MICE Ionization-Cooling Demonstration
Lead Research Organisation:
University of Glasgow
Department Name: School of Physics and Astronomy
Abstract
The Neutrino Factory is a possible future accelerator facility that creates beams of neutrinos from the decays of muons in a storage ring. The neutrino beams from a Neutrino Factory would have the highest intensity and can be controlled with unprecedented accuracy. For these reasons, the Neutrino Factory has the potential to discover measurable differences between neutrino and antineutrino oscillations, which could be the key to understanding the puzzle of the matter-antimatter asymmetry of the universe. This phenomenon, known as CP violation, has been observed in the quark sector but has never been seen in the neutrino sector. A future Neutrino Factory would determine CP violation in the neutrino sector with the best possible accuracy. Furthermore, a Neutrino factory could be used as a first stage before the construction of a Muon Collider, which could be used to measure the properties of the Higgs boson with the ultimate precision, and could potentially reach energies of up to 6 TeV, in order to explore new physics phenomena at the highest energy frontier.
Both the Neutrino Factory and a Muon Collider rely on the acceleration of muons. To be able to create muon accelerator facilities, we require to reduce the size of the muon beam so that it may be accelerated. Since muons decay within 2 microseconds in their own rest frame, the only known way to reduce the phase space of the muon beam before the muons decay is to use the concept of ionisation cooling, in which the muons lose energy in an absorber such as liquid hydrogen or lithium hydride (LiH) and then recover the longitudinal component of the momentum by accelerating them using RF cavities. The international Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment (MICE) is an engineering demonstration of the concept of ionisation cooling. This experiment is being built at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, in which a beam of muons will be cooled in a muon cooling cell consisting of three absorbers and two RF cavities inside the field of two focus coil magnets. The emittance of the beam is measured before and after the cooling channel using a scintillating fibre tracker inside a superconducting solenoid, and the muons are identified using time-of-flight detectors, a Cherenkov detector and a calorimeter system consisting of a scintillating fibre-lead pre-shower detector (named the KL) and a totally active scintillating detector, called the Electron Muon Ranger (EMR).
In this proposal we aim to perform measurements of emittance reduction, without RF cavities (MICE step IV) and perform the final demonstration of ionization cooling with RF cavities. This proposal is a bid for 42 months funding from October 2016 to April 2020, supporting academic and student effort over that period and research staff from the end of the bridging support that ends in December 2016.
Both the Neutrino Factory and a Muon Collider rely on the acceleration of muons. To be able to create muon accelerator facilities, we require to reduce the size of the muon beam so that it may be accelerated. Since muons decay within 2 microseconds in their own rest frame, the only known way to reduce the phase space of the muon beam before the muons decay is to use the concept of ionisation cooling, in which the muons lose energy in an absorber such as liquid hydrogen or lithium hydride (LiH) and then recover the longitudinal component of the momentum by accelerating them using RF cavities. The international Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment (MICE) is an engineering demonstration of the concept of ionisation cooling. This experiment is being built at the Rutherford Appleton Laboratory, in which a beam of muons will be cooled in a muon cooling cell consisting of three absorbers and two RF cavities inside the field of two focus coil magnets. The emittance of the beam is measured before and after the cooling channel using a scintillating fibre tracker inside a superconducting solenoid, and the muons are identified using time-of-flight detectors, a Cherenkov detector and a calorimeter system consisting of a scintillating fibre-lead pre-shower detector (named the KL) and a totally active scintillating detector, called the Electron Muon Ranger (EMR).
In this proposal we aim to perform measurements of emittance reduction, without RF cavities (MICE step IV) and perform the final demonstration of ionization cooling with RF cavities. This proposal is a bid for 42 months funding from October 2016 to April 2020, supporting academic and student effort over that period and research staff from the end of the bridging support that ends in December 2016.
Planned Impact
1) The main impact of the Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment (MICE) is its contribution to the worldwide Accelerator R&D programme. Techniques developed in MICE are essential for future high power proton facilities including the Neutrino Factory and the Muon Collider. These will benefit the worldwide accelerator industry, including the development of future RF cavities that can operate inside magnetic fields, the development of large superconducting technology that may be realised in a simpler and more cost-effective way, and the development of innovative instrumentation to operate at such facilities.
2) The training of accelerator physicists and engineers underpins the increasing use of accelerators in research and industry, including such disparate areas as medical treatment and diagnosis, security applications and power generation. MICE has trained over 67 STFC and university staff and students, including 22 PhD students (12 have graduated and are deploying their skills in industry, such as IT consultancy, the financial sector, IBM and defence industries), 16 post-doctoral and contract staff and 11 faculty (8 PDRA staff
trained on the project have taken their expertise to other projects or to private industry). MICE has developed UK expertise in running a major project in the UK, with 4 STFC and 7 University staff playing senior roles in the project leadership. The expertise in university and STFC staff include: low frequency RF for future accelerators, large Superconducting Solenoids; novel liquid hydrogen handling systems and accelerator instrumentation.
