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LEMMAACC

Schematic design of the two rings to accumulate the µ+ and µ- produced by a positron beam impinging of a fixed target.

A muon collider is one of the best solutions for a future machine at the energy frontier because it can provide, still using elementary particles, a center of mass energy much higher than any electron collider. However, it has to face several challenges, e.g. the short muon lifetime of 2.2 $\mu$s and the emittance cooling when the muon beam is produced from protons [1].

The LEMMA (Low EMittance Muon Accelerator) project [2] aims to study the possibility of producing muons at low emittance, therefore, not requiring cooling. Profiting from the ee annihilation process into muon pairs, the LEMMA project foresees to use a high intensity and low emittance positron beam, above the production energy threshold at 43.7 GeV, that impinges on a fixed target. An initial experimental test program started in 2016 and continues up to date.

Due to the asymmetry of the collision, the muon lifetime is extended to 440$\mu$s. The resulting muon beam has a low transverse and longitudinal emittance, however, with a small intensity because of the small production cross section.

In order to overcome the low muon population, LEMMAACC is studying the magnets optics and beam dynamics of a muon ACCumulator ring for LEMMA that stores the muons produced over a hundred to a thousand passages of the positron bunches through the target, therefore, increasing the muon beam population with minimal emittance growth.

The muon accumulator itself shows several challenges. It must have a very small circumference to avoid the muon beam losses due to decay, a large dynamic aperture of +/-20% in order to capture all muons produced, a low beta interaction region common to three beams (e+, $\mu$+, $\mu$) at two different energies (e+ at 45 GeV and $\mu$ pairs at 22.5 GeV) where the target is allocated.

 

More detailed info is available in the following links:

[1] The Muon Accelerator Program: https://map.fnal.gov/
[2] LEMMA project: https://web.infn.it/LEMMA/index.php/it/

GALLERY
Latest modified: 10 April 2020