27 August 2007

T2K Horn Testing


I've been in Japan for the the past week, working on horn tests for T2K's third neutrino horn at KEK (pictured at right). The horns are devices that create strong magnetic fields which are used to focus charged pions into a long decay region where they, not surprisingly, decay into neutrinos. T2K will employ three horns in series to create the world's most powerful neutrino beam. Each horn itself is essentially two concentric aluminium [sic] cylinders which carry
a high electric current. Between the two cylinders, a powerful magnetic field is created and that bends the paths of any charged particles passing through.

The horns must generate strong magnetic fields but they run in a high radiation environment so they must be very robust. The T2K horns will operate with an electric current of 320 kA. For this much current, the power is distributed along large aluminium striplines (pictured below) which feed the horns.



The work this week was mainly to test the structural stability of the newly constructed third horn. The first horn was tested extensively earlier this year. The currents and fields created by the horns are so strong that they exert tremendous mechanical stresses on the devices and must be tested extensively before being deployed in their final locations in the beamline. The mechanical forces are so strong that the horns emit an incredibly loud bang each time they are pulsed; it sounds as if someone were banging them with a sledgehammer. Given the amount of energy being pulsed through the horns when they operate, that's not a bad analogy.

The tests themselves are simple enough: we just run the horns in the same way that we will in the experiment. The horn experts spent the past few weeks preparing for the tests by setting up the DAQ and monitoring tools so that non-experts (like me) could come in and watch to make sure nothing went wrong. The plan was to test the horns for 10.5 hours per day in three shifts of 3.5 hours each. We didn't test the horn overnight because the noise is so loud you can hear it off-site, and it's important to keep good relations with the community surrounding the lab. The only hitch has been the extreme heat that Japan has been experiencing this summer. The building where the horns were tested does not have air conditioning, and if the temperature inside went over 37 C we halted operation until it went back down below that threshold. We lost three afternoons to the heat last week! Nevertheless it was a successful week: the horns were pulsed over 44,000 times last week while I was there.

1 comment:

Yoshi said...

Any chance you could add a photograph of the third horn itself? (although I agree that those striplines are very impressive)

It was funny (sort of) when we had our group meeting online last week, you were at KEK dealing with temperatures over 35C (95F), we were in the London at 15C (60F), and Joe in Chicago was at the same as us, except he was in his air conditioned bedroom....

Joe obviously needs to raise his thermostat a bit.

I am happy to say though that last week was a blip, and this weekend has been glorious, 22C and beautifully sunny in London right now!

Very much looking forward to going out to Japan a month from now for the T2K Collaboration meeting, however, I am not sure if hundreds of foreign physicists descending on the town of Tsukuba is helping us "keep good relations with the community surrounding the lab"! Especially the patrons of the local karaoke bars....