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A Particle Physicist’s Toolbox Dan Levin Saturday Morning Physics University of Michigan Nov 6, 2004 My Résumé Age 3 discovered electricity – inserted severed lamp cord into wall outlet – blew circuit breakers, blew parental complacency – observed copious sparks Age 7 discovered the telegraph – hooked up battery, coil of wire, earphone – heard static noise – observed sparks Age 10 – – – discovered hydrogen filled test tubes with gas from reaction of Zn+HCl ignited gas with match sparks observed Age 12 discovered application for Maxwell’s equations – built shortwave transmitter – obtained “ham” radio license Particle Physics is reductionist 1. Break open matter 2. See what parts are within 3. Observe their properties & interactions 4. Describe underlying structure & fundamental principles 5. Go to step 1 In HEP (High Energy Particle Physics) Observation of subatomic particles we adopt a verybeyond sophisticated method requires working day-to-day human scales in 1. Ramp up particles to high velocities time,them spaceinto & energy 2. Smack each other We mustwhat extend our senses with specialized 3. See emerges instruments & methods These comprise the contents of our toolbox How do we “naturally” observe our world? Source Probe Target Scattered Rays Detector The Particle Physics Scattering Model Source Probe Target Emerging Rays Detector Particle Physics aims to characterize the target & study the probe-target interaction To do this we measure attributes of the emerging particles 1. 2. 3. 4. 5. mass electrical charge momentum and energy intensity or how many direction - location This is the task of the particle detectors Our toolbox enables all facets of this model – radiation producing sources • radioisotopes • cosmic rays • particle accelerators – targets • “fixed” stationary targets • colliding beams – detectors • • • • calorimeters signal processing triggers tracking spectrometers – data acquisition • computers & software The Death of Plum Pudding Rutherford, Geiger and Marsden Scattering Model- Example I Probe: Alpha (He++) Source: Radium Lead Collimator Target: gold foil Detector: Zinc Sulfide Viewing Screen circa 1909: Prevailing atomic model is Plum Pudding. The Coloumb electrical repulsion results only from a fraction of the total charge A Plum Pudding Atom Positively charged mass Negatively charged embedded electrons They expected to see small deflections of the alphas as they barreled through the ultra-thin foil Alpha particles Ultra thin Gold foil Marsden instead observes many large angle scatters or ricochets. Alpha particles Ultra thin Gold foil This scattering is contrary to the PP model! From Marsden’s observed scattering angles Rutherford calculates: Charged mass is not distributed over whole atomic volume. The observed scatters can occur when the charge is concentrated at the center in volume of 0.0001 atomic diameter This was the death of plum pudding & birth of the nucleus. Scattering Model 2: Cosmic Rays Early 1900’s: omnipresent radiation discharges electroscopes - In 1912, Viktor Hess rises to the occasion (27,000’). He carries an electroscope The discharge rate is measured at altitude It is found to increase + + + + + + + + + + - - What Hess was detecting + μ+ Source: Supernova Probe: Nucleus Target: Earth Atmosphere Emerging Rays: Cosmic Ray Shower Let’s examine how different high energy particle species leave their imprint Then we can construct instruments to detect their passage ! Here are collision products with longevity electrons & positrons (e-, e+) gammas () - high energy photons muons ( μ+/-) hadrons mesons: , k… baryons: protons, neutrons… Particles with Electric Charge: Two Important Things Thing 1: They interact with atomic electrons in matter & leave an ionization trail Thing 2: Their path in a magnetic field curves according to their polarity and momentum (mass, speed and direction) A charged particle trajectory curves in a perpendicular magnetic field L charge q momentum sagitta p = mv 2 Lorentz says “The curvature depends on the mass velocity, charge, magnetic field and path” qBL Sagitta 8p Electrons, positrons, gammas: They make showers in a massive calorimeter Electrons leave an ion trail in low density media e- e- or e+ light detector material (gas) ee+ massive detector material (eg lead or tungsten) muons μ+/- leave an ionized trail Fast muons leave a continuous trail of ionization, losing a fraction of their energy as they pass through. Neutrinos slip by unnoticed. Protons, pions & kaons initiate hadronic cascades. These look like electron showers but are more spread out. μ o P + + μ Detection Methods • scintillators – calorimeters (energy measurement) – time of flight – triggering • gas filled counters – tracking in magnetic field – momentum measurement – particle identification So what is really recorded with these methods? A pulse and nothing but a pulse! 