LEP vertical tunnel movement -- Lessons for future colliders
Author(s) -
R. Pitthan
Publication year - 1999
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Reports
DOI - 10.2172/753234
Subject(s) - extrapolation , term (time) , contrast (vision) , scale (ratio) , movement (music) , pessimism , geodesy , magnitude (astronomy) , statistical physics , mathematics , physics , geology , computer science , statistics , geography , cartography , artificial intelligence , acoustics , philosophy , epistemology , quantum mechanics , astronomy
The data from 10 years of vertical surveys verify for all of LEP the previous observation, localized to region P1, that LEP floor movements are predominantly deterministic. This rules out the ATL model as being correct for this tunnel. If generalized, for yearly movements a random ATL model underestimates the possible maximum long-term motions. In contrast, extrapolation of the LEP vertical data to the short-term (hours and days) time-scale shows that the random approach predicts larger short-term movements than the deterministic model. This means that simulations using the ATL hypothesis are overly pessimistic with regard to the frequency of operational re-alignments required. Depending on the constants chosen in the models these differences can be large, of the order of a magnitude and more.
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