Jefferson Lab Weekly Briefs September 21, 2011

Jefferson Lab Weekly Briefs
September 21, 2011

12 GeV Upgrade

An intermediate design review has been held for the horizontal bend dipole magnet for the Hall C Super High Momentum Spectrometer (SHMS), and the final design review for the Q1 quadrupole magnet is set for early October. Contract awards are being readied for the first two major sections of the main spectrometer carriage, and the rails have arrived. The first large orders of parts have arrived at the power supply vendor for the five large supplies for the SHMS. Scintillator hodoscope assembly is proceeding well and mirror parts for the heavy gas Cerenkov and quartz bars for the quartz hodoscope are in hand.

Physics

In Hall A, preparations for the run period continued. Controls for the magnets are being installed and more beamline elements have been installed. The detectors are nearly ready. The target is assembled and is being cooled down for tests. Hall A staffers are behind schedule because of delivery of parts (e.g. the parts for the beam dump). So far, this does not affect the start date for the experiment.

Accelerator

Work continues in the injector for the Polarized Electrons for Polarized Positrons experiment, with the second pedestal and polarimeter table positioned in the tunnel. Dump work at 0L07 continued unabated with shielding stacked in place. Radiofrequency system commissioning work continued on SL24. The North Linac to Machine Control Center trench work continued, with good progress being made. Low-conductivity water was circulated through various box supplies in the W1, W2 and beam switchyard buildings. In addition, box power supply drop tests were completed.

Free-Electron Laser

The FEL team made progress, getting beam through the injector setup successfully and working to get beam to the energy-recovery dump. The group successfully set up rf operations, except for one cavity that appears to have excessive losses. A warmup of that module is scheduled for next week in an attempt to fix the problem. Delivery of the ultraviolet wiggler from STI occurred on Friday. It will be placed in the FEL vault this week.

Center for Theoretical and Computational Physics

In a recent paper, the results of a high-statistics, multi-volume lattice QCD exploration of two baryon systems at a pion mass of 390 MeV have been presented. The H-dibaryon and Ξ- Ξ- system are found to be clearly bound at this pion mass. There are indications that both the deuteron and the di-neutron are also bound at this pion mass, with binding energies of Bd = 11(5)(12) MeV and Bnn = 7.1(5.2)(7.3) MeV, respectively.

Engineering

The Survey and Alignment group has been busy throughout the site over the last month. Some of the major activities include:

  • supporting g2p installation in Hall A;
  • fiducializing a set of the Hall B 12 GeV region 3 detector end plates;
  • aligning the Hall B HD-Ice target for the 6 GeV run;
  • re-aligning and verifying Hall C's Q-weak installation;
  • aligning cryomodule C100-1 and the associated warm girders;
  • fiducializing C100-2 in the Test Lab;
  • fiducializing a cryomodule space frame in the test lab;
  • finishing the final alignment of the west arc dipoles;
  • and continuing initial alignment (pre-hookup) of the arc 10 components and magnets.

 

For much of the month, the group worked on a surface control survey to support bringing the beam from the CEBAF accelerator to Hall D and a network of control points within the hall. This is in preparation for the installation of the first major equipment in the hall: the solenoid magnet.

Additionally, the group checked the status of some of the magnets after the August earthquake. Four of the 32 stacks of magnets in the arcs and some Hall C components were inspected to check for movement. The results in the accelerator appear to indicate that there was a negligible amount of movement of the checked components. In Hall C, data taken immediately before the event in the hall seem to again indicate very few effects from the earthquake. Since other components had not been measured immediately before the earthquake, the group was not able to make direct comparisons.

Environment, Safety, Health and Quality

Hazards Under Your Desk
It's easy to fall into a routine of being more aware of safety issues in industrial areas of the workplace, while ignoring hazards that could lurk in typical office settings. Take a few moments to look at all the cords and cables that run to your phone, computer, lamps or etc. at your desk or workstation. How close are they to your feet as they hang down or loop around where you can’t see them? Secure any dangling cords that could become a trip hazard. Remove any inappropriately stored items and clear your area of general clutter that could better be housed elsewhere. Ensure a clear path is available to trash and recycling bins, so that these items do not impede movement through your area, and that all work areas in your office or workstation are safely accessible.

Announcements

American Red Cross Blood Drive
The next American Red Cross Blood Drive is scheduled for Tuesday, Oct. 4, 10 a.m.- 4 p.m. in CEBAF Center, Room F113. New and repeat donors are encouraged to attend. Appointments and walk-ins are welcome. To schedule an appointment, contact Johnie Banks, x7539.

JLab Travel Bookings Managed Through Rearden
There are so many search engines promising so much. But what none of the public sites can do is manage the JLab travel program. Only travel professionals using branded, managed travel sites from experienced Travel Management Companies can control spending, manage data and reduce security risk for our travelers. Consequently, JLab has contracted with CI Travel for their online travel system, Rearden. With Rearden, you can view and initiate personal, and possibly business flights, hotels and car rentals. Each reservation made in Rearden is reviewed by a live agent to ensure the JLab policy is being met and there are no loopholes in the terms of purchase. Ticket changes, cancellations and re-issues are fast and simple to arrange. JLab uses Rearden exclusively for the purchase of all JLab business-related domestic flights. Speak with Travel Services, x7519, or your department administrator about getting an account on Rearden today.

Add Your Voice to A National Dialog on Improving Federal Websites
The federal government wants to re-invent how it delivers information and services online, and the .gov Task Force needs your help. Join the conversation with web experts, policymakers and everyday citizens about the practices, policies and principles you think should guide federal websites. Results will directly inform recommendations for a National Web Strategy, developed by the .gov Task Force.

Tracking Thomas at JLab
Little Thomas is visiting all corners of the JLab campus. If you can identify his location this week, email Kandice Carter with your guess. Guesses are accepted through Fridays.

A belated congratulations for correctly guessing the Sept. 7 location goes to Michael Haddox-Schatz. Congratulations this week go to Jason Willoughby, Harry Fanning and Valerie Bookwalter, who were the first to correctly identify the Sept. 14 location. Honorable mentions go to Ryan Bodenstein, Dick Owen, HyeKyoung Park, Brita Hampton, Stephanie Vermeire, Pashupati Dhakal, Michelle Shinn, Zhe Chen and Amy Lovell. Check out the Tracking Thomas webpage for a better view of his last location and this week's new mystery photo.

JLab Calendar of Events

Sept. 26: Safety Shoe Vendor onsite
Oct. 4: American Red Cross Blood Drive
Oct. 18-20: DOE Project Review of the 12 GeV Upgrade
Oct. 19: Colloquium and Public Lecture, 4 p.m., CC auditorium
Oct. 25: Science Series public lecture
Nov. 6: Daylight Saving Time ends
Nov. 24-25: Thanksgiving holiday; JLab closed