Author(s)
| Klyukhin, V.I. (Moscow State U.) ; Amapane, N. (Turin U. ; INFN, Turin) ; Ball, A. (CERN) ; Curé, B. (CERN) ; Gaddi, A. (CERN) ; Gerwig, H. (CERN) ; Mulders, M. (CERN) ; Calvelli, V. (Genoa U. ; INFN, Genoa) ; Hervé, A. (Wisconsin U., Madison) ; Loveless, R. (Wisconsin U., Madison) |
Note
| 7 pages, 5 figures, presented at 4th International Conference on Superconductivity and Magnetism 2014, April 27 - May 2, 2014, Antalya, Turkey. arXiv admin note: substantial text overlap with arXiv:1605.08778; text overlap with arXiv:1212.1657 |
Abstract
| The Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) is a general purpose detector, designed to run at the highest luminosity at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC). Its distinctive features include a 4-T superconducting solenoid with 6-m-diameter by 12.5-m-length free bore, enclosed inside a 10,000-ton return yoke made of construction steel. The return yoke consists of five dodecagonal three-layered barrel wheels and four end-cap disks at each end comprised of steel blocks up to 620 mm thick, which serve as the absorber plates of the muon detection system. To measure the field in and around the steel, a system of 22 flux loops and 82 three-dimensional (3-D) Hall sensors is installed on the return yoke blocks. A TOSCA 3-D model of the CMS magnet is developed to describe the magnetic field everywhere outside the tracking volume measured with the field-mapping machine. The magnetic field description is compared with the measurements and discussed. |