* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download C1 and C2 are threshold Cerenkov counters filled with CO 2 , for
Survey
Document related concepts
Atomic nucleus wikipedia , lookup
Double-slit experiment wikipedia , lookup
Quantum electrodynamics wikipedia , lookup
Introduction to quantum mechanics wikipedia , lookup
Photoelectric effect wikipedia , lookup
Theoretical and experimental justification for the Schrödinger equation wikipedia , lookup
ALICE experiment wikipedia , lookup
Elementary particle wikipedia , lookup
Large Hadron Collider wikipedia , lookup
ATLAS experiment wikipedia , lookup
Future Circular Collider wikipedia , lookup
Transcript
PID, trigger and DAQ for the GLAST beam test (preliminary study) Nicola Mazziotta INFN Bari [email protected] Dec. 6, 2005 Scope Particle identification and trigger layout to be used in the PS and SPS beam test Cerenkov Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 2 Requirement • PS: – – – – – Photon beam via bremsstrahlung Electron beam: energy Hadron beam: energy Muon beam: energy PID rejection: TBD • SPS: – – – – – 4 angles (0, 20, 40 and 60 deg) 6 positions 6 energies (10, 20, 50, 100, 200 and 300 GeV) Particle type: electrons, hadrons, muons PID rejection: TBD Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 3 PS Particle type and intensity Electrons, hadrons, muons Momentum (GeV/c) Electrons (%) Hadrons (%) -1 60 40 -2 40 60 -3 30 70 -5 10 90 -5 ÷ -15 few 95 Muon fraction few % Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 4 Threshold Cerenkov counters filled with CO2 • Electron selection in all range • Muon selection from 2 GeV/c • Pion selection from 3 GeV/c • Kaon selection from 10 GeV/c Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 • Proton below the Cerenkov threshold up to 16 GeV/c 5 Electron tagging with threshold Cerenkov counters PS T9 Beam C1 (CO2) 5 m long C2 (CO2) 3 m long C1 and C2 are threshold Cerenkov counters filled with CO2, for each energy the CO2 pressure has been set to select the Electrons Electrons = C1 * C2 Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 6 Electron tagging by threshold Cerenkovs Beam C1 (CO2) 5 m long C2 (CO2) 3 m long EM CAL The hadron contamination in the electron sample is due to the interaction of particles with the Cerenkov materials, that can produce delta rays with enough energy to generate Cerenkov photons. Any background can also simulate fake electrons. An external system EM CAL (Pb Glass) is needed to evaluate the hadron (pion) contamination in the electron sample Electrons Pions Pion contamination in the electron sample is few % Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 7 Hadron tagging with threshold Cerenkov counters PS T9 Beam C1 (CO2) 5 m long C2 (CO2) 3 m long C1 and C2 are threshold Cerenkov counters filled with CO2, for each energy the CO2 pressure has been set to select the Electrons+Muons (p > 2 GeV/c) Hadrons = (C1 + C2), Electron/Muon contamination in the hadron sample = (1- 1) (1-2) fe/f (< 10-3 from 3 to 6 GeV/c). Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 8 Proton tagging with threshold Cerenkov counters PS T9 Beam C1 (CO2) 5 m long C2 (CO2) 3 m long C1 and C2 are threshold Cerenkov counters filled with CO2, for each energy the CO2 pressure has been set to select the Kaons from 12 GeV/c Protons = (C1 + C2) Electron/Muon/Kaon/Pion contamination in the proton sample = (1- 1) (1-2) (f+fK+ fμ+fe)/fp (< 10-3 from 2 to 8 GeV/c). Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 9 HARP Proton tagging by Cerenkov counters PS T9 Beam C1 (N2) 5 m long Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 C2 (N2) 3 m long 10 Hadron tagging by TOF system m1, m2, p L Proton/Kaon Muon/Electron Kaon/Pion Pion/Electron Pion/Muon 3 sigma resolution 1.00E+02 L = 10 m, sigma = 100 ps 1.00E+01 Delta TOF (ns) 1.00E+00 1.00E-01 1.00E-02 1.00E-03 1.00E-04 0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Beam momentum (GeV/c) Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 11 Observed particle fractions in the T9 beam by HARP experiment (L=21.4 m) proton contamination in positron sample Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 12 PS T9 beam area In The T9 beam area maybe there is not enough space to install a TOF, i.e. TOF could tag proton from kaon up to 2 GeV/c Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 13 Electron/Hadron idetification by TRD Particle ID is based on the threshold properties of the TR gsat gth Electron/pion identification: 1-100 GeV Pion/proton identification: few 100 GeV - 1 TeV Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 14 TRD performance vs length The hadron contamination at 90% electron identification efficiency can be reduced from about 0.1 to < 10-3 by increasing the TRD length from 20 cm to 100 cm Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 15 TRDs for particle identification • TRDs have been used to discriminate electron/hadron or pion/proton in test beams or in running experiments (accelerators or astrophysics): rejecton factor ~ 10-3 (off-line) • Starting from the beginning of '90 years there have been extensive research and developments to build TRDs able to discriminate high rate beam particles and work also as first level trigger devices – E769 at Fermilab (1991): the trigger time jitter was ~150 ns and the /p rejection factor was ~ 3%, momenta (250- 500 GeV/c) and beam intensities of 30 kHz - 2 MHz – Fast TRD (1999): trigger device in a electron/hadron CERN SPS beam (NA57) Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 16 TRDs for high energy hadron beam (as trigger or veto) Fast-TRD for SPS-beam (1999): 1. pions/kaons/protons beam < 500 GeV/c (4 MHz rate), 2. 