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Dive into the research topics where Michael Anerella is active.

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Featured researches published by Michael Anerella.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2003

The RHIC magnet system

Michael Anerella; J. Cottingham; J. Cozzolino; P. Dahl; Y Elisman; J. Escallier; H. Foelsche; G. Ganetis; M. Garber; A. Ghosh; C. Goodzeit; A. Greene; R. Gupta; M. Harrison; J. Herrera; A. Jain; S. Kahn; E. Kelly; E. Killian; M Lindner; W. Louie; A. Marone; G. Morgan; A. Morgillo; S. Mulhall; J. Muratore; S. Plate; A. Prodell; M. Rehak; E.P. Rohrer

Abstract The magnet system of the collider consists of superconducting dipole, quadrupole and correction magnets for guiding and focusing the beams through the regular arcs of the machine lattice as well as into collision at the six interaction points. It is designed to allow operation in the energy range 30–100xa0GeV/ u . Operation with either equal or unequal ion species in the colliding beams is possible, imposing a ratio of up to 2.5:1 in the magnetic fields of the two rings. There are 1740 superconducting magnets in the machine. They were designed to meet stringent requirements on field quality, reproducibility, and long-term reliability while being inexpensive to produce. Wherever feasible, production of magnets and components was carried out in industry, always with build-to-print designs. After several years of operation, no magnet has failed and the magnet system has proven reliable and functional.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2009

Design of HQ—A High Field Large Bore

H. Felice; Giorgio Ambrosio; Michael Anerella; R. Bossert; S. Caspi; D. W. Cheng; D.R. Dietderich; P. Ferracin; A. Ghosh; R. Hafalia; C. R. Hannaford; Vadim V. Kashikhin; Jesse Schmalze; S. Prestemon; GianLuca Sabbi; P. Wanderer; Alexander V. Zlobin

In support of the Large Hadron Collider luminosity upgrade, a large bore (120 mm) Nb3Sn quadrupole with 15 T peak coil field is being developed within the framework of the US LHC Accelerator Research Program (LARP). The 2-layer design with a 15 mm wide cable is aimed at pre-stress control, alignment and field quality while exploring the magnet performance limits in terms of gradient, forces and stresses. In addition, HQ will determine the magnetic, mechanical, and thermal margins of Nb3Sn technology with respect to the requirements of the luminosity upgrade at the LHC.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2014

{\rm Nb}_{3}{\rm Sn}

P. Ferracin; Giorgio Ambrosio; Michael Anerella; F. Borgnolutti; R. Bossert; Daizhan Cheng; D.R. Dietderich; H. Felice; A. Ghosh; A. Godeke; S. Izquierdo Bermudez; P. Fessia; S. Krave; M. Juchno; J. C. Perez; L. Oberli; G. Sabbi; E. Todesco; M. Yu

The high luminosity LHC (HL-LHC) project is aimed at studying and implementing the necessary changes in the LHC to increase its luminosity by a factor of five. Among the magnets that will be upgraded are the 16 superconducting low-β quadrupoles placed around the two high luminosity interaction regions (ATLAS and CMS experiments). In the current baseline scenario, these quadrupole magnets will have to generate a gradient of 140 T/m in a coil aperture of 150 mm. The resulting conductor peak field of more than 12 T will require the use of Nb3Sn superconducting coils. We present in this paper the HL-LHC low-β quadrupole design, based on the experience gathered by the US LARP program, and, in particular, we describe the support structure components to pre-load the coils, withstand the electro-magnetic forces, provide alignment and LHe containment, and integrate the cold mass in the LHC IRs.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2009

Quadrupole Magnet for LARP

Giorgio Ambrosio; N. Andreev; Michael Anerella; E. Barzi; R. Bossert; S. Caspi; Guram Chlachidize; D.R. Dietderich; H. Felice; P. Ferracin; A. Ghosh; R. Hafalia; R. Hannaford; G. Jochen; V.V. Kashikhin; P. Kovach; M.J. Lamm; A.F. Lietzke; Al McInturff; Joseph F. Muratore; F. Nobrega; I. Novitsky; S. Peggs; S. Prestemon; GianLuca Sabbi; J. Schmalzle; D. Turrioni; P. Wanderer; G. Whitson; Alexander V. Zlobin

