5. Annual MT Meeting

Europe/Berlin
various rooms, please see programme (Helmholtz Institute Jena)

various rooms, please see programme

Helmholtz Institute Jena

Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
Peter Michel (HZDR), Ties Behnke (DESY)
Description

The fifth annual meeting of the programme "Matter and Technologies" will take place at Helmholtz Institute Jena from Tuesday, March 5, 2019 to Thursday, March 7, 2019.

The day before the workshop, Monday, March 4, 2019, there will be the opportunity for topical meetings. In addition the students connected to the programme will organize the "Fifth MT student retreat", starting around noon on Monday.

 

Link to 4th Matter and Technology Meeting photo: https://indico.desy.de/indico/event/19923/material/slides/0.jpg

 

 

Conference booklet
Participants
  • Adrian Rodriguez Rodriguez
  • Akira Mochihashi
  • Alessandro Marras
  • Alessia Renardi
  • Alexander Blinne
  • Alexander Debus
  • Alexander Kessler
  • Alexander Köhler
  • Alexander Sävert
  • Alexandre Gumberidze
  • Ambra Provenza
  • Andrea Bellandi
  • Andreas Ebersoldt
  • Andreas Fleischmann
  • Andreas Jankowiak
  • Andreas Lehrach
  • Andreas Mussgiller
  • Andreas Seidel
  • Andrei Maalberg
  • Andrey Volotka
  • André Arnold
  • Anke-Susanne Müller
  • Anna Hützen
  • Anton Malygin
  • Arie Irman
  • Arno Klenke
  • Arti Dangwal Pandey
  • Benjamin Lutz
  • Bifeng Lei
  • Binghui Zhu
  • Carola Zepter
  • Christian Henkel
  • Christian Joachim Schmidt
  • Christian Koschitzki
  • Christian Rödel
  • Christiane Buchwald-Kayser
  • Christoph Burandt
  • Christoph Caesar
  • Christoph Hahn
  • Christoph Wissing
  • Cornelia Wunderer
  • Danyal Winters
  • David Pennicard
  • Dennis Schumacher
  • Diana Jahn
  • Dominic Greiffenberg
  • Dominik Hollatz
  • Doris Eckstein
  • Elmar Vogel
  • Erik Bründermann
  • Erwin Agustin Cano Vargas
  • Farsane Baraki
  • Felipe Cezar Salgado
  • Felix Kröger
  • Florian Grüner
  • Francesco Valenti
  • Frank Gaede
  • Frank Schmidl
  • Frank Stephan
  • Franz X. Kärtner
  • Friederike Januschek
  • Georg Becker
  • Gerhard G. Paulus
  • Guan Shu
  • Guido Juckeland
  • Hans Weise
  • Harsh Harsh
  • Heide Meißner
  • Heike Prokoph
  • Heinz Graafsma
  • Hendrik Jansen
  • Holger Schlarb
  • Hui Zhang
  • Ilja Bohnet
  • J. Michael Klopf
  • Jan Dreyling-Eschweiler
  • Jan Stephan
  • Jana Schaber
  • Jens Knobloch
  • Jens Osterhoff
  • Jens Viefhaus
  • Jimmy Garland
  • Jochen Teichert
  • Johann Heuser
  • Jonas Christian Wolff
  • Jonas Ohland
  • Jonathan Correa
  • Josefine Metzkes-Ng
