The acceleration and storage of radioactive ions for a neutrino factory
/ Authors
B. Autin, M. Benedikt, S. Hancock, H. Haseroth, A. Jansson, U. Koester, M. Lindroos, S. Russenschuck, F. Wenander, M. G. Cern
and 2 more authors
/ Abstract
The term beta-beam has been coined for the production of a pure beam of electron neutrinos or their antiparticles through the decay of radioactive ions circulating in a storage ring. This concept requires radioactive ions to be accelerated to a Lorentz gamma of 150 for 6 He and 60 for 18 Ne. The neutrino source itself consists of a storage ring for this energy range, with long straight sections in line with the experiment(s). Such a decay ring does not exist at CERN today, nor does a high -intensity proton source for the production of the radioactive ions. Nevertheless, the existing CERN accelerator infrastructure could be used as this would still represent an important saving for a betabeam facility. This paper outlines the first study, while some of the more speculative ideas will need further investigations.