3) The MICE project will benefit the following collaborations: the international MICE collaboration encompassing 34 institutions in 8 countries; the International Design Study for a Neutrino Factory (IDS-NF), (https://www.ids-nf.org/wiki/FrontPage) and the EC-funded EUROnu project (http://www.euronu.org/), the nuSTORM collaboration (http://arxiv.org/pdf/1206.0294v1.pdf), the 'Proton Accelerators for Science and Innovation' (PASI) collaboration, (http://pasi.org.uk/Main_Page).
4) The MICE project is benefitting UK and international industry through engineering and construction partnerships: cryogenic engineering (AS Scientific), collaborative development of unusually large superconducting magnets with closed-circuit cooling with TESLA engineering (UK) and Wang NMR (USA), knowledge exchange in the development of the MICE target with TechVac, Multigrind Watford, ExcelPrecision and CCFE-Babcock, and knowledge exchange with UK industry in the manufacture of RF amplifier components, HT safety systems, high power, high frequency electrical contacts and specialist plating and joining methods.
5) The MICE project is active in the dissemination of its activities, with refereed journal and conference publications, a freely accessible archive record (http://www.mice.iit.edu/), organised outreach activities for school students, participation in the Annual Goldsmiths courses for A-level teachers, participation in the Particle Physics masterclasses, public events, such as the "Accelerator extravaganza" at RAL and the General Public Access Day at RAl (8 July 2015), 15 undergraduate, PGI and summer projects hosted by MICE, publicity through Physics World and the CERN Courier, a prizewinning paper at the "SET for Britain" Meeting in 2009, and other public and media activities.
2) The training of accelerator physicists and engineers underpins the increasing use of accelerators in research and industry, including such disparate areas as medical treatment and diagnosis, security applications and power generation. MICE has trained over 67 STFC and university staff and students, including 22 PhD students (12 have graduated and are deploying their skills in industry, such as IT consultancy, the financial sector, IBM and defence industries), 16 post-doctoral and contract staff and 11 faculty (8 PDRA staff
trained on the project have taken their expertise to other projects or to private industry). MICE has developed UK expertise in running a major project in the UK, with 4 STFC and 7 University staff playing senior roles in the project leadership. The expertise in university and STFC staff include: low frequency RF for future accelerators, large Superconducting Solenoids; novel liquid hydrogen handling systems and accelerator instrumentation.
3) The MICE project will benefit the following collaborations: the international MICE collaboration encompassing 34 institutions in 8 countries; the International Design Study for a Neutrino Factory (IDS-NF), (https://www.ids-nf.org/wiki/FrontPage) and the EC-funded EUROnu project (http://www.euronu.org/), the nuSTORM collaboration (http://arxiv.org/pdf/1206.0294v1.pdf), the 'Proton Accelerators for Science and Innovation' (PASI) collaboration, (http://pasi.org.uk/Main_Page).
4) The MICE project is benefitting UK and international industry through engineering and construction partnerships: cryogenic engineering (AS Scientific), collaborative development of unusually large superconducting magnets with closed-circuit cooling with TESLA engineering (UK) and Wang NMR (USA), knowledge exchange in the development of the MICE target with TechVac, Multigrind Watford, ExcelPrecision and CCFE-Babcock, and knowledge exchange with UK industry in the manufacture of RF amplifier components, HT safety systems, high power, high frequency electrical contacts and specialist plating and joining methods.
5) The MICE project is active in the dissemination of its activities, with refereed journal and conference publications, a freely accessible archive record (http://www.mice.iit.edu/), organised outreach activities for school students, participation in the Annual Goldsmiths courses for A-level teachers, participation in the Particle Physics masterclasses, public events, such as the "Accelerator extravaganza" at RAL and the General Public Access Day at RAl (8 July 2015), 15 undergraduate, PGI and summer projects hosted by MICE, publicity through Physics World and the CERN Courier, a prizewinning paper at the "SET for Britain" Meeting in 2009, and other public and media activities.
Organisations
- University of Glasgow (Lead Research Organisation)
- Budker Institute of Nuclear Physics (BINP) (Collaboration)
- University of Naples (Collaboration)
- University of Iowa (Collaboration)
- University of Kyoto (Collaboration)
- High Energy Accelerator Research Organization (KEK) (Collaboration)
- Argonne National Laboratory (Collaboration)
- University of Northern Illinois (Collaboration)
- European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) (Collaboration)
- University of New Hampshire (Collaboration)
- University of Trieste (Collaboration)
- Cockcroft Institute (Collaboration)
- Harbin Institute of Technology (Collaboration)
- UNIVERSITY OF SHEFFIELD (Collaboration)
- University of Geneva (Collaboration)
- National Institute for Nuclear Physics (Collaboration)
- National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) (Collaboration)
- University of California, Riverside (Collaboration)
- Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory (Collaboration)
- Paul Scherrer Institute (Collaboration)
- Osaka University (Collaboration)
- Brookhaven National Laboratory (Collaboration)
- University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) (Collaboration)
- IMPERIAL COLLEGE LONDON (Collaboration)
- National Institute for Subatomic Physics Nikhef (Collaboration)
- UNIVERSITY OF OXFORD (Collaboration)
- Sofia University (Collaboration)
- Rutherford Appleton Laboratory (Collaboration)
- BRUNEL UNIVERSITY LONDON (Collaboration)
- Muons Inc (Collaboration)
- UNIVERSITY OF LIVERPOOL (Collaboration)
- Fermilab - Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory (Collaboration)
- Daresbury Laboratory (Collaboration)
- University of Mississippi (Collaboration)
- Roma Tre University (Collaboration)
People |
ORCID iD |
Paul Soler (Principal Investigator) | |
Ryan Bayes (Researcher) |
Publications