  • João Branco
  • Julia Bränzel
  • Julian List
  • Julien Branlard
  • Jurjen Couperus Cabadağ
  • Kantaphon Damminsek
  • Karsten Buesser
  • Kilian Schwarz
  • Klaus Steiniger
  • Klaus Zenker
  • Kseniia Bastrakova
  • Kui Zhou
  • Lars Bozyk
  • Lars Eisenblätter
  • Lieselotte Obst-Hübl
  • Louise Springer
  • Lutz Winkelmann
  • Malte Kaluza
  • Marc Günther
  • Marc Oliver Herdrich
  • Marc Schneider
  • Marc Weber
  • Marc Wenskat
  • Marco Garten
  • Marco Vockert
  • Maria Reuter
  • Markus Ackermann
  • Markus Büscher
  • Marta Baselga
  • Martin Müller
  • Matt Zepf
  • Matthew Schwab
  • Matthias Balzer
  • Matthias Gross
  • Matthias Kleifges
  • Matthias Reukauff
  • Max Mäusezahl
  • Mei Bai
  • Mengqing Wu
  • Merve Dogan
  • Michael Fiederle
  • Michael Nasse
  • Michael Wiebusch
  • Michele Caselle
  • Mikhail Krasilnikov
  • Mingyuan Shi
  • Mohammad Al-Turany
  • Moritz Guthoff
  • Mykyta Haranko
  • Nick Karcher
  • Niels Pyka
  • Nikolay Shurkhno
  • Nils Lockmann
  • Nina Elkina
  • Oleg Kiselev
  • Olin Pinto
  • Oliver Forstner
  • Oliver Sander
  • Oliver Schäfer
  • Oskar Reichelt
  • Osnan Maragoto Rodriguez
  • Patrick Stiller
  • Paul Goslawski
  • Paul Schütze
  • Pavel Evtushenko
  • Peng-Wei Huang
  • Peter Hilz
  • Peter Michel
  • Philip Pfäfflein
  • Pooyan Khademi
  • Rajesh Ganai
  • Ralf Diener
  • Ralf Gebel
  • Ralph Assmann
  • Ricardo Monroy-Villa
  • Richard Gebauer
  • Richard Pausch
  • Rikhav Shah
  • Roberto Blanco
  • Ross McHugh
  • Sara Casalbuoni
  • Saskia Baier
  • Sebastian Keppler
  • Sebastian Klammes
  • Sergei Bastrakov
  • Shahab Sanjari
  • Shaifali Mehta
  • Shuai Ma
  • Silvia Masciocchi
  • Simon Lauber
  • Simone Aumüller
  • Sobhy Kholaif
  • Stefan Tietze
  • Stefano Maffessanti
  • Stephan Stern
  • Steve Aplin
  • Sumera Kousar
  • Surabhi Sharma
  • Suren Chilingaryan
  • Susanne Schöbel
  • Sven Stubbe
  • Theresa Brümmer
  • Thomas Gutberlet
  • Thomas Krings
  • Thomas Kurz
  • Thomas Kühner
  • Thomas Stöhlker
  • Thomas Teter
  • Thorsten Kamps
  • Thorsten Kollegger
  • Thorsten Lamb
  • Ties Behnke
  • Tim Wilksen
  • Tino Lang
  • Torsten Laurus
  • Ulrich Schramm
  • Ulrich Trunk
  • Uwe Spillmann
  • Vincent Bagnoud
  • Volker Gülzow
  • Volker Tympel
  • Wilko Middents
  • Wim Leemans
  • Winfried Barth
  • Wolfgang Hillert
  • Xiang Rong
  • Xiangkun Li
  • Ye Chen
  • Yenyu Chang
  • Yuki Nojiri
  • Yunlong Zhang
  • Yves Kemp
    • 09:00 12:00
      MT organisation: POF IV Proposal planning in topics (restricted attendance) Max-Wien-Platz 1, Seminarraum 1