16 modules radiator (C-fibers)/double straw tubes layer (Xe-CO2) 3. time jitter of 40 ns 4. pion (proton) contamination about 1 % @ 90% electron (pion) efficiency Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 17 Fast-TRD for SPS-beam: trigger layout LeCroy 3412 16 Channel 200MHz Discriminator: Current Sum Outputs: Rear-panel Lemo connector; high impedance current source; generates a current proportional to the input multiplicity at the rate of -1 mA+/-10% per hit (-50 mV per hit into a 50 ohm load); The Mod. CAEN N408 is a NIM module which performs the function of a logic adder on 24 independent input NIM signals. Each true input signal gives a contribution of 50 mV on an internal analog adding section Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 to TRIGGER or to VETO 18 Fast-TRD: e/ beam pions contamination about 1 % @ 90% electron efficiency e vs as trigger e vs e as veto e e/ ~ GeV/c /p ~ 100 GeV/c For more details see NIM A 455 (2000) 305 Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 19 TRD system acquisition LeCroy 3412 16 Channel 200MHz Discriminator: Rear-panel Lemo connector; high impedance current source; generates a current proportional to the input multiplicity at the rate of -1 mA+/10% per hit (-50 mV per hit into a 50 ohm load); 16 Modules VME ADC (CAEN V792 16/32 Channel Multievent Charge ADC; 50 Ohm impedance, negative polarity, DC coupling; Input range 0÷400 pC; Resolution 12 bit) This system provides an easy solution to improve the TRD identification capability: the number of straw tubes per module over the threshold will be counted (i.e. the number of TR photons absorbed in different straw tube counters). A Monte Carlo analysis is planned to study and to verify the TRD PID performance with this solution. Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 20 TRD work progress in Bari Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 21 PS beam line PID strategy (TBR) 1. Electron: C1 • C2 • TRD, in whole momentum range, Cerenkov gas pressure to select electrons 2. Hadron: (C1 + C2 + TRD), from 2 GeV/c, Cerenkov gas pressure to select electrons and muons 3. Proton: (C1 + C2 + TRD), from 12 GeV/c, Cerenkov gas pressure to select kaons 4. Muons: beam off, in whole momentum range A more detailed analysis need to be performed in order to define the correct strategy for particle identification and to evaluate the efficiency and the contamination. Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 22 SPS North area H4 beam • 10 - 400 GeV/c, up to 108 particles/spill (π+) • H4 can be set-up for very clean electron beam (up to ~300 GeV/c) • H2/H4 originate from same (T2) target – due to beam optics, H2 and H4 should run with opposite polaritiy beams – e.g. H2: protons or π+, H4: electrons – beam conditions of H2 and H4 users need to be coordinated • provision of (threshold) Čerenkov counter(s) – usally 1 counter available per beam line, 2 can be requested – also more sophisticated differential Čerenkov counters (CEDAR) available at SPS (but tricky to commission and to operate, only on STRONG request) Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 23 Particle Production at the Primary H4 Target (T4) 1.Using the simulation tool Geant3, the particle production at T4 was simulated assuming a primary proton beam of 400 GeV/c. 2.The target consists of a Beryllium plate with a length of 30 cm (hy=2mm, bx=16mm). 3.Production rates are simulated within the limits of ±0.1mm and ±12(2)mrad. 4.The total number of simulated protons on target (pot) is 108 Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 24 Negative Particles at SPS H4 line with T4 target Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 25 T2 target wobbling (1) The "democratic" wobbling centers the beam between H2 and H4 on the TAX and the two beamlines get the same momentum with opposite signe at an production angle of 0 mrad. Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 26 T2 target wobbling (2) Another very often used wobble scheme is to turn B1T and B2T off, such that the 0mrad production angle is pointing towards H4, which allows to provide a high electron intensity there. H4 is delivered with charged particles by using B3T. Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 27 TRD threshold and saturation values • The TR threshold (gth) depends on the foil thickness (d1) and on its plasma frequency (ω1) • The TR saturation (gsat) depends on the gth value and on the foil gap (d2) – gth = 2.5 d1(μm) ω1(eV) – gsat gth (d2/d1)1/2 gth gsat 240 420 3000 50 500 2625 8000 50 500 3050 9500 Material ω1(eV) C-fibres 28 6 Polyethylene 21 Mylar 24.4 Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 d1(μm) d2(μm) 28 Particle identification at SPS H4 line • The Cherenkov (differential and threshold) counters can be used to tag the hadrons and to identify the electrons • The Fast-TRD allows the electron/hadron identification up to few 100 (400) GeV/c • The Fast-TRD allows the pion/proton identification from few 100 GeV/c to 1 TeV/c • The TOF systems can be also used to tag hadrons in the beam Nicola Mazziotta, Dec. 6, 2005 29