Title :
Construction and Operational Experience With a Superconducting Octupole Used to Trap Antihydrogen
Author :
Wanderer, P. ; Escallier, J. ; Marone, A. ; Parker, B.
Author_Institution :
Supercond. Magn. Div., Brookhaven Nat. Lab., Upton, NY, USA
fDate :
6/1/2012 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
A superconducting octupole magnet has seen extensive service as part of the ALPHA experiment at CERN. ALPHA has trapped antihydrogen, a crucial step towards performing precision measurements of anti-atoms. The octupole was made at the Direct Wind facility by the Superconducting Magnet Division at Brookhaven National Laboratory. The magnet was wound with a six-around-one NbTi cable about 1 mm in diameter. It is about 300 mm long, with a radius of 25 mm and a peak field at the conductor of 4.04 T. Specific features of the magnet, including a minimal amount of material in the coil and coil ends with low multipole content, were advantageous to its use in ALPHA. The magnet was operated for six months a year for five years. During this time it underwent about 900 thermal cycles (between 4 K and 100 K). A novel operational feature is that during the course of data-taking the magnet was repeatedly shut off from its 950 A operating current. The magnet quenches during the shutoff, with a decay constant of 9 ms. Over the course of the five years, the magnet was deliberately quenched many thousands of times. It still performs well.
Keywords :
superconducting magnets; superconductivity; anti-atoms; antihydrogen trapping; construction experience; operational experience; precision measurements; superconducting octupole magnet; Coils; Conductors; Electron tubes; Harmonic analysis; Materials; Superconducting magnets; Wires; Antihydrogen; direct wind; octupole; super conductivity;
Journal_Title :
Applied Superconductivity, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TASC.2012.2184730