      Max-Wien-Platz 1, Seminarraum 1

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
    • 13:00 15:10
      Plenary Session various rooms, please see programme

      various rooms, please see programme

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
      Convener: Peter Michel (ELBE)
      • 13:00
        Welcome at Jena/ HIJ 5m
        Speaker: Thomas Stöhlker (HIJ)
      • 13:05
        Welcome 10m
        Speaker: Helmut Dosch (DESY)
      • 13:15
        Introduction/ Opening 5m
        Speaker: Ties Behnke (DESY)
        Slides
      • 13:20
        Quantum Computing 45m
        Speaker: Kristel Michielsen (FZJ)
        Slides
      • 14:05
        Trigger and DAQ 45m
        Speaker: Dave Newbold (STFC)
        Slides
      • 14:50
        Status ARD 20m
        Speaker: Andreas Jankowiak (HZB)
        Slides
    • 15:10 15:35
      Coffee break 25m HS 1, Max-Wien-Platz 1

      HS 1, Max-Wien-Platz 1

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
    • 15:35 17:00
      Plenary Session: Plenary Session II various rooms, please see programme

      various rooms, please see programme

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
      Convener: Anke-Susanne Mueller (KIT)
      • 15:35
        Status DTS 20m
        Speaker: Marc Weber (KIT)
        Slides
      • 15:55
        Microelectronics and ASIC developments 45m
        Speakers: Mehmet Kaynak (Leibnitz Institut Frankfurt/ Oder), Roland Sorge
        Slides
      • 16:40
        Status DMA 20m
        Speaker: Michael Bussmann (Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden - Rossendorf)
        Slides
    • 17:00 18:00
      Poster Session: Speed Talks various rooms, please see programme