The U.S. LHC Accelerator Research Program (LARP) has started the fabrication of 3.7-m long Nb3Sn quadrupole models. The Long Quadrupoles (LQ) are ldquoProof-of-Principlerdquo magnets which are to demonstrate that Nb3Sn technology is mature for use in high energy particle accelerators. Their design is based on the LARP Technological Quadrupole (TQ) models, developed at FNAL and LBNL, which have design gradients higher than 200 T/m and an aperture of 90 mm. The plans for the LQ R&D and a design update are presented and discussed in this paper. The challenges of fabricating long accelerator-quality Nb3Sn coils are presented together with the solutions adopted for the LQ coils (based on the TQ experience). During the fabrication and inspection of practice coils some problems were found and corrected. The fabrication at BNL and FNAL of the set of coils for the first Long Quadrupole is in progress.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2004

Magnet Design of the 150 mm Aperture Low-

Tatsushi Nakamoto; Norio Higashi; Torn Ogitsu; A. Terashima; Y. Ajima; Michael Anerella; R. Gupta; Hisashi Hattori; Tadashi Ichihara; Yosuke Iwamoto; N. Kimura; Y. Makida; Tetsuhiro Obana; K. Tanaka; P. Wanderer; Akira Yamamoto

Superconducting combined function magnets will be utilized for the 50 GeV-750 kW proton beam line for the J-PARC neutrino experiment and an R&D program has been launched at KEK. The magnet is designed to provide a combined function with a dipole field of 2.59 T and a quadrupole field of 18.7 T/m in a coil aperture of 173.4 mm. A single layer coil is proposed to reduce the fabrication cost and the coil arrangement in the 2D cross-section results in left-right asymmetry. This paper reports the design study of the magnet.


The Physics of Particles Accelerators: Based in Part on the U.S. Particle Accelerator School (USPAS) Seminars and Courses in 1989 and 1990 | 1992

\beta

A. Devred; T. Bush; R. Coombes; J. DiMarco; C. Goodzeit; J. Kuzminski; M. Puglisi; P. Radusewicz; P. Sanger; R. Schermer; G. Spigo; J. Thompkins; J. Turner; Z. Wolf; Y. Yu; H. Zheng; T. Ogitsu; Michael Anerella; J. G. Cottingham; G. Ganetis; M. Garber; A. Ghosh; A. Greene; R. Gupta; J. Herrera; S. Kahn; E. Kelly; A. Meade; G. Morgan; J. Muratore

During the last two years, nine 4‐cm aperture, 17‐m‐long dipole magnet prototypes were produced by Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL) under contact with the Superconducting Super Collider (SSC) Laboratory. These prototypes are the last phase of a half‐decade‐long R&D program, carried out in collaboration with Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory and Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory, and aimed at demonstrating the feasibility of the SSC main‐ring dipole magnets. They also lay the groundwork for the 5‐cm‐aperture dipole magnet program now underway. After reviewing the design features of the BNL 4‐cm‐aperture, 17‐m‐long dipole magnets, we describe in detail the various steps of their fabrication. For each step, we discuss the paramaters that need to be mastered, and we compare the values that were achieved for the nine most recent prototypes. The data appear coherent and reproducible, demonstrating that the assembly process is under control. We then analyze the mechanical behavior of these magnets during cool...


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2013

Quadrupoles for the High Luminosity LHC

H. Bajas; Giorgio Ambrosio; Michael Anerella; M. Bajko; R. Bossert; S. Caspi; A. Chiuchiolo; G. Chlachidze; D.R. Dietderich; Olaf Dunkel; H. Felice; P. Ferracin; J. Feuvrier; Lucio Fiscarelli; A. Ghosh; C. Giloux; A. Godeke; A.R. Hafalia; M. Marchevsky; Stephan Russenschuck; G. Sabbi; T. Salmi; J. Schmalzle; E. Todesco; P. Wanderer; X. Wang; M. Yu

The high gradient quadrupole magnet is a 120-mm-aperture, 1-m-long Nb3Sn quadrupole developed by the LHC Accelerator Research Program collaboration in support of the High-Luminosity LHC project. Several tests were performed at Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory in 2010-2011 achieving a maximum gradient of 170 T/m at 4.4 K. As a next step in the program, the latest model (HQ01e) was sent to CERN for testing at 1.9 K. As part of this test campaign, the magnet training has been done up to a maximum current of 16.2 kA corresponding to 85% of the short sample limit. The ramp rate dependence of the quench current is also identified. The efficiency of the quench heaters is then studied at 4.2 K and at 1.9 K. The analyses of the magnet resistance evolution during fast current discharge showed evidence of quench whereas high energy quenches have been successfully achieved and sustained with no dump resistor.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2014

