Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where P. Dahl is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by P. Dahl.


IEEE Transactions on Magnetics | 1989

Tests of full scale SSC R&D dipole magnets

J. Strait; B.C. Brown; R. Hanft; M. Kuchnir; M.J. Lamm; R. Lundy; P. Mantsch; P.O. Mazur; A. McInturff; J.R. Orr; J. G. Cottingham; P. Dahl; G. Ganetis; M. Gerber; A. Ghosh; C. Goodzeit; A. Greene; J. Herrera; S. Kahn; E. Kelly; G. Morgan; A. Prodell; W. Sampson; W. Schneider; R. Shutt; P. Thompson; P. Wanderer; E. Willen; S. Caspi; W. Gilbert

Four full-scale SSC (Superconducting Super Collider) research and development dipole magnets, incorporating successive mechanical design improvements, have been quench-tested. Three of the magnets are heavily instrumented with sensors to measure their mechanical behavior and verify the effectiveness of the mechanical improvements and with multiple voltage taps to locate the origin of quenches. The last two magnets of this series reach the SSC design operating field of 6.6 T in two or fewer quenches. Load cells and motion sensors show that in these two magnets the azimuthal clamping stress is higher at zero current and drops more slowly with excitation that in previous long magnets, and that the axial motion of the coil upon excitation has been greatly reduced. Quenches are found to originate preferentially in several locations, suggesting other design improvements. >


Journal of Applied Physics | 1969

Loss Measurements on Twisted Multifilamentary Superconducting Wires

P. Dahl; G. H. Morgan; W. B. Sampson

Measurements have been made on the energy losses produced during pulsed operation of several superconducting magnets. The coils were made from NbTi wires with solid and multifilamentary cores and pulsed to approximately 25 kG. A comparison was made between the losses produced in magnets made from the two types of conductor. The multifilamentary wire was tested first with the filaments straight, and then after the wire had been twisted with a pitch of 2 turns/cm. The losses for both the solid core and the untwisted multicore conductors were essentially identical and increased as the cube of the maximum field. The losses in the magnet made from the twisted material showed a drastic reduction at high fields with the loss varying as the first power of the maximum field.


Archive | 1989

Quench Start Localization in Full-Length SSC R&D Dipoles

A. Devred; M. Chapman; J. Cortella; A. Desportes; J. Kaugerts; T. Kirk; K. Mirk; R. Schermer; J. C. Tompkins; J. Turner; J. G. Cottingham; P. Dahl; M. Garber; G. Ganetis; A. Ghosh; C. Goodzeit; A. Greene; J. Herrera; S. Kahn; E. Kelly; G. Morgan; A. Prodell; E.P. Rohrer; W. Sampson; R. Shutt; P. Thompson; P. Wanderer; E. Willen; M. Bleadon; B. C. Brown

Full-length SSC R&D dipole magnets instrumented with four voltage taps on each turn of the inner quarter coils have been tested. These voltage taps enable (1) accurate location of the point at which the quenches start and (2) detailed studies of quench development in the coil. Attention here is focused on localizing the quench source. After recalling the basic mechanism of a quench (why it occurs and how it propagates), the method of quench origin analysis is described: the quench propagation velocity on the turn where the quench occurs is calculated, and the quench location is then verified by reiterating the analysis on the adjacent turns. Last, the velocity value, which appears to be higher than previously measured, is discussed.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 1985

Superconducting Magnets for the CBA Project

E.J. Bleser; J. G. Cottingham; P. Dahl; R.J. Engelmann; R. Fernow; M. Garber; A. Ghosh; C. Goodzeit; A. Greene; J. Herrera; S. Kahn; J. Kaugerts; E. Kelly; H. Kirk; R.J. Leroy; G. Morgan; Robert B. Palmer; A. Prodell; D. Rahm; W. Sampson; R. Shutt; A. Stevens; M. J. Tannenbaum; P. Thompson; P. Wanderer; E. Willen

Abstract The superconducting magnets that were designed and tested for the BNL colliding beam accelerator are described, including dipoles, quadrupoles and trim coils. The dipoles had an effective length of 436 cm, a good field aperture of 8.8 cm diameter, and were designed for an operating field of 5.28 T in a temperature range between 2.6 K and 3.8 K (provided by supercritical helium). The quadrupoles had the same aperture, an effective length of 138.5 cm, and were designed to operate in series with the dipoles, with a gradient of 70.8 T/m. The dipoles incorporated internal sextupole, octupole, and decapole trim coil windings; the quadrupole trim coils consisted of dipole, quadrupole, and dodecapole windings. The design, construction, and performance (training, field quality, quench protection characteristics) of prototype magnets are discussed in considerable detail.