      various rooms, please see programme

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
      Convener: Ties Behnke (DESY)
      • 17:00
        Unexpected impact of radiation reaction on laser wake field generation 3m
        Radiation reaction effect is expected to effectively modify the plasma dynamics at ultra-intense laser intensities (intensity $I \simeq 10^{23}–10^{24}$ W/cm$^2$). We show that enhancement of radiation pressure due to radiation reaction acting in the direction transverse to the laser pulse propagation. This effect is especially pronounced for stronger and longer laser pulses transversing plasma slab of sub-critical density. Under such conditions this mechanism dominates over the ordinary ponderomotive pressure, thus resulting in a substantially stronger charge separation than anticipated previously. We give estimates of the effect and compare them with the results of one and two dimensional particle-in-cell simulations. This effect can be important for laser-based plasma wake acceleration schemes.
        Speaker: Nina Elkina (HI-Jena)
        Slides
      • 17:05
        A Highly Granular SiPM-on-tile Hadron Calorimeter Prototype 3m
        The Analogue Hadron Calorimeter (AHCAL) developed by the CALICE collaboration is a sampling highly granular calorimeter foreseen for a future Linear Collider experiment. It consists of steel absorber plates as absorber material and plastic scintillator tiles readout by silicon photomultipliers (SiPMs) as active material. The front end electronics is integrated into the active layers. In 2017 and 2018 a large prototype, scalable to a full linear collider detector, has been built. It is made of 38 layers, each containing 576 channels, arranged on readout boards and grouped according to the 36 channel readout chips. The prototype has been commissioned at DESY and tested in muons, electrons and pions beam at CERN SPS. In this poster, the prototype design and the test beam activity will be presented.
        Speaker: Ambra Provenza (Desy)
        Slides
      • 17:10
        Ongoing and future projects at BESSY II/VSR - Steps towards a BESSY II successor - 3m
        Ongoing and future projects at BESSY II as EMIL, BESSY VSR, TRIBs will be descriebed and their potential impact for a BESSY II successor discussed.
        Speaker: Paul Goslawski (Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin, HZB)
        Poster
      • 17:15
        A Particle Reduction Tool for Particle-in-Cell Plasma Simulation 3m
        Large-scale particle-in-cell plasma simulations on modern supercomputers often involve handling immense amounts of macroparticles, which poses a challenge in terms of computational and memory resources. Furthermore, the amount of macroparticles could grow throughout a simulation due to accounting for such processes as ionization or creation of electron-positron pairs. In such situations, a common approach to alleviate the growth in computational demands is occasionally reducing the amount of simulated macroparticles, while preserving the main physical invariants and representing the same distribution. Particle reduction is also helpful for complex simulation workflows involving chaining several software tools, which might have substantially different requirements. There are several established approaches to performing particle reduction in the context of particle-in-cell simulation, based on subsampling or merging nearby macroparticles. We present a new open scriptable data-centric workflow for performing particle reduction based on the open meta-data standard openPMD. It implements a few established algorithms and provides a numerical evaluation of distortions inflicted on the distribution functions due to particle reduction. We present a computational evaluation of the implemented algorithms on input data of different scales.
        Speaker: Kseniia Bastrakova (HZDR)
        Slides
      • 17:20
        Scaling EUV and X-ray Thomson Sources to Optical Free-Electron Laser Operation with Traveling-Wave Thomson-Scattering 3m
        Traveling-Wave Thomson-Scattering (TWTS) is a novel Thomson scattering geometry which allows for orders of magnitude higher photon yields than classic head-on Thomson sources. TWTS thereby remains compact and provides narrowband and ultra-short ultraviolet to γ-ray radiation pulses just as classic Thomson sources. Even the realization of optical free-electron lasers is possible with the TWTS geometry since it provides both optical undulators with thousands of periods needed to microbunch the electron beam and a reduction of electron beam quality requirements compared to classic Thomson scattering to a level technically feasible today. TWTS employs a side-scattering geometry depicted in fig. 1. Laser and electron propagation direction of motion enclose the interaction angle ϕ. Tilting the laser pulse front with respect to the wave front by half the interaction angle ensures continuous overlap of electrons and laser pulse over the whole laser pulse width while the laser pulse crosses the electron beam trajectory. In this way the interaction length becomes controllable by the laser pulse width and independent of the laser pulse duration. Utilizing wide, petawatt class laser pulses for TWTS allows to realize thousands of optical undulator periods. The variability of TWTS with respect to the interaction angle can be used to control the radiation wavelength even for electron sources with fixed energy. For a fixed target wavelength on the other hand, the free choice of interaction angle enables control over electron beam quality requirements. Small interaction angle scenarios (ϕ∼10°) typically yield the best trade-off between requirements on electron beam quality, laser power and laser intensity stability. In the talk we will show that TWTS OFELs emitting extreme ultraviolet radiation are realizable today with existing technology for electron accelerators and laser systems. We detail an experimental setup to generate the tilted TWTS laser pulses which aims at compactness and provides focusing of these high-power pulses and compensation of dispersion accompanying pulse-front tilts. The method presented for dispersion compensation is especially relevant when building high yield X- and γ-ray sources in large interaction angle setups of TWTS.
        Speakers: Dr Alexander Debus (a.debus@hzdr.de), Klaus Steiniger (Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf)
        Slides
      • 17:25
        Phonon traps to reduce the quasiparticle density in superconducting circuits 3m
        Out of equilibrium quasiparticles (QPs) are a main source of dissipation and noise in superconducting circuits. The generation-recombination processes of QPs link their dynamics to the phonon dynamics of the circuit and substrate ensemble. We demonstrate that surrounding granular aluminum resonators with lower gapped aluminum islands increases the internal quality factors of the resonators in the single photon regime, suppresses the noise, and reduces the rate of observed QP generation events, which we all attribute to phonon trapping.
