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Lecture 13: Detectors • Visual Track Detectors • Electronic Ionization Devices • Cerenkov Detectors • Calorimeters • Phototubes & Scintillators • Tricks With Timing • Generic Collider Detector Useful Sections in Martin & Shaw: Sections 4.3, 4.4, 4.5 Consider a massless qq pair linked by a rotating string with ends moving at the speed of light. At rest, the string stores energy per unit length and we assume no transverse oscillations on the string. This configuration has the maximum angular momentum for a given mass and all of both reside in the string - the sheet 4 quarks have none. Consider one little bit of string at a distance r from the middle, with the quarks located at fixed distances R. Accounting for the varying velocity as a function of radial position, calculate both the mass, M, and angular momentum, J, as a function of and R. 3 At rest: dM/dr = k In motion: dM/dr = gk R g = (1-b2)-½ = [1-(r/R)2]-½ Thus, ∫ M = 2k = kRp [1-(r/R)2]-½ dr R Similarly, J = 2k ∫ vr [1-(r/R)2]-½ dr 0 In natural units v = b = (r/R) R ∫∫ = (2k/R) r2 [1-(r/R)2]-½ dr = kR2p/2 0 but M = kRp thus, J = M2/(2pk) From experimental measurements of J versus M (“Regge trajectories”) it is found that ∼ 0.18GeV2 when expressed in natural units. Convert this to an equivalent number of tonnes. ~15 Now consider the “colour charge” contained within a Gaussian surface centred around a quarks and cutting through a flux tube of cross sectional area A . By computing an effective “field strength” (in analogy to electromagnetism), derive an expression for the energy density of the string (i.e. ) in terms of the colour charge and the area A . In analogy with EM: Ec = rc/ec Gaussian surface Flux tube Ec A = qc/ec Ec = qc/(Aec) Assume A ~ 1 fm2 k = energy/length = (energy density) x A = qc2/(2Aec) qc2/(4pecħc) = kA/(2pħc) as ≈ (14.4x104 kg m/s2)(10-15m)2 2p (10-34 J s)(3x108 m/s) = ½ ec Ec2 A = 0.76 Lecture 13: Detectors • Visual Track Detectors • Electronic Ionization Devices • Cerenkov Detectors • Calorimeters • Phototubes & Scintillators • Tricks With Timing • Generic Collider Detector Useful Sections in Martin & Shaw: Section 3.3, Section 3.4 Wilson Cloud Chamber: Antimatter Anderson 1933 Evaporation-type Cloud Chamber: Photographic Emulsions p Discovery of the Pion (Powell et al., 1947) e e DONUT (Direct Observation of NU Tau) July, 2000 Bubble Chamber Donald Glazer (1952) Bubbles form at nucleation sites in regions of higher electric fields ionization tracks Bubble Chamber Donald Glazer (1952) Bubbles form at nucleation sites in regions of higher electric fields ionization tracks Steve’s Tips for Becoming a Particle Physicist 1) Be Lazy 2) Start Lying 3) Sweat Freely 4) Drink Plenty of Beer Liquid superheated by sudden expansion hydrogen, deuterium, propane Freon Bubbles allowed to grow over 10ms then collapsed during compression stroke Acts as both target & detector Difficult to trigger Track digitization cumbersome High beam intensities swamp film Mechanically Complex Spatial resolution 100200 m Slow repetition rate Ionization Detectors Electric field imposed to prevent recombination Medium must be chemically inactive (so as not to gobble-up drifting electrons) and have a low ionization threshold (noble gases often work pretty well) heavily ionizing particle minimum ionizing particle signal smaller than initially produced pairs signal reflects total amount of ionization initially free electrons accelerated and further ionize medium such that signal is amplified proportional to initial ionization acceleration causes avalance of pairs leads to discharge where signal size is independent of initial ionization continuous discharge (insensitive to ionization) Proportional Counter Typical Parameters rin = 10-50 m E = 104 V Amplification = 105 E(r) = V0 r log(rout/rin) Multiwire Proportional Counter (MWPC) Typical wire spacing ~ 2mm George Charpak use of MWPC in determination of particle momenta Drift Chamber Field-shaping wires provide ~constant electric field so charges drift to anode wires with ~constant velocity (~50mm/s) Timing measurement compared with prompt external trigger can thus yield an accurate