling system by 2011," Vigdor said.
Research at RHIC is funded
primarily by the Office of Nuclear Physics within the U.S.
Department of Energy's Office of Science and by various national
and international collaborating institutions.
Source:
Brookhaven National Laboratory

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