        Speaker: Francesco Valenti (KIT)
        Slides
      • 17:30
        Niobium surface investigation for RF cavity applications 3m
        Thermal treatments of SRF Nb cavities – including the well-established 120°C bake and the recently reported N-infusion - are shown to improve the cavity performance significantly; however, the underlying physical phenomenon is not fully understood yet. We have chosen a much simpler system of Nb(100) single-crystals heated in different vacuum conditions and nitrogen partial pressures. In-situ X-ray reflectivity and photoelectron spectroscopy measurements were performed to monitor the changes in the elemental species on the surface during thermal treatments. Electron microscopy, x-ray diffraction, energy dispersive X-ray spectroscopy and time-of-flight –secondary ion mass spectroscopy were applied to observe the surface topography, crystallinity and depth profiles of the elements present in the near-surface region. Some samples were treated together with cavities, whose surface properties are also discussed with reference to the cavity-test results.
        Speaker: Arti Dangwal Pandey (DESY Hamburg)
        Slides
      • 17:35
        The Silicon Tracking System of CBM getting ready for experiment 3m
        The Compressed Baryonic Matter (CBM) experiment at the FAIR facility will explore the QCD phase diagram at very high baryon densities, where a first order phase transition from hadronic to partonic matter as well as a chiral phase transition is expected to occur. The Silicon Tracking System is the central detector for charged-particle identification and momentum measurement. It is designed to measure up to 1000 particles in A+A collision rates between 0.1 and 10 MHz, to achieve a momentum resolution in a 1 Tm dipole magnetic field of better than 2%, and to be capable of identifying complex particle decays topologies, e.g., such with strangeness content. The STS employs high-granularity double-sided sensors matching the non-uniform track density and fast self-triggering electronics with a free streaming data acquisition system and online event selection. With the resulting 1.8 million readout channels, it poses the most demanding requirements regarding bandwidth and density of all CBM detectors. The STS functional building block is a module consisting of a sensor, micro-cables and two front-end electronics boards. The modules are mounted on carbon fiber support ladders. The silicon sensors provide double-sided segmentation at a strip pitch of 58 µm and 7.5-degree stereo angle. Ultra-thin micro-cables with up to 50 cm length transfer the sensor signals to the electronics located out of the detector acceptance. The custom-developed read-out ASIC “STS-XYTER” has a self-triggering architecture that delivers time and amplitude information per channel. Towards the phase 0 of the CBM experiment, mini CBM (mCBM), a precursor of the full CBM with detector units from all subsystems, the STS will contribute with two tracking stations consisting of a total of 13 modules. The mCBM will allow to test and optimize the detector performance, including the data acquisition chain under realistic experimental conditions and its integration with the other subsystems. This presentation aims to show an overview of the development status of the module components, readout chain, first test results and system integration in a framework of the mCBM campaign at SIS18 at GSI.
        Speaker: Adrian Rodriguez Rodriguez (Goethe Universitaet Frankfurt am Main)
        Slides
      • 17:40
        Hybrid plasma accelerators - LWFA-PWFA simulations with PIConGPU 3m
        Utilizing laser-wakefield accelerated (LWFA) electrons to drive a plasma-wakefield accelerator (PWFA) holds great promise for realizing centimeter-scale electron accelerators providing ultra-high brightness beams. Recent experiments at HZDR could demonstrate for the first time such an electron acceleration in a nonlinear PWFA plasma wakefield using this compact setup. On this poster, we show recent results of the accompanying simulation campaign performed with the 3D3V particle-in-cell code PIConGPU. These simulations model the geometry, density distributions, laser modes, and gas dopings as determined in the experiments. The simulation conditions resemble the experiment to a very high degree and thus provide precise comparability between experiment and simulation. Additionally, the wealth of information provided by the in-situ data analysis of PIConGPU provides insight into the plasma dynamic, otherwise inaccessible in experiments. Algorithmic and computational challenges essential for the numerical stability of these long-duration simulations will be presented as well.
        Speaker: Richard Pausch (HZDR)
        Slides
      • 17:45
        Microwave readout of SQUID multiplexed MMCs: Software-defined radio for the ECHo experiment 3m
        The Electron Capture Holmium-163 (ECHo) experiment investigate the electron neutrino mass. It utilizes an array of metallic magnetic calorimeters to acquire a high statistic decay spectrum of Holmium-163. To read out the frequency multiplexed array the KIT - IPE is building a large bandwidth software-defined radio system for ECHo. The basic concept of acquisition and processing will be presented on the poster.
        Speaker: Nick Karcher (KIT - IPE)
        Slides
      • 17:50
        Achieving highest proton intensities and beam shaping with a laser-driven ion beamline 3m
        In the past two decades, the generation of intense ion beams based on laser-driven sources became an extensively investigated and promising field. The LIGHT collaboration combines a laser-driven proton source with conventional accelerator technology. In this context, a laser-driven multi-MeV ion beamline was realized at the GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung. A 100 TW-beam from the local PHELIX laser drives the TNSA source resulting in a exponentially decaying TNSA spectrum. In the second step, protons with an energy of 8 MeV are selected via chromatic focusing with a pulsed high-field solenoid. Afterwards, they are injected into an rf cavity and rotated in phase-space allowing to create energy- or time-compressed particle bunches. Finally, a second solenoid is used for final focusing achieving a focal spot of 1.1 mm x 1.2 mm (FWHM). On this poster, the complete beamline with its focusing capabilities at the interaction point 6 m away from source will be demonstrated.
        Speaker: Diana Jahn (Technische Universität Darmstadt)
        Slides
    • 18:00 18:15
      Transfer 15m various rooms, please see programme

