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See Links at end
Outer containment vessel, prior to final assembly.
Outer containment vessel, showing the baseplate prior
to installation of the window test modules.
Outer containment vessel, another view.
View through the lexan window, of the mounting
hardware for the window test modules. The optic axis is perpendicular to the
proton beam axis, and is primarly for the mercury tests.
The 5 double window test modules being installed in
the outer containment vessel. Each double window unit has a thermocouple
vacuum gauge protruding to the left, and a brass shutoff valve pointing
upwards.
Exploded drawing of a double window module.
Another view of the 5 double window test modules.
The 5 strain sensor modules, prior to final assembly.
Closeup view of the havar window + strain sensors.
The window is clamped between a pair of conflat flanges, and 4 fiberoptic
strain sensors are glued to the havar to form a kind of quadrant detector.
FISO fiberooptic strain sensors.
Another view of the 5 double window modules.
The four 18" extension tubes, prior to assembly.
Each has a double window module at one end.
Yet another view of the 5 double window test modules.
(Maybe the best view.) The two ports in the outer containment vessel for the
proton beam can be seen in the upper part of the picture.
Four strain sensor modules being mounted in proton line
2.
Completed assembly of 5 double window modules and
5 strain sensor modules. We are testing 0.010" Al, 0.011" havar,
0.013" Ti90Al6V4, 1mm inconel 718 and 6mm inconel 718. The proton beam will
enter from the upper right. Our line 1 contains the Al strain sensor + the
5 double window units; line 2 contains the havar, Ti and inconel strain
sensor modules.
Drawing of the window test setup. The proton
beam enters from the left.
Another view of the competed window test assembly.
The proton beam enters from the upper left.
Another view of the competed window test assembly.
The proton beam enters from the left.
TV monitor view of the window test box being hoisted
onto the x-y mover + Chuck Finfrock.
The window test box on the x-y mover, + George
Greene.
The optical fiber from the 20W diode laser, +
field lens and first mirror. Chuck Finfrock in back.
The window test box on the x-y mover. The beam
flag is at left center; the SWIC (segmented wire ion chamber) and
picture frame loss monitor are at right center.
The window test box on the x-y mover. The last
quad and the SWIC are at left center.
Another view of the window test box on the x-y mover.
The Yokogawa digital scope used to read out the
strain sensors. DL700
specs.
Strain sensor data. Upper trace = the beam current
transformer just upstream of the target box. Lower trace = data from a
fiberoptic strain sensor on the aluminum test window. The horizontal scale
has been expanded to 500 ns/div. The beam arrived about 750 ns into the
frame.
Jim Tsai.
Steve Kahn, Nick Simos, Dave Beshears, Jim Tsai in
the E951 trailer.
Steve Kahn, Kirk McDonald, Dave Beshears, Jim Tsai.
Jim Tsai, Dave Beshears and the carbon test box
during assembly.
The carbon test box with "dummy" graphite rods.
Rick Fernow, Chuck Finfrock, Nick Simos during
assembly of the carbon test box.
The completed carbon rod assembly. Line 1 (lower)
contains two 12" ATJ graphite rods + strain sensors. Line 2 (upper)
contains a 12" ATJ rod + two 4" carbon-carbon composite rods. The proton
beam will enter from the right.
Drawing of the carbon test setup. The proton
beam enters from the left.
Dave Beshears.
Another view of the carbon rod assembly. The proton
beam will enter from the left.
Rick Fernow, Jim Tsai, Nick Simos, Chuck Finfrock.
The window test box stored in the upstream end
of the A3 target cave after the checkout shift of beam.
The carbon test box on the x-y mover, before the
18" extension tubes have been added.
Another view of the carbon test box on the x-y mover.
Rick Fernow, Steve Kahn, Nick Simos, Jim Tsai,
Dave Beshears.
Nick Simos connecting the fiberoptic strain sensors.
Nick Simos connecting the fiberoptic strain sensors.
George Greene, Chuck Finfrock hoisting the windows test box.
George Greene, Chuck Finfrock hoisting the windows test box.
Nick Tsoupas, Kevin Brown at the AGS
Main Control Room.
Kathleen Tuohy, Scott Berg (part), Nick
Simos, Dave Beshears, Jim Tsai, Juan Gallardo, Rick Fernow,
Yongxiang Zhou, Steve Kahn.
Kathleen Tuohy, Harold Kirk, Scott Berg,
Bob Weggel, Nick Simos, Dave Beshears, Jim Tsai, Juan Gallardo, Rick Fernow,
Steve Kahn, Kirk McDonald.
Harold Kirk, Rick Fernow, Steve Kahn;
sitting: Mike Cates, Bernie Riemer.
Carbon rod Strain data. Two sensors
located at the middle of a carbon rod, but on opposite sides, show 350 Hz
strain signals due to
transverse bending that are 180 deg out of phase. The higher frequency
components are due to longitudinal waves.
HEMC'99, Montauk, NY, Sep. 27 - Oct. 1, 1999.
NuFact'99, Lyon, France, July 5-9, 1999.
Collaboration meeting at the Tamarind Reef Inn,
St. Croix, May 20-26, 1999.
RF and Targetry Meeting, LBNL, Feb. 18-20, 1999.
Muon Collider Collaboration Meeting, LBNL, Oct. 9-12,
1998.
ECFA Muon Collider Study Group, CERN, Sept. 17,
1998.
Muon Collider Cooling Meeting, FNAL, May 1998.
Muon Collider Collaboration Meeting, Alabama, March '98.
More photos can be found on the Targetry Page.
The XLS ring, E = 200 MeV, Circum = 8.5 m.
Download
Aladdin Ghostscript to view .ps files.
Download
WinZip to upack .gz files on a PC.
Visit the
Tucows website for an extensive collection of browser utilities.
Muon Collider Status Report, Jan. 1999.
Physics Opportunities at a Muon Collider.
Fermilab Muon Collider Home Page
Muon Collider
Cooling R&D Project
Muon Collider Accelerator Physics at Indiana University;
Another Indiana mumu
page.
Survey of low-energy muon beams from pi decay
Rick Fernow's Muon Collider page
Juan Gallardo's Muon Collider page
Colin Johnson's
Muon Collider page
Bruce King's
Muon Collider page
Harold Kirk's Muon Collider page
N. Mokhov's
Muon Collider page,
MARS page,
Related papers.
Jim Norem's
Muon Collider page
Bob Palmer's
Muon Collider page
Eric Prebys'
Muon Collider page
KTM's archives:
Earl,
epsfiles,
Gallardo,
Geer,
Johnson,
King,
Kirk,
Mokhov,
Palmer,
Prebys,
Silvestrov,
Status,
Weggel,