Development and Coil Fabrication for the LARP 3.7-m Long Nb3Sn Quadrupole

G. Chlachidze; Giorgio Ambrosio; Michael Anerella; F. Borgnolutti; R. Bossert; S. Caspi; D. W. Cheng; D.R. Dietderich; H. Felice; P. Ferracin; A. Ghosh; A. Godeke; A.R. Hafalia; M. Marchevsky; D. Orris; Pallab Kanti Roy; G. Sabbi; T. Salmi; J. Schmalzle; C. Sylvester; M. Tartaglia; J.C. Tompkins; P. Wanderer; X. Wang; A.V. Zlobin

In preparation for the high luminosity upgrade of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), the LHC Accelerator Research Program (LARP) is developing a new generation of large aperture high-field quadrupoles based on Nb3Sn technology. One meter long and 120 mm diameter HQ quadrupoles are currently produced as a step toward the eventual aperture of 150 mm. Tests of the first series of HQ coils revealed the necessity for further optimization of the coil design and fabrication process. A new model (HQ02) has been fabricated with several design modifications, including a reduction of the cable size and an improved insulation scheme. Coils in this magnet are made of a cored cable using 0.778 mm diameter Nb3Sn strands of RRP 108/127 subelement design. The HQ02 magnet has been fabricated at LBNL and BNL, and then tested at Fermilab. This paper summarizes the performance of HQ02 at 4.5 K and 1.9 K temperatures.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2009

Design of superconducting combined function magnets for the 50 GeV proton beam line for the J-PARC neutrino experiment

P. Ferracin; Giorgio Ambrosio; Michael Anerella; B. Bingham; R. Bossert; S. Caspi; D. W. Cheng; H. Felice; A.R. Hafalia; C. R. Hannaford; F. Nobrega; S. Prestemon; GianLuca Sabbi; J. Schmalzle; Frederic Trillaud; P. Wanderer; Alexander V. Zlobin

The 3.7 m long quadrupole magnet LQS01 represents a major step of the US LHC Accelerator Research Program (LARP) towards the development of long Nb3Sn accelerator quadrupole magnets for a LHC Luminosity upgrade. The magnet support structure is a scale up of the 1 m long Technology Quadrupole TQS design with some modifications suggested by TQS model test results. It includes an aluminum shell pre-tensioned over iron yokes using pressurized bladders and locking keys (bladder and key technology). The axial support is provided by two stainless steel end plates compressed against the coil ends by four stainless steel rods. The structure, instrumented with strain gauges, has been fabricated and assembled around four aluminum ldquodummy coilsrdquo to determine pre-load homogeneity and mechanical characteristics during cool-down. After presenting the main magnetic and mechanical parameters of LQS01, we report in this paper on the design, assembly, and test of the support structure, with a comparison between strain gauges data and 3D finite element model results.


IEEE Transactions on Applied Superconductivity | 2004

About the mechanics of SSC dipole magnet prototypes

T. Ogitsu; Y. Makida; T. Kobayashi; Y. Ajima; Y. Doi; Norio Higashi; Yosuke Iwamoto; A. Ichikawa; N. Kimura; Tatsushi Nakamoto; Hirokatsu Ohhata; T. Shintomi; M. Takasaki; K. Tanaka; A. Terashima; Akira Yamamoto; Tetsuhiro Obana; Michael Anerella; J. Escallier; R. Gupta; G. Ganetis; M. Harrison; A. Jain; J. Muratore; B. Parker; P. Wanderer

A neutrino oscillation experiment using the J-PARC 50 GeV 0.75 MW proton beam is planned as a successor to the K2K project currently being operated at KEK. A superconducting magnet system is required for the arc section of the primary proton beam line to be within the space available at the site. A system with 28 combined function magnets is proposed to simplify the system and optimize the cost. The required fields for the magnets are 2.6 T dipole and 19 T/m quadrupole. The magnets are also required to have a large aperture, 173.4 mm diameter, to accommodate the large beam emittance. The magnets will be protected by cold diodes and cooled by forced flow supercritical helium produced by a 4.5 K, 2/spl sim/2.5 kW refrigerator. This paper reports the system overview and the design status.

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P. Wanderer

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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A. Ghosh

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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R. Gupta

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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G. Ganetis

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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A. Jain

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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E. Willen

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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W. Sampson

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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J. Schmalzle

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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A. Greene

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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E. Kelly

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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