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Mitsuru Shirai

Bio: Mitsuru Shirai is an academic researcher from KEK. The author has contributed to research in topics: KEKB & Beam (structure). The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 50 publications receiving 433 citations.


Papers
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Journal ArticleDOI
Tetsuo Abe1, Kazunori Akai1, Norimasa Akasaka1, Mitsuo Akemoto1, A. Akiyama1, M. Arinaga1, Yunhai Cai2, Kiyokazu Ebihara1, Kazumi Egawa1, Atsushi Enomoto1, Eiji Ezura1, J.W. Flanagan1, Shigeki Fukuda1, Hitoshi Fukuma1, Yoshihiro Funakoshi1, Kazuro Furukawa1, Takaaki Furuya1, J. Haba1, Kazufumi Hara1, Toshiyasu Higo1, Shigenori Hiramatsu1, Hiromi Hisamatsu1, Hiroyuki Honma1, Teruya Honma1, Kenji Hosoyama1, T. Ieiri1, Naoko Iida1, Hitomi Ikeda1, M. Ikeda1, Shigemi Inagaki1, S. Isagawa1, Hitoshi Ishii1, Atsushi Kabe1, E. Kadokura1, Tatsuya Kageyama1, Kazuhisa Kakihara1, Eiji Kako1, S. Kamada1, Takuya Kamitani1, Ken-ichi Kanazawa1, Hiroaki Katagiri1, Shigeki Kato1, T. Kawamoto1, Sergey Kazakov1, Mitsuo Kikuchi1, Eiji Kikutani1, Kiyoshi Kitagawa1, Haruyo Koiso1, Yuuji Kojima1, I. Komada1, T. Kubo1, K. Kudo1, Shin-ichi Kurokawa1, K. Marutsuka1, Mika Masuzawa1, Shuji Matsumoto1, Toshihiro Matsumoto1, Shinichiro Michizono1, K. Mikawa1, Toshihiro Mimashi1, Toshiyuki Mitsuhashi1, S. Mitsunobu1, Takako Miura1, K. Mori1, Akio Morita1, Yoshiyuki Morita1, Hirotaka Nakai1, Hiromitsu Nakajima1, Tatsuro Nakamura1, H. Nakanishi1, Kota Nakanishi1, Katumi Nakao1, H. Nakayama1, Michiru Nishiwaki1, Yujiro Ogawa1, Kazuhito Ohmi1, Yukiyoshi Ohnishi1, Satoshi Ohsawa1, Yasunobu Ohsawa1, Norihito Ohuchi1, Katsunobu Oide1, Toshiyuki Oki1, Masaaki Ono1, Toshiyuki Ozaki1, E. Perevedentsev3, Hiroshi Sakai1, Y. Sakamoto1, M. Sato1, Kotaro Satoh1, Masanori Satoh1, Yuji Seimiya1, Kyo Shibata1, Tetsuo Shidara1, Miho Shimada1, Samo Stanic1, Mitsuru Shirai1, A. Shirakawa1, T. Sueno1, Masaaki Suetake1, Yusuke Suetsugu1, Ryuhei Sugahara1, Takashi Sugimura1, Tsuyoshi Suwada1, Osamu Tajima1, S. Takano1, S. Takasaki1, Tateru Takenaka1, Yasunao Takeuchi1, Y. Takeuchi1, Masafumi Tawada1, Masaki Tejima1, Makoto Tobiyama1, N. Tokuda1, Kiyosumi Tsuchiya1, Sadaharu Uehara1, Shoji Uno1, Yingzhi Wu, Noboru Yamamoto1, Yasuchika Yamamoto1, Yoshiharu Yano1, K. Yokoyama1, Masato Yoshida1, Mitsuhiro Yoshida1, S. Yoshimoto1, K. Yoshino1, Masakazu Yoshioka1, Demin Zhou1, Frank Zimmermann4, Zhanguo Zong1 
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors summarize the history of KEKB and show the achievements made there, and show that the machine commissioning of the KEKB started in December 1998 and its operation was terminated at the end of June 2010 to upgrade KEKB to SuperKEKB.
Abstract: The machine commissioning of KEKB started in December 1998 and its operation was terminated at the end of June 2010 to upgrade KEKB to SuperKEKB. In this paper, we summarize the history of KEKB and show the achievements made there.