position determination (~200m) Time Projection Chamber (TPC) One Application of a TPC: n p + e + e n p + e + e but sometimes... ''double bdecay" but what if e = e ? (Majorana particle) then the following would be possible: n p + e + e e + n p + e ''neutrinoless double bdecay" occurs as a single quantum event within a nucleus Example of a radial drift chamber (''Jet Chamber") Angular segment of JADE Jet Chamber Reconstruction of 2-jet event in the JADE Jet Chamber at DESY Spark Chamber Silicon Strip Detector etched electron-hole pairs instead of electron-ion pairs 3.6 eV required to form electron-hole pair thin wafers still give reasonable signals and good timing (10ns) Spatial resolution 10m CDF Silicon Tracking Detector Cerenkov Radiation Cerenkov Radiation cosC = ct/(nvt) = 1/(nb) vt (c/n)t d2Ng dxdE = az2 ℏc ( 1 # photons ∝ dE 1 ) b2n2 ∝ d/2 blue light Threshold Cerenkov Counter: discriminates between particles of similar momentum but different mass (provided things aren’t too relativistic!) m1 , b1 m2 , b2 ( 1 - 1/(b22n2) ) = ( 1 - b12/b22) just below threshold = (b22 b2)/b22 1/(nb1) = 1 1/n2 = b12 b2 [(1m22/E22) (1m12/E12)] = =1 = 1 m2/E2 1/g2 (1m22/E22) = ≃ length of radiator needed increases as the square of the momentum! (m12/E12 m22/E22) (1 m22/E22) (m12 m22) (E2 m22) = (m12 m22)/p2 Medium n1 helium CO2 pentane aerogel H2O glass g (thresh) 3.3x105 123 4.3x104 34 1.7x103 17.2 0.0750.025 2.74.5 0.33 1.52 0.750.46 1.221.37 Muon Rings liquid radiator Ring Imaging CHrenkov detector gaseous radiator light detectors on inner surface Calorimeters Above some ''critical" energy, bremsstrahlung and pair production dominate over ionization EC ~ (600 MeV)/Z Assume each electron with E > EC undergoes bremsstrahlung after travelling 1 radiation length, giving up half it’s energy Assume each photon with E > EC undergoes pair production after travelling 1 radiation length, dividing it’s energy equally t=0 1 2 3 4 Depth in radiation lengths Neglect ionization loss above EC Assume only collisional loss below EC # after t radiation lengths = 2t Avg energy/particle: Maximum development will occur when E(t) = EC : tmax = log(E0/EC) log(2) E(t) = E0/2t Nmax = E0/EC Depth of maximum increases logarithmically with primary energy Number of particles at maximum is proportional to primary energy Total track length of particle is proportional to primary energy Fluctuations vary as ≃ 1/N ≃ 1/E0 Typically, for an electromagnetic calorimeter: Scale is set by radiation length: X0 ≃ 37 gm/cm2 For hadronic calorimeter, scale set by nuclear absorption length iron nuc = 130 gm/cm2 lead nuc = 210 gm/cm2 ~ 30% of incident energy is lost by nuclear excitations and the production of ''invisible" particles E E 0.5 ≃ EGeV E E ≃ 0.05 EGeV Examples of Calorimeter Construction: Photomultiplier Tubes (PMTs) A Typical ''Good" PMT: quantum efficiency30% collection efficiency80% signal risetime2ns Scintillator Inorganic Usually grown with small admixture of impurity centres. Electrons created by ionization drift through lattice, are captured by these centres and form an excited state. Light is then emitted on return to the ground state. Most important example NaI (doped with thallium) Organic Cons: relatively slow time response (largely due to electron migration) Excitation of molecular energy levels. Medium is transparent to produced light. Why isn’t light self-absorbed?? Pros: very fast Cons: smaller light output potential energy Pros: large light output excited state ground state interatomic spacing Some Commonly Used Scintillators: Scintillator organic anthacene toluene polystyrene { { Relative light yield Decay max time (ns) (nm) Density (gm/cm3) 1.0 0.7 0.3 25 3 3 450 430 350 1.25 0.9 0.9 2.2 2.4 0.5 250 900 300 410 550 480 3.7 4.5 7.1 + p-terphenyl inorganic NaI (Tl) CsI (Tl) BGO (Bi4Ge3O12) some ways of coupling plastic scintillator to phototubes to provide fast timing signal : Time Of Flight (TOF): An Application of Promt Timing (used to discriminate particle masses) t = Lc/b t = Lc (1/b/b2) b2 = 1 1/g2 /b = ( 1 1/g2 )1/2 ≃ 1 1/(2g2) t ≃ Lc/2 (1/g22/g2) = Lc/2 ( m22/E22 m12/E12 ) ≃ Lc/2 ( m22 m12 )/E2 High Energy Particle Detectors in a Nutshell: