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Dive into the research topics where Claudia Tambasco is active.

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Featured researches published by Claudia Tambasco.


Physical Review Special Topics-accelerators and Beams | 2014

Simulations and measurements of beam loss patterns at the CERN Large Hadron Collider

Roderik Bruce; G. Robert-Demolaize; R. Assmann; V. Boccone; Chiara Bracco; M. Brugger; Marija Cauchi; F. Cerutti; D Deboy; A. Ferrari; L Lari; Aurelien Marsili; Alessio Mereghetti; Daniele Mirarchi; Elena Quaranta; Stefano Redaelli; A Rossi; Belen Salvachua; Eleftherios Skordis; Claudia Tambasco; Gianluca Valentino; T Weiler; V. Vlachoudis; D Wollmann

The CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is designed to collide proton beams of unprecedented energy, in order to extend the frontiers of high-energy particle physics. During the first very successful running period in 2010--2013, the LHC was routinely storing protons at 3.5--4 TeV with a total beam energy of up to 146 MJ, and even higher stored energies are foreseen in the future. This puts extraordinary demands on the control of beam losses. An un-controlled loss of even a tiny fraction of the beam could cause a superconducting magnet to undergo a transition into a normal-conducting state, or in the worst case cause material damage. Hence a multi-stage collimation system has been installed in order to safely intercept high-amplitude beam protons before they are lost elsewhere. To guarantee adequate protection from the collimators, a detailed theoretical understanding is needed. This article presents results of numerical simulations of the distribution of beam losses around the LHC that have leaked out of the collimation system. The studies include tracking of protons through the fields of more than 5000 magnets in the 27 km LHC ring over hundreds of revolutions, and Monte-Carlo simulations of particle-matter interactions both in collimators and machine elements being hit by escaping particles. The simulation results agree typically within a factor 2 with measurements of beam loss distributions from the previous LHC run. Considering the complex simulation, which must account for a very large number of unknown imperfections, and in view of the total losses around the ring spanning over 7 orders of magnitude, we consider this an excellent agreement. Our results give confidence in the simulation tools, which are used also for the design of future accelerators.


IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 2016

Beam Instabilities in Hadron Synchrotrons

Elias Métral; Theodoros Argyropoulos; Hannes Bartosik; Nicolo Biancacci; Xavier Buffat; J.Esteban Muller; Werner Herr; Giovanni Iadarola; Alexandre Lasheen; Kevin Li; A. Oeftiger; Danilo Quartullo; G. Rumolo; Benoit Salvant; Michael Schenk; E. Shaposhnikova; Claudia Tambasco; Helga Timko; Carlo Zannini; A. Burov; D. Banfi; Javier Barranco; N. Mounet; Oliver Boine-Frankenheim; U. Niedermayer; V. Kornilov; Shawnte L. White

Beam instabilities cover a wide range of effects in particle accelerators and they have been the subjects of intense research for several decades. As the machines performance was pushed new mechanisms were revealed and nowadays the challenge consists in studying the interplays between all these intricate phenomena, as it is very often not possible to treat the different effects separately. The aim of this paper is to review the main mechanisms, discussing in particular the recent developments of beam instability theories and simulations.


Journal of Instrumentation | 2016

High Luminosity LHC: Challenges and plans

Gianluigi Arduini; J. Barranco; A. Bertarelli; Nicolo Biancacci; Roderik Bruce; O. Brüning; Xavier Buffat; Y. Cai; Lee Robert Carver; S. Fartoukh; M. Giovannozzi; Giovanni Iadarola; Kevin Li; Anton Lechner; L. Medina Medrano; Elias Métral; Y. Nosochkov; Yannis Papaphilippou; Dario Pellegrini; J. Qiang; Stefano Redaelli; A. Romano; L. Rossi; G. Rumolo; Benoit Salvant; M. Schenk; Claudia Tambasco; Rogelio Tomás; S. Valishev; F.F. Van der Veken

The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is one of the largest scientific instruments ever built. Since opening up a new energy frontier for exploration in 2010, it has gathered a global user community working in fundamental particle physics and the physics of hadronic matter at extreme temperature and density. To sustain and extend its discovery potential, the LHC will undergo a major upgrade in the 2020s. This will increase its rate of collisions by a factor of five beyond the original design value and the integrated luminosity by a factor ten. The new configuration, known as High Luminosity LHC (HL-LHC), will rely on a number of key innovations that push accelerator technology beyond its present limits. Among these are cutting-edge 11–12 T superconducting magnets, including Nb3Sn-based magnets never used in accelerators before, compact superconducting cavities for longitudinal beam rotation, new technology and physical processes for beam collimation. The dynamics of the HL-LHC beams will be also particularly challenging and this aspect is the main focus of this paper.