175 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The SuperKEKB as mentioned in this paper, a two-ring electron-positron collider with asymmetric energies, was designed by the High Energy Accelerator Research Organization (KEK) as an upgrade of the KEKB B-factory (KEKB), which completed 12 years of operation in 2010.
Abstract: A two-ring electron-positron collider with asymmetric energies—called the SuperKEKB—has been designed by the High Energy Accelerator Research Organization (KEK) as an upgrade of the KEKB B-factory (KEKB), which completed 12 years of operation in 2010. It is anticipated that the SuperKEKB will reach a luminosity of 8 × 1035 cm−2 s−1, which is approximately 40 times larger than that of the original KEKB. The upgrade of the vacuum system is a key factor that will allow the SuperKEKB to achieve unprecedented high performance. Most of the beam pipes, especially in the positron ring, are newly manufactured to manage the electron cloud effect, and to reduce beam impedance, which is essential to keep the low-emittance beam stable. Our design of the vacuum system implements recent technologies and draws on various experiences and studies during the operation of the original KEKB. The basic design is near completion, and manufacturing of beam pipes and the major vacuum components, such as bellows chambers, gate valves and supports, are in progress. The installation of these components will start in 2013 with the aim of commissioning the SuperKEKB in 2014.

31 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The first phase-1 commissioning of SuperKEKB, an asymmetric-energy electron-positron collider at KEK, began in February 2016, after more than five years of upgrade work on KEKB and successfully ended in June 2016 as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: The first (Phase-1) commissioning of SuperKEKB, an asymmetric-energy electron-positron collider at KEK, began in February 2016, after more than five years of upgradation work on KEKB and successfully ended in June 2016. A major task of the Phase-1 commissioning was the vacuum scrubbing of new beam pipes in anticipation of a sufficiently long beam lifetime and low background noise in the next commissioning, prior to which a new particle detector will be installed. The pressure rise per unit beam current decreased steadily with increasing beam dose, as expected. Another important task was to check the stabilities of various new vacuum components at high beam currents of approximately 1 A. The temperature increases of the bellows chambers, gate valves, connection flanges, and so on were less than several degrees at 1 A, and no serious problems were found. The effectiveness of the antechambers and TiN coating in suppressing the electron-cloud effect (ECE) in the positron ring was also confirmed. However, the ECE in the Al-alloy bellows chambers was observed where TiN had not been coated. The use of permanent magnets to create an axial magnetic field of approximately 100 G successfully suppressed this effect. Pressure bursts accompanying beam losses were also frequently observed in the positron ring. This phenomenon is still under investigation, but it is likely caused by collisions between the circulating beams and dust particles, especially in the dipole magnet beam pipes.

24 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this article, two rings with a circumference of 3016m, mainly made of copper, were constructed at the KEK B-factory to store a positron beam with the energy at 3.5