1. The rate at a location: Always 2. The amplitude: Sometimes 3. The time : Sometimes All physics is reconstructed from the above basic data! Plastic Scintillator & Phototubes What are scintillators good for? – measure deposited energy – measure time of particle passing – measure location How do they work? – passing charge excite molecules in plastic – as molecules de-excite, a small fraction release optical energy – this light propagates inside the plastic to the surface of the phototubes Phototubes: Electronic Retinas • See light pulse from scintillator • Very sensitive – huge amplification – they can detect a single photon ! • Produce a signal quickly – important for triggering – precise timing photon photocathode photoelectron 100 volts 100 volts 100 volts output pulse 20 ns 100 volts 100 volts 100 volts evacuated tube Put the phototube & scintillator together… particle Phototube pulse The pulse amplitude is proportional to the light intensity (number of photons) The number of photons is proportional to the energy lost by the passing particle Electromagnetic “Sampling” Calorimeter: A layer cake of scintillator & lead electron + = Sum the phototube signals to measure energy of the entering particle ! Separating flotsam from jetsam (signal from noise) Discriminators – not all pulses are made by a passing particle. – there are also “noise” sources – we use a discriminator to clean up the noise – If the pulse is larger than the discriminator threshold output is TRUE, otherwise FALSE noise pulse discriminator signal pulse “threshold” voltage digital output pulse when signal crosses threshold Let’s say we want 1. to observe a specific particle track 2. not a random noise hit 3. passing from a specific direction or 4. with some flight time We do this by forming an trigger. A trigger is defined by a series of pulses or hits in our detectors in a restricted time interval Phototube + discriminator these two overlapping hits make a trigger pulse scintillator 1 pulses logical scintillator 2 pulses Time axis 1 μsec AND An Elegant Cosmic Ray Telescope & Trigger top left top right top coincidence time of flight ~ nanoseconds bottom left bottom right bottom coincidence muon top + bottom trigger μ- μ μ- How to measure time of flight of energetic particles? Use Galileo’s Solution 1. start pulse opens an electronic gate 2. current flows into capacitor 3. stop pulse closes gate 4. measure voltage on capacitor Voltage = Current x Elapsed Time stop start gate steady current source capacitor Gas Filled Drift Tube Detectors Sealed tube, pressurized with Argon and CO2 + - Ultra-thin, anode stretched along axis. High voltage of ~ 3000 Volts between anode wire and tube wall Signal picked off of anode Passing particle ionizes gas Electrons accelerate along electric field lines Fast electrons ionize more atoms Ensuing electron avalanche produces big signal We can pack the drift tubes into multi-tube, rigid arrays. When a particle passes, the hit tubes produce signals. As an integrated unit, these arrays record a particle track segment. 24 cm threshold The time of threshold crossing corresponds to the electron drift time. Measure the drift time to get the distance of the track from tube axis Many possible tracks are tangent to the circle defined by the drift radius From each tube’s drift time we obtain the drift radius or drift circle. Software algorithms find the one track tangent to all drift circles. We now have a well measured track segment. 24 cm Put it all togther Magnetic field μ+ Triggers μ- The measured curvature yields the muons momenta Drift tube arrays We have explored 1. scattering experiments 2. counting hit rate vs location 3. cosmic rays 4. scintillator with phototubes 5. pulse height discrimination 6. triggering with timed coincidences 7. a cosmic ray telescope 8. time measurement 9. charged particles in a magnetic field 10.calorimeters 11.drift tubes 12.precision trackers using drift tube arrays Next Week: Building a Higgs Trap