Adams D
(2019)
First particle-by-particle measurement of emittance in the Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment
in The European Physical Journal C

Adey D
(2017)
Overview of the Neutrinos from Stored Muons Facility - nuSTORM
in Journal of Instrumentation

Asfandiyarov R
(2019)
MAUS: the MICE analysis user software
in Journal of Instrumentation

Bayes R
(2017)
Measurements of muon multiple scattering in MICE
in Journal of Physics: Conference Series

Bogomilov M
(2022)
Multiple Coulomb scattering of muons in lithium hydride
in Physical Review D

Bogomilov M
(2017)
Lattice design and expected performance of the Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment demonstration of ionization cooling
in Physical Review Accelerators and Beams

F.J.P. Soler
(2019)
MICE Results

MICE Collaboration
(2020)
Demonstration of cooling by the Muon Ionization Cooling Experiment.
in Nature
Description | This award discovered muon ionization cooling, a technique to cool beams of muons, essential to deliver a muon collider and a neutrino factory form muon decays. |
Exploitation Route | A future muon collider may be the next high energy frontier machine and is the only machine capable of achieving more than 3 TeV collision energy with leptons. |
Sectors | Electronics Energy Manufacturing including Industrial Biotechology |
URL | http://mice.iit.edu |
Description | Developments of high field magnets that can be used in industry and healthcare. |
First Year Of Impact | 2008 |
Sector | Healthcare,Manufacturing, including Industrial Biotechology |
Impact Types | Economic |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | Argonne National Laboratory |
Country | United States |
Sector | Public |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | Brookhaven National Laboratory |
Country | United States |
Sector | Public |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | Brunel University London |
Department | School of Information Systems, Computing and Mathematics |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | Budker Institute of Nuclear Physics (BINP) |
Country | Russian Federation |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | Cockcroft Institute |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | Daresbury Laboratory |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Private |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN) |
Country | Switzerland |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | Fermilab - Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory |
Country | United States |
Sector | Public |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | Harbin Institute of Technology |
Department | Institute of Cryogenics and Superconductivity Technology |
Country | China |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | High Energy Accelerator Research Organization (KEK) |
Department | Institute of Particle and Nuclear Studies |
Country | Japan |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | Imperial College London |
Department | Department of Physics |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory |
Country | United States |
Sector | Public |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | Muons Inc |
Country | United States |
Sector | Private |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA) |
Department | Jet Propulsion Laboratory |
Country | United States |
Sector | Public |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | National Institute for Nuclear Physics |
Department | National Institute for Nuclear Physics - Pavia |
Country | Italy |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | National Institute for Nuclear Physics |
Department | National Institute for Nuclear Physics - Pavia |
Country | Italy |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | National Institute for Subatomic Physics Nikhef |
Country | Netherlands |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | Osaka University |
Department | Department of Physics |
Country | Japan |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | Paul Scherrer Institute |
Country | Switzerland |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | Roma Tre University |
Country | Italy |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | Rutherford Appleton Laboratory |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | Sofia University |
Department | Department of Atomic Physics |
Country | Bulgaria |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) |
Department | Division of Astronomy & Astrophysics |
Country | United States |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | University of California, Riverside |
Country | United States |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | University of Geneva |
Department | Department of Nuclear and Particle Physics |
Country | Switzerland |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | University of Iowa |
Country | United States |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | University of Kyoto |
Department | Research Reactor Institute |
Country | Japan |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | University of Liverpool |
Department | Department of Physics |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | University of Mississippi |
Country | United States |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | University of Naples |
Department | Department of Physics |
Country | Italy |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | University of New Hampshire |
Country | United States |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | University of Northern Illinois |
Country | United States |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | University of Oxford |
Department | Department of Physics |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | University of Sheffield |
Department | Department of Physics and Astronomy |
Country | United Kingdom |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |
Description | International MICE Collaboration |
Organisation | University of Trieste |
Department | Department of Physics |
Country | Italy |
Sector | Academic/University |
PI Contribution | MICE conditions database, luminosity monitor, MICE Step I data analysis, analysis of MICE target yields |
Collaborator Contribution | Buikding the MICE beam, MICE instrumentation and the MICE cooling channel |
Impact | Construction of the MICE beam, detectors and progress towards construction of the MICE cooling channel |
Start Year | 2006 |