22 citations

Proceedings ArticleDOI
Tetsuo Abe1, K. Akai1, M. Akemoto1, A. Akiyama1, M. Arinaga1, Kiyokazu Ebihara1, Kazumi Egawa1, Atsushi Enomoto1, J.W. Flanagan1, Shigeki Fukuda1, Hitoshi Fukuma1, Y. Funakoshi1, Kazuro Furukawa1, Takaaki Furuya1, Keigo Hara1, Toshiyasu Higo1, Shigenori Hiramatsu1, Hiromi Hisamatsu1, Hiroyuki Honma1, Teruya Honma1, Kenji Hosoyama1, T. Ieiri1, Naoko Iida1, Hitomi Ikeda1, Makoto Ikeda1, Shigemi Inagaki1, S. Isagawa1, Hitoshi Ishii1, Atsushi Kabe1, E. Kadokura1, Tatsuya Kageyama1, Kazuhisa Kakihara1, Eiji Kako1, S. Kamada1, Takuya Kamitani1, Ken-ichi Kanazawa1, Hiroaki Katagiri1, Shigeki Kato1, T. Kawamoto1, S. Kazakov1, Mitsuo Kikuchi1, Eiji Kikutani1, K. Kitagawa1, Haruyo Koiso1, Yuuji Kojima1, I. Komada1, T. Kubo1, K. Kudo1, N. Kudo1, K. Marutsuka1, Mika Masuzawa1, Shuji Matsumoto1, Toshihiro Matsumoto1, Shinichiro Michizono1, K. Mikawa1, Toshihiro Mimashi1, S. Mitsunobu1, K. Mori1, A. Morita1, Yoshiyuki Morita1, Hirotaka Nakai1, Hiromitsu Nakajima1, Tatsuro Nakamura1, H. Nakanishi1, Kota Nakanishi1, Katsumi Nakao1, S. Ninomiya1, Yujiro Ogawa1, Kazuhito Ohmi1, Satoshi Ohsawa1, Yasunobu Ohsawa1, Yukiyoshi Ohnishi1, Norihito Ohuchi1, Katsunobu Oide1, Masaaki Ono1, Toshiyuki Ozaki1, Kenji Saito1, Hiroshi Sakai1, Y. Sakamoto1, M. Sato1, Masanori Satoh1, Kyo Shibata1, Tetsuo Shidara1, Mitsuru Shirai1, A. Shirakawa1, T. Sueno1, Masaaki Suetake1, Yusuke Suetsugu1, Ryuhei Sugahara1, Takashi Sugimura1, Tsuyoshi Suwada1, Osamu Tajima1, S. Takano1, S. Takasaki1, Tateru Takenaka1, Y. Takeuchi1, Masafumi Tawada1, Masaki Tejima1, Makoto Tobiyama1, N. Tokuda1, Sadaharu Uehara1, S. Uno1, Yasuchika Yamamoto1, Yoshiharu Yano1, K. Yokoyama1, M. Yoshida1, S. Yoshimoto1, K. Yoshino1, E. Perevedentsev2, D.N. Shatilov2 
25 Jun 2007
TL;DR: In this paper, the first experience with such cavities in colliders or storage rings is described, and the beam operation with crab crossing has been done since February 2007 and the crab cavities have been working without serious issues.
Abstract: Crab cavities have been installed in the KEKB B-factory rings to compensate the crossing angle at the collision point and thus increase luminosity. The beam operation with crab crossing has been done since February 2007. This is the first experience with such cavities in colliders or storage rings. The crab cavities have been working without serious issues. While higher specific luminosity than the geometrical gain has been achieved, further study is necessary and under way to reach the prediction of simulation.

21 citations


Cited by
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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The Large Hadron Electron Collider (LHeC) as discussed by the authors was designed to achieve an integrated luminosity of O(100 ),fb$^{-1}, which is the cleanest high resolution microscope of mankind.
Abstract: This document provides a brief overview of the recently published report on the design of the Large Hadron Electron Collider (LHeC), which comprises its physics programme, accelerator physics, technology and main detector concepts. The LHeC exploits and develops challenging, though principally existing, accelerator and detector technologies. This summary is complemented by brief illustrations of some of the highlights of the physics programme, which relies on a vastly extended kinematic range, luminosity and unprecedented precision in deep inelastic scattering. Illustrations are provided regarding high precision QCD, new physics (Higgs, SUSY) and electron-ion physics. The LHeC is designed to run synchronously with the LHC in the twenties and to achieve an integrated luminosity of O(100)\,fb$^{-1}$. It will become the cleanest high resolution microscope of mankind and will substantially extend as well as complement the investigation of the physics of the TeV energy scale, which has been enabled by the LHC.

553 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
A. Abada1, Marcello Abbrescia2, Marcello Abbrescia3, Shehu S. AbdusSalam4  +1491 moreInstitutions (239)
TL;DR: In this article, the authors present the second volume of the Future Circular Collider Conceptual Design Report, devoted to the electron-positron collider FCC-ee, and present the accelerator design, performance reach, a staged operation scenario, the underlying technologies, civil engineering, technical infrastructure, and an implementation plan.
Abstract: In response to the 2013 Update of the European Strategy for Particle Physics, the Future Circular Collider (FCC) study was launched, as an international collaboration hosted by CERN. This study covers a highest-luminosity high-energy lepton collider (FCC-ee) and an energy-frontier hadron collider (FCC-hh), which could, successively, be installed in the same 100 km tunnel. The scientific capabilities of the integrated FCC programme would serve the worldwide community throughout the 21st century. The FCC study also investigates an LHC energy upgrade, using FCC-hh technology. This document constitutes the second volume of the FCC Conceptual Design Report, devoted to the electron-positron collider FCC-ee. After summarizing the physics discovery opportunities, it presents the accelerator design, performance reach, a staged operation scenario, the underlying technologies, civil engineering, technical infrastructure, and an implementation plan. FCC-ee can be built with today’s technology. Most of the FCC-ee infrastructure could be reused for FCC-hh. Combining concepts from past and present lepton colliders and adding a few novel elements, the FCC-ee design promises outstandingly high luminosity. This will make the FCC-ee a unique precision instrument to study the heaviest known particles (Z, W and H bosons and the top quark), offering great direct and indirect sensitivity to new physics.