      various rooms, please see programme

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
    • 18:15 22:00
      Poster Session: Poster Display with Reception Mensa Philosophenweg, Philosophenweg 20

      Mensa Philosophenweg, Philosophenweg 20

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
    • 09:00 10:30
      ARD Parallel Session: SubTopics - Status and Outlook PoF IV HS 1, Max-Wien-Platz 1

      HS 1, Max-Wien-Platz 1

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
      Convener: Jens Osterhoff (DESY)
      • 09:00
        ST1 – Advanced cw SRF systems 22m
        Speaker: Jens Knobloch (HZB)
      • 09:22
        ST2 – Optimisation of hadron-/ electron accelerators for ultimate intensities and stability 22m
        Speakers: Dr Niels Pyka (GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung GmbH), Peter Spiller (GSI)
        Slides
      • 09:44
        ST3 – Advanced concepts for beam controls, diagnostics and dynamics 22m
        Speaker: Dr Holger Schlarb (DESY)
      • 10:06
        ST4 – Novel concepts for ultra-compact accelerators and their application 22m
        Speaker: Prof. Ulrich Schramm (HZDR)
    • 09:00 10:30
      DMA parallel session: DMA Übersicht Zentren HS 2, Helmholtzweg 5

      HS 2, Helmholtzweg 5

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
      • 09:00
        DESY 15m
        Speaker: Dr Yves Kemp (DESY)
        Slides
      • 09:15
        FZJ 15m
      • 09:30
        GSI 15m
        Slides
      • 09:45
        HZB 15m
      • 10:00
        HZG 15m
      • 10:15
        HZDR 15m
        Slides
    • 09:00 10:30
      DTS parallel session: Convener: Heinz Graafsma HS 4, Helmholtzweg 5

      HS 4, Helmholtzweg 5

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
      • 09:00
        DTS parallel session: Introduction to the day 10m
        Speaker: Marc Weber (KIT)
      • 09:10
        High-Z detectors 20m
        Speaker: Dominic Greiffenberg (PSI)
      • 09:30
        Discussion 4m
      • 09:34
        Development of a CZT-detector based Compton camera for MeV astronomy with small satellites 20m
        Speaker: Markus Ackermann (DESY Zeuthen)
        Slides
      • 09:54
        Discussion 4m
      • 09:58
        Low Gain Avalanche Detectors for Timing Applications 20m
        Speaker: Marta Baselga (KIT)
        Slides
      • 10:18
        Discussion 4m
    • 10:30 11:00
      Coffee break 30m Max-Wien-Platz 1

      Max-Wien-Platz 1

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
    • 11:00 13:00
      ARD Parallel Session: Scientific Highlights HS 1, Max-Wien-Platz 1

      HS 1, Max-Wien-Platz 1

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
      Convener: Prof. Andreas Lehrach (Forschungszentrum Jülich, RWTH Aachen University)
      • 11:00
        FLASHForward first results - plasma based energy dechirping 17m
        Speaker: Jens Osterhoff (DESY)
        Slides
      • 11:17
        Beam driven plasma wakefield acceleration results from PITZ 17m
        Speaker: Dr Matthias Gross (DESY)
        Slides
      • 11:34
        Digital LLRF Operation using MicroTCA at ELBE 17m
        Speaker: Klaus Zenker (Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf)
        Slides
      • 11:51
        RF control challenges and results for a CW operation of the European XFEL 17m
        Speaker: Julien Branlard (DESY)
        Slides
        summary
      • 12:08
        Attosecond RF field receivers for next generation RF control systems 17m
        Speaker: Ms Louise Springer (DESY)
        Slides
      • 12:25
        Heavy ion beam test with the cw-CH-cavity 17m
        Speaker: Dr Christoph Burandt (GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung GmbH)
        Slides
      • 12:42
        An all-superconducting gun for CW FEL operations 17m
        Speaker: Elmar Vogel (DESY)
        Slides
    • 11:00 13:00
      DMA parallel session: DMA ST2 HS 2, Helmholtzweg 5

      HS 2, Helmholtzweg 5

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
      • 11:20
        Generic Software tools for HEP 20m
        Speaker: Frank Gaede (DESY)
        Slides
      • 11:40
        Generic tools for particle and nuclear physics experiments 20m
        Speaker: Dr Mohammad Al-Turany (GSI Helmholz)
        Slides
      • 12:00
        Making X-Ray Imaging Fast Again 20m
        Speaker: Heide Meissner (HZDR)
        Slides
      • 12:20
        How to: One code for CPUs, GPUs & FPGAs with Alpaka 20m
        Speaker: Dr Sergei Bastrakov (HZDR)
      • 12:40
        Discussion Synergies ST2 20m
    • 11:00 13:00
      DTS parallel session: Convener: Christian Schmidt HS 4, Helmholtzweg 5

      HS 4, Helmholtzweg 5

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
      • 11:00
        Towards heterogeneous FPGA architectures and application examples 20m
        Speaker: Oliver Sander (KIT)
        Slides
      • 11:20
        Discussion 4m
      • 11:24
        CMS phase 2 tracker end cap design and integration 20m
        Speaker: Andreas Mussgiller (DESY)
        Slides
      • 11:44
        Discussion 4m
      • 11:48
        TimePix3 readout electronics development 20m
        Speaker: Jonathan Correa (DESY)
        Slides
      • 12:08
        Discussion 4m
      • 12:12
        Diamond and Silicon based fast beam condition monitoring 20m
        Speaker: Moritz Guthoff (DESY)
        Slides
      • 12:32
        Discussion 2m
      • 12:34
        Schottky detectors for storage ring experiments at GSI (and FAIR) 20m
        Speaker: Shahab Sanjari (GSI)
        Slides
      • 12:54
        Discussion 4m
    • 13:00 14:00
      Lunch 1h Mensa Philosophenweg, Philosophenweg 20

