Design of the LBNF Beamline Target Station

Salman Tariq,Kavin Ammigan,K. Anderson, S. A. Buccellato, Cory Francis Crowley, Brian Hartsell,Patrick Hurh,J. Hylen, P. Kasper, G. E. Krafczyk, A. Lee,Byron Lundberg,Sarah Reitzner, Vladimir Sidorov,Andrew Stefanik, I. S. Tropin,Kamran Vaziri, Karlton Williams,Robert Zwaska,Chris Densham

arXiv: Accelerator Physics(2016)

Cited 23|Views36
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Abstract
The Long Baseline Neutrino Facility (LBNF) project will build a beamline located at Fermilab to create and aim an intense neutrino beam of appropriate energy range toward the DUNE detectors at the SURF facility in Lead, South Dakota. Neutrino production starts in the Target Station, which consists of a solid target, magnetic focusing horns, and the associated sub-systems and shielding infrastructure. Protons hit the target producing mesons which are then focused by the horns into a helium-filled decay pipe where they decay into muons and neutrinos. The target and horns are encased in actively cooled steel and concrete shielding in a chamber called the target chase. The reference design chase is filled with air, but nitrogen and helium are being evaluated as alternatives. A replaceable beam window separates the decay pipe from the target chase. The facility is designed for initial operation at 1.2 MW, with the ability to upgrade to 2.4 MW, and is taking advantage of the experience gained by operating Fermilab’s NuMI facility. We discuss here the design status, associated challenges, and ongoing Ru0026D and physics-driven component optimization of the Target Station.
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