IEEE Transactions on Magnetics | 1987

Construction of cold mass assembly for full-length dipoles for the SSC accelerator

P. Dahl; J. G. Cottingham; M. Garber; A. Ghosh; C. Goodzeit; A. Greene; J. Herrera; S. Kahn; E. Kelly; G. Morgan; A. Prodell; W. Sampson; W. Schneider; R. Shutt; P. Thompson; P. Wanderer; E. Willen

Four of the initial six 17m long demonstration dipole magnets for the proposed Superconducting Super Collider have been constructed, and the first one is now being tested. This paper describes the magnet design and construction of the cold mass assembly. The magnets are cold iron (and cold bore) 1-in-1 dipoles, wound with partially keystoned current density-graded high homogeneity NbTi cable in a two-layer \cos \theta coil of 40 mm inner diameter. The magnetic length is 16.6 m. The coil is prestressed by 15 mm wide stainless steel collars, and mounted in a circular, split iron yoke of 267 mm outer diameter, supported by a cylindrical yoke (and helium) containment vessel of stainless steel. The magnet bore tube assembly incorporates superconducting sextupole trim coils produced by an industrial, automatic process akin to printed circuit fabrication.


IEEE Transactions on Magnetics | 1988

Tests of prototype SSC magnets

J. Strait; B.C. Brown; R. Hanft; K. Koepke; M. Kuchnir; R. Lundy; P. Mantsch; P.O. Mazur; A. McInturff; J.R. Orr; J. G. Cottingham; P. Dahl; M. Garber; A. Ghosh; C. Goodzeit; A. Greene; J. Herrera; S. Kahn; E. Kelly; G. Morgan; A. Prodell; W. Sampson; W. Schneider; R. Shutt; P. Thompson; P. Wanderer; E. Willen; S. Caspi; W. Gilbert; R. Meuser

Results are presented from tests of the third full-scale development dipole magnet for the Superconducting Super Collider (SSC) and from a retest of a 4.5-m model magnet of the same design mounted in an SSC cryostat. The 4.5-m magnet showed consistent quench performance between its original tests in boiling liquid helium in a vertical dewar and the current tests in forced-flow helium in a horizontal cryostat. Little or no retraining was observed over several thermal cycles. The full-length magnet required 12 quenches to train to its short-sample limit of 6800 A and displayed a reasonably stable quench plateau following training. Data are presented on quench behavior as a function of current and temperature, and on azimuthal and longitudinal loading of the coil by the support structure. >


IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 1973

Superconducting Magnet Models for Isabelle

P. Dahl; R. Damm; D. D. Jacobus; C. Lasky; A. D. McInturff; G. H. Morgan; G. Parzen; W. B. Sampson

The development program for the superconducting magnets of the Intersecting Storage Accelerators is described. The dipole magnet design is of the cos ? type and employs wide ribbon conductor. Magnetic measurements are compared with calculations which include the effects of conductor magnetization and iron saturation. Calculations of the harmonics due to the magnet ends will also be presented along with estimates of the effect of the shape of the outer boundary of the iron shield on the field and the degree of interaction between the magnets in the two rings. The conductor is a metal-filled braid woven from 186 wires each containing 400 filaments. A precision molding technique has been developed which assures accurate placement of the turns and could be used for semi-mass production. The iron cores are laminated and assembled in a special way to eliminate the axial differential expansion between the coil and the core. Correction coils for the 3? and 5? terms are built into the bore tubes. These coils are necessary to correct the small (10-3) harmonics produced by conductor magnetization at low field and iron saturation at high fields.


