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Green, M.A.; Eberhard, P.H.; Ross, R.R.; Taylor, J.D.
California Univ., Berkeley (USA). Lawrence Berkeley Lab1979
California Univ., Berkeley (USA). Lawrence Berkeley Lab1979
AbstractAbstract
[en] High energy colliding beam physics often requires large detectors which contain large volumes of magnetic field. The TPC (Time Projection Chamber) experiment at PEP will use a 1.5T magnetic field within a cylindrical volume which is 2.04m in diameter bounded by iron poles which are separated by a gap of 3.25m. The TPC magnet, built in 1979 by the Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory (LBL), is the largest high current density superconducting magnet built to date. It is designed to operate at a current density of 7 x 108Am-2 and a stored energy of 11MJ, and it is protected by shorted secondary windings during a quench. The paper describes the basic parameters of the TPC magnet and the results of the first subassembly tests at LBL
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Aug 1979; 19 p; Cryogenic engineering conference; Madison, WI, USA; 21 - 24 Aug 1979; CONF-790815--28; Available from NTIS., PC A02/MF A01
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Conference
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