Simulations of heavy-ion halo collimation at the CERN Large Hadron Collider: benchmark with measurements and cleaning performance evaluation
N.Fuster-Mart\'inez

TL;DR
This paper introduces a new simulation framework coupling Sixtrack and FLUKA to accurately model heavy-ion collimation in the LHC, comparing it with measurements and evaluating its performance for future upgrades.
Contribution
A novel coupled simulation tool for heavy-ion collimation in the LHC, validated against measurements and used for performance prediction.
Findings
Good agreement between simulations and measurements for Pb ions.
The simulation helps optimize collimation system performance.
Insights into loss mechanisms and limits for heavy-ion beams.
Abstract
Protons and heavy-ion beams at unprecedented energies are brought into collisions in the CERN Large Hadron Collider for high-energy experiments. The LHC multi-stage collimation system is designed to provide protection against regular and abnormal losses in order to reduce the risk of quenches of the superconducting magnets as well as keeping background in the experiments under control. Compared to protons, beam collimation in the heavy-ion runs is more challenging despite the lower stored beam energies, because the efficiency of cleaning with heavy ions has been observed to be two orders of magnitude worse. This is due to the differences in the interaction mechanisms between the beams and the collimators. Ion beams experience fragmentation and electromagnetic dissociation at the collimators that result in a substantial flux of off-rigidity particles that escape the collimation system.…
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