      Mensa Philosophenweg, Philosophenweg 20

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
    • 14:00 16:00
      ARD Parallel Session: Scientific Highlights HS 1, Max-Wien-Platz 1

      HS 1, Max-Wien-Platz 1

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
      Convener: Prof. Peter Michel (ELBE)
      • 14:00
        Overview and highlights FZJ 23m
        Speaker: Prof. Andreas Lehrach (Forschungszentrum Jülich, RWTH Aachen University)
        Slides
      • 14:23
        Contrast Dependence of Laser-Driven Proton Acceleration 19m
        Speaker: Sebastian Keppler (GSI / HI Jena)
      • 14:42
        All-optical structuring of laser-driven proton beam profiles 19m
        Speaker: Lieselotte Obst-Huebl (Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf)
        Slides
      • 15:01
        Laser-plasma acceleration of polarized beams 19m
        Speaker: Mrs Anna Hützen (Forschungszentrum Jülich, PGI-6)
        Slides
      • 15:20
        Undulator developments at KIT 19m
        Speaker: Sara Casalbuoni (KIT)
        Slides
      • 15:39
        GigE Vision high-speed image processing on FPGAs for science and industry 19m
        Speaker: Sven Stubbe (DESY)
        Slides
    • 14:00 16:00
      DMA parallel session: DMA ST3 HS 2, Helmholtzweg 5

      HS 2, Helmholtzweg 5

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
      • 14:00
        SFX: Data Explosions at Light Sources 20m
        Speaker: Steve Aplin (DESY)
      • 14:20
        Machine learning techniques for measurement prediction at BESSY II 20m
        Speaker: Luis Vera Ramirez (HZB)
      • 14:40
        Towards Digital Twins of accelerator based x-ray experiments 20m
        Speaker: Dr Jens Viefhaus (Helmholtz-Zentrum Berlin)
        Slides
      • 15:00
        Near Real Time Analysis for Tomography 20m
        Speaker: Nikolay Kardjilov
      • 15:20
        Start-to-end Simulations for ATHENA and HIBEF 20m
        Speaker: Dr Michael Bussmann (Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden - Rossendorf)
        Slides
      • 15:40
        Discussion Synergies ST3 20m
    • 14:00 16:00
      DTS parallel session: Convener: Oliver Sander HS 4, Helmholtzweg 5

      HS 4, Helmholtzweg 5

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
      • 14:00
        FPGA-based Platform to Control and Readout Superconducting Qubits 20m
        Speaker: Richard Gebauer (KIT)
        Slides
      • 14:20
        Discussion 4m
      • 14:44
        Discussion 4m
      • 14:48
        Development of a compact high-energy camera for the Cherenkov Telescope Array 20m
        Speaker: Heike Prokoph (DESY-Zeuthen)
        Slides
      • 15:08
        Discussion 4m
      • 15:12
        Quality Assurance Tests of The STS Read-out Electronics for The CBM Experiment 20m
        Speaker: Merve Dogan (GSI)
        Slides
      • 15:32
        Discussion 4m
      • 15:36
        Lorentz angle measurements in irradiated Silicon 20m
        Speaker: Mr Paul Schuetze (CMS)
        Slides
      • 15:56
        Discussion 4m
    • 16:00 16:30
      Coffee break 30m Max-Wien-Platz 1

      Max-Wien-Platz 1

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
    • 16:30 18:00
      Plenary Session: Plenary Session III various rooms, please see programme

      various rooms, please see programme

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
      Convener: Silvia Masciocchi (GSI)
      • 16:30
        Imaging in 4D 45m
        Speaker: Wolfgang zu Castell (HMGU)
      • 17:15
        Imaging of Gold Nanoclusters 45m
        Speaker: Florian Gruener (UHH)
        Slides
    • 18:00 19:30
      Free Time various rooms, please see programme

      various rooms, please see programme

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
    • 18:00 19:00
      MT organisation: MT Executive Board (restricted attendance) HS 2, Helmholtzweg 5