Open Engineering | 2017

LHC@Home: a BOINC-based volunteer computing infrastructure for physics studies at CERN

Javier Barranco; Y. Cai; David G. Cameron; Matthew Crouch; Riccardo De Maria; Laurence Field; M. Giovannozzi; Pascal Dominik Hermes; Nils Høimyr; Dobrin Kaltchev; Nikos Karastathis; Cinzia Luzzi; Ewen Hamish Maclean; E McIntosh; Alessio Mereghetti; James Molson; Y. Nosochkov; Ivan D. Reid; Lenny Rivkin; Ben Segal; Kyrre Sjobak; Peter Skands; Claudia Tambasco; Frederik Van der Veken; Igor Zacharov

Abstract The LHC@Home BOINC project has provided computing capacity for numerical simulations to researchers at CERN since 2004, and has since 2011 been expanded with a wider range of applications. The traditional CERN accelerator physics simulation code SixTrack enjoys continuing volunteers support, and thanks to virtualisation a number of applications from the LHC experiment collaborations and particle theory groups have joined the consolidated LHC@Home BOINC project. This paper addresses the challenges related to traditional and virtualized applications in the BOINC environment, and how volunteer computing has been integrated into the overall computing strategy of the laboratory through the consolidated LHC@Home service. Thanks to the computing power provided by volunteers joining LHC@Home, numerous accelerator beam physics studies have been carried out, yielding an improved understanding of charged particle dynamics in the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC) and its future upgrades. The main results are highlighted in this paper.


7th International Particle Accelerator Conference (IPAC'16), Busan, Korea, May 8-13, 2016 | 2016

Simulation of Head-on Beam-Beam Limitations in Future High Energy Colliders

Xavier Buffat; Javier Barranco; Adrien Florio; Claudia Tambasco

The Future Circular Hadron Collider (FCC-hh) project calls for studies in a new regime of beam-beam interactions. While the emittance damping due to synchrotron radiation is still slower than in past or existing lepton colliders, it is significantly larger than in other hadron colliders. The slow reduction of the emittance is profitable for higher luminosity in term of transverse beam size at the interaction points and also to mitigate long-range beam-beam effects, potentially allowing for a reduction of the crossing angle between the beams during the operation. In such conditions, the strength of head-on beam-beam interactions increases, potentially limiting the beam brightness. 4D weak-strong and strongstrong simulations are performed in order to assess these limitations.


Archive | 2014

INTEGRATED SIMULATION TOOLS FOR COLLIMATION CLEANING IN HL-LHC

Roderik Bruce; Chiara Bracco; F. Cerutti; A. Ferrari; Anton Lechner; Aurelien Marsili; Daniele Mirarchi; Stefano Redaelli; A Rossi; Belen Salvachua; Claudia Tambasco; V. Vlachoudis; Alessio Mereghetti; James Molson; M. Serluca; Haroon Rafique; A. Toader


7th Int. Particle Accelerator Conf. (IPAC'16), Busan, Korea, May 8-13, 2016 | 2016

Current Status of Instability Threshold Measurements in the LHC at 6.5 TeV

Lee Robert Carver; Javier Barranco; Nicolo Biancacci; Xavier Buffat; Wolfgang Höfle; Gerd Kotzian; T. Lefevre; Thomas Levens; Elias Métral; Benoit Salvant; Claudia Tambasco; Na Wang; M. Zobov


57th ICFA Advanced Beam Dynamics Workshop on High-Intensity and High-Brightness Hadron Beams (HB'16), Malmö, Sweden, July 3-8, 2016 | 2016

Beam dynamics issues in the FCC

F. Zimmermann; Jose Abelleira; Robert Appleby; Philip Bambade; Javier Barranco; Wolfgang Bartmann; Michael Benedikt; Maria Ilaria Besana; Jean-Luc Biarrotte; Oliver Boine-Frankenheim; Manuela Boscolo; Roderik Bruce; O. Brüning; Xavier Buffat; Florian Burkart; H. Burkhardt; S. Calatroni; F. Cerutti; Antoine Chancé; Francesco Collamati; Emilia Cruz Alaniz; Barbara Dalena; Alessandro Drago; Stephane Fartoukh; Angeles Faus-Golfe; M. Fiascaris; John Fox; Cedric Garion; B. Goddard; Gerardo Guillermo Cantón


57th ICFA Advanced Beam Dynamics Workshop on High-Intensity and High-Brightness Hadron Beams (HB'16), Malmö, Sweden, July 3-8, 2016 | 2016

Measurement and interpretation of transverse beam instabilities in the CERN large hadron collider (LHC) and extrapolations to HL-LHC

Elias Métral; Claudia Tambasco; Benoit Salvant; Govanni Rumolo; Javier Barranco; Lee Robert Carver; Xavier Buffat; Nicolo Biancacci; Giovanni Iadarola; Gianluigi Arduini; Michael Schenk; Kevin Li; Annalisa Romano


Archive | 2018

Update of the HL-LHC operational scenarios for proton operation

Elias Métral; Javier Barranco Garcia; Robert Appleby; Daniele Mirarchi; P. Baudrenghien; Roderik Bruce; Elena Chapochnikova; Riccardo De Maria; Alessio Mereghetti; Claudia Tambasco; Gianluigi Arduini; Luis Eduardo Medina Medrano; Matthew Crouch; Yannis Papaphilippou; Wolfgang Höfle; Fanouria Antoniou; Dario Pellegrini; Patrik Goncalves Jorge; Davide Gamba; Rogelio Tomas Garcia; Chiara Bracco; Sergey Antipov; Nicolo Biancacci; Giovanni Iadarola; Alexandre Lasheen; Nikos Karastathis; G. Rumolo; Matteo Solfaroli Camillocci; T. Mastoridis; Lee Robert Carver

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Javier Barranco

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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Benoit Salvant

École Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne

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