526 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
S. Wehle, C. Niebuhr, S. Yashchenko, Iki Adachi1  +239 moreInstitutions (64)
TL;DR: The result is consistent with standard model (SM) expectations, where the largest discrepancy from a SM prediction is observed in the muon modes with a local significance of 2.6σ.
Abstract: We present a measurement of angular observables and a test of lepton flavor universality in the B -> K(+)l(+)l(-) decay, where l is either e or mu. The analysis is performed on a data sample corresponding to an integrated luminosity of 711 fb(-1) containing 772 x 10(6) B (B) over bar pairs, collected at the Upsilon(4S) resonance with the Belle detector at the asymmetric-energy e(+)e(-) collider KEKB. The result is consistent with standard model (SM) expectations, where the largest discrepancy from a SM prediction is observed in the muon modes with a local significance of 2.6 sigma.

338 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
G. Caria1, Phillip Urquijo1, Iki Adachi2, Iki Adachi3  +228 moreInstitutions (77)
TL;DR: This work constitutes the most precise measurements of R(D) and R (D^{*}) performed to date as well as the first result for R( D) based on a semileptonic tagging method.
Abstract: The experimental results on the ratios of branching fractions $\mathcal{R}(D) = {\cal B}(\bar{B} \to D \tau^- \bar{ u}_{\tau})/{\cal B}(\bar{B} \to D \ell^- \bar{ u}_{\ell})$ and $\mathcal{R}(D^*) = {\cal B}(\bar{B} \to D^* \tau^- \bar{ u}_{\tau})/{\cal B}(\bar{B} \to D^* \ell^- \bar{ u}_{\ell})$, where $\ell$ denotes an electron or a muon, show a long-standing discrepancy with the Standard Model predictions, and might hint to a violation of lepton flavor universality. We report a new simultaneous measurement of $\mathcal{R}(D)$ and $\mathcal{R}(D^*)$, based on a data sample containing $772 \times 10^6$ $B\bar{B}$ events recorded at the $\Upsilon(4S)$ resonance with the Belle detector at the KEKB $e^+ e^-$ collider. In this analysis the tag-side $B$ meson is reconstructed in a semileptonic decay mode and the signal-side $\tau$ is reconstructed in a purely leptonic decay. The measured values are $\mathcal{R}(D)= 0.307 \pm 0.037 \pm 0.016$ and $\mathcal{R}(D^*) = 0.283 \pm 0.018 \pm 0.014$, where the first uncertainties are statistical and the second are systematic. These results are in agreement with the Standard Model predictions within $0.2$, $1.1$ and $0.8$ standard deviations for $\mathcal{R}(D)$, $\mathcal{R}(D^*)$ and their combination, respectively. This work constitutes the most precise measurements of $\mathcal{R}(D)$ and $\mathcal{R}(D^*)$ performed to date as well as the first result for $\mathcal{R}(D)$ based on a semileptonic tagging method.

228 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In the past decade, exotic hadrons with charm and bottom flavors have been extensively studied both in experiments and in theories as mentioned in this paper, and the authors provide topical discussions by selecting $X,Y,Z$ particles, to which Belle has made important contributions.
Abstract: In the past decade, exotic hadrons with charm and bottom flavors have been extensively studied both in experiments and in theories. In this review, we provide topical discussions by selecting $X,Y,Z$ particles, to which Belle has made important contributions. These are $X(3872)$, $Y(4260)$, $Z_c(4430)^+$, $Z_c(3900)^+$, $Z_{b}(10610)^+$, and $Z_{b}(10650)^+$. Based on the current experimental observations, we discuss these states with emphasis on the hadronic molecule whose dynamics is governed by chiral symmetry and heavy-quark symmetry of QCD. We also mention briefly various interpretations and some theoretical predictions for the as yet undiscovered exotic hadrons.

222 citations