      HS 2, Helmholtzweg 5

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
      • 18:00
        MT executive Session 20m
        Slides
      • 18:20
        Milestones 20m
        Speaker: Prof. Andreas Jankowiak (HZB)
        Slides
    • 19:30 22:00
      MT Conference Dinner 2h 30m Mensa Philosophenweg, Philosophenweg 20

      Mensa Philosophenweg, Philosophenweg 20

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
    • 09:00 10:30
      Plenary Session: Plenary Session IV various rooms, please see programme

      various rooms, please see programme

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
      Convener: Thomas Stöhlker (HIJ)
      • 09:00
        Neutrons for today and tomorrow 45m
        Speaker: Thomas Gutberlet (FZJ)
        Slides
        summary
      • 09:45
        Plasma Accelerations 45m
        Speaker: Wim Leemans (DESY)
    • 10:30 11:00
      Coffee break and Conference Photo 30m Max-Wien-Platz 1

      Max-Wien-Platz 1

    • 11:00 13:00
      ARD Parallel Session: Scientific Highlights HS 1, Max-Wien-Platz 1

      HS 1, Max-Wien-Platz 1

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
      Convener: Dr Holger Schlarb (DESY)
      • 11:00
        Overview and highlights GSI 23m
        Speakers: Dr Niels Pyka (GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung GmbH), Peter Spiller (GSI)
        Slides
      • 11:23
        Dynamic Vacuum in high-intensity heavy-ion synchrotrons 19m
        Speaker: Lars Bozyk (GSI)
        Slides
      • 11:42
        High brightness beam developments at PITZ 19m
        Speaker: Ye Chen (DESY)
        Slides
      • 12:01
        GaN photocathodes for SRF photoinjectors 19m
        Speaker: Jana Schaber (HZDR)
        Slides
      • 12:20
        From theory to cryotests: Photocathodes with quantum efficiencies > 10% 19m
        Speaker: Prof. Thorsten Kamps (HZB)
        Slides
      • 12:39
        Influence of LWFA injection schemes on temporal pulse structure and peak current 19m
        Speaker: Dr Alexander Debus (a.debus@hzdr.de)
        Slides
    • 11:00 13:00
      DMA parallel session: DMA ST1 HS 2, Helmholtzweg 5

      HS 2, Helmholtzweg 5

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
      • 11:00
        Data Lifecycle and Analysis Infrastructure at DESY 35m
        Speaker: Dr Yves Kemp (DESY)
        Slides
      • 11:35
        Distributed Computing Services and Data Management 35m
        Speaker: Kilian Schwarz (GSI)
        Slides
      • 12:10
        FAIR & Open Data at HZDR 35m
        Speaker: Dr Guido Juckeland (Helmholtz-Zentrum Dresden-Rossendorf (HZDR))
      • 12:45
        Discussion Synergies ST1 15m
    • 11:00 13:00
      DTS parallel session: Convener: Trixi Wunderer HS 4, Helmholtzweg 5

      HS 4, Helmholtzweg 5

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
      • 11:00
        A hybrid-less Strip Telescope for the DESY II Test Beam Facility 20m
        Speakers: Dr Mengqing WU (DESY), Mr Uwe Krämer (DESY)
        Slides
      • 11:20
        Discussion 4m
      • 11:24
        UFO Cloud - Data-Acquisition-as-a-Service 20m
        Speaker: Suren Chilingaryan (KIT)
        Slides
      • 11:44
        Discussion 4m
      • 11:48
        Development of Customized Integrated Circuits for Scientific and Medical Applications 20m
        Speaker: Roberto Blanco (KIT)
        Slides
      • 12:08
        Discussion 4m
      • 12:12
        Enhanced lateral drift sensors 20m
        Speaker: Dr Hendrik Jansen (DESY)
        Slides
      • 12:32
        Discussion 4m
      • 12:36
        Si detectors for the TOF measurements with heavy ions 20m
        Speaker: Oleg Kiselev (GSI)
        Slides
      • 12:56
        Discussion 4m
    • 13:00 14:15
      Plenary Session: Closeout Plenary Session various rooms, please see programme

      various rooms, please see programme

      Helmholtz Institute Jena

      Max-Wien-Platz 1 07743 Jena
      Convener: Friederike Januschek (DESY)
      • 13:00
        Superconducting detectors in science 45m
        Speaker: Ronny Stolz (IPHT Jena)
        Slides
      • 13:45
        Outlook, Planning for POFIV 30m
        Speaker: Ties Behnke (DESY)
        Slides