IEEE Transactions on Magnetics | 1987

Full length prototype SSC dipole test results

J. Strait; B.C. Brown; J. Carson; N. Engler; H. Fisk; R. Hanft; K. Koepke; M. Kuchnir; E.T. Larson; R. Lundy; P. Mantsch; P.O. Mazur; A. McInturff; T. Nicol; T. Ohmori; E. Schmidt; J. Theilacker; G. Tool; J. G. Cottingham; P. Dahl; M. Garber; A. Ghosh; C. Goodzeit; A. Greene; J. Herrara; S. Khan; E. Kelly; G. Morgan; A. Prodell; W. Sampson

Results are presented from tests of the first full length prototype SSC dipole magnet. The cryogenic behavior of the magnet during a slow cooldown to 4.5K and a slow warmup to room temperature has been measured. Magnetic field quality was measured at currents up to 2000 A. Averaged over the body field all harmonics with the exception of b 2 and b 8 are at or within the tolerances specified by the SSC Central Design Group. (The values of b 2 and b 8 result from known design and construction defects which will be corrected in later magnets.) Using an NMR probe the average body field strength is measured to be 10.283 G/A with point to point variations on the order of one part in 1000. Data are presented on quench behavior of the magnet up to 3500 A (approximately 55% of full field) including longitudinal and transverse velocities for the first 250 msec of the quench.


Archive | 1990

Quench Characteristics of Full-Length SSC R&D Dipole Magnets

A. Devred; M. Chapman; J. Cortella; A. Desportes; J. DiMarco; J. Kaugerts; R. Schermer; J. C. Tompkins; J. Turner; J. G. Cottingham; P. Dahl; G. Ganetis; M. Garber; A. Ghosh; C. Goodzeit; A. Greene; J. Herrera; S. Kahn; E. Kelly; G. Morgan; A. Prodell; E.P. Rohrer; W. Sampson; R. Shutt; P. Thompson; P. Wanderer; E. Willen; M. Bleadon; B. C. Brown; R. Hanft

Several 17-meter-long SSC R&D dipole magnets, instrumented with numerous voltage taps on the inner quarter coils, have been tested. These magnets, protected with quench heaters, differed in mechanical details as well as in the cables used for the winding. The voltage taps enabled us to measure longitudinal and azimuthal quench propagation velocities. Summary plots of these velocities are presented showing that, even though the Fourier conduction model doesn’t apply, the mechanism of the quench is reproducible from magnet to magnet. Correlations are established between the velocities and the fraction of short sample. After showing that for currents higher than 5000 A the magnet is self-protected, we investigate the relation between the number of MIITs and the quench characteristics.


IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 1985

Superconducting Magnet System for RHIC

P. Thompson; J. G. Cottingham; P. Dahl; R. Fernow; M. Garber; A. Ghosh; C. Goodzeit; A. Greene; H. Hahn; J. Herrera; S. Kahn; E. Kelly; G. Morgan; S. Plate; A. Prodell; W. Sampson; W. Schneider; R. Shutt; P. Wanderer; E. Willen

The proposed Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider1 (RHIC) will operate at ion energies of 7 to 100+ GeV/Amu for ions as heavy as Au197. This paper discusses the superconducting magnet system for this machine. It will consist of 372 dipoles typically 9.7 meters long with an operating field of 3.4 Tesla, 492 quadrupoles with typical length 1.4 meters, gradient 76 T/m, and approximately 1000 sextupole and corrector magnets. A detailed design has been developed for the dipoles which will have a clear bore of 76 mm; less detailed designs are presented for the other components. A proof-of-concept magnet has been constructed and successfully tested.

Collaboration


Dive into the P. Dahl's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

W. Sampson

Brookhaven National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. Prodell

Brookhaven National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. Ghosh

Brookhaven National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

A. Greene

Brookhaven National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

C. Goodzeit

Brookhaven National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

M. Garber

Brookhaven National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

E. Kelly

Brookhaven National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

J. G. Cottingham

Brookhaven National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

S. Kahn

Brookhaven National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

E. Willen

Brookhaven National Laboratory

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge