- Lopes, M;
- Ambrosio, G;
- Badgley, K;
- DiMarco, J;
- Evbota, D;
- Fabbricatore, P;
- Farinon, S;
- Feher, S;
- Friedsam, H;
- Galt, A;
- Hays, S;
- Hocker, J;
- Kim, MJ;
- Kokoska, L;
- Koshelev, S;
- Kotelnikov, S;
- Lamm, M;
- Makulski, A;
- Marchevsky, M;
- Nehring, R;
- Nogiec, J;
- Orris, D;
- Pilipenko, R;
- Rabehl, R;
- Santini, C;
- Sylvester, C;
- Tartaglia, M
The Fermilab Mu2e experiment has been developed to search for evidence of charged lepton flavor violation through the direct conversion of muons into electrons. The transport solenoid is an s-shaped magnet that guides the muons from the source to the stopping target. It consists of 52 superconducting coils arranged in 27 coil modules. A full-size prototype coil module, with all the features of a typical module of the full assembly, was successfully manufactured by a collaboration between INFN-Genoa and Fermilab. The prototype contains two coils that can be powered independently. To validate the design, the magnet went through an extensive test campaign. Warm tests included magnetic measurements with a vibrating stretched wire and electrical and dimensional checks. The cold performance was evaluated by a series of power tests and temperature dependence and minimum quench energy studies.