The ALICE Muon Spectrometer Andreas Morsch ALICE Collaboration IV International Symposium on LHC...

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Transcript of The ALICE Muon Spectrometer Andreas Morsch ALICE Collaboration IV International Symposium on LHC...

The ALICEMuon Spectrometer

Andreas MorschALICE Collaboration

IV International Symposium on LHC Physics and Detectors

Fermilab, May 1-3 2003

Outline

● Muon Spectrometer overview● Muon Spectrometer components

– Tracking Chambers– Trigger Chambers– Absorbers– Dipole Magnet

● Expected performance

Design Goals

● Study the production of J/, ', Y, Y', Y’’ decaying into – In the range 2.5 < < 4 (2° < < 9°)– With mass resolutions of 70 MeV at the J/ and 100 MeV at the Y

● Separate Y family● p/p < 1% @ p = 150 GeV

● Acceptance at low angles

– Small angle absorber (beam shield)

– Robust tracking in high random background environment● High granularity chambers ● Combined angle-angle and sagitta measurement with 3 Tm dipole field

- 5 stations of high granularity cathode pad tracking chambers (CPCs), over 1.1 M channels- 2 chambers per station

Dipole Magnet: bending power 3 Tm

Complex absorber/small angle shield system to minimize background(90 cm from vertex)

RPC Trigger Chambers

Front AbsorberDipole Magnet

Trigger

Tracking Stations

Tracking

● All stations with cathode segmentation varying with distance to beam axis

– Higher hit density close to the beam-pipe– Both cathodes segmented (bending/non-bending plane)– Bending plane resolution <100 m– Transparent: X/X0 ~ 3%

● Muon stations 1-2 – Quadrants

– “Frameless” chambers ● Muon stations 3-5

– Slat design similar for all stations– Production shared between several labs

Station 1

• 1999 Prototype– Anode-cathode gap: 2.5 mm

– Pad size 5 x 7.5 mm2

– Spatial resolution 43 m

– Efficiency 95%

– Gain homogeneity ± 12%

● New requirements (2000)– Suppression of the Al frames of Stations 1, 2 (+7% acceptance)– Decrease of the occupancy of Station 1

● Decrease of the pad sizes ( 4.2 x 6.3 mm2)● Decrease of anode-cathode gap (2.1 mm)

Station 1

● Mechanical prototype (fall 2001)

– Max. deformation 80 m

● Full quadrant (June 2002)

– 0.7 m2 frameless structure– 14000 channels per cathode – Gas : 80% Ar + 20 % CO2

– 3 zones with different pad sizes

Test Beam Results

● Unacceptable gain variations

● Solved by:

– Improved closing procedure– Improved stiffness with central spacer– Gain variations ±150% → ±20%

Resolution 65 m

Stations 3-5

● Tests– Test-beam Sept. 2002

– Ageing studies at GIF on a small mock-up foreseen by May

– In-beam tests of a rounded shape at SPS planned in June- July

● Production– Sharing between 4 institutes

completed– Slats production starts Sept.

2003– Station construction 6/2004-

10/2005– Installation 6/2005-11/2005

Stations 3-5

Comparison of different pad sizes:

•5 x 50 mm2

•5 x 100 mm2

FEE: MANU

Manas / Gassiplex

- Charge pre-amplifier

- Sample / Hold

- Filtering

- Analog multiplexing

MARC

(Muon Arm Readout Chip)

- Coding sequence

- Zero suppression

- Interface with the the DAQ

ADC: AD7476

12 Bits / 1 Msps

Crystal oscillator

16 Mhz

Voltage ref.

3V or 2,5V

FEE: MANU

● MANU with Gassiplex works well● MANU with MANAS under tests● MARC3

– Small problems found in last test-beam– New iteration May 2003– Final version October 2003

Trigger● Principle:

– Transverse momentum cut using correlation of position and angle● Deflection in dipole + vertex constraint

● 4 RPC planes 6x6 m2

● Maximum counting rates

– 3 Hz/cm2 in Pb-Pb

– 40 Hz/cm2 in Ar-Ar

– 10 Hz/cm2 in pp ● important contribution from beam gas

● The chambers– Single gap RPC, low resistivity bakelite, streamer mode

– Gas mixture: Ar-C2H2F4-C4H10-SF6 @ 50.5-41.3-7.2-1%

Aging Tests

● Aging test to improve chamber life-time– Test at the CERN Gamma Irradiation Facility (GIF) show

● Increase of dark current and dark rate– Chem. surface deterioration (HF)

● Decrease of efficiency– Bakelite deterioration

Cs source

E= 660 keV

Other detect. under test

RPCs

Pb shield

Triggerscintill.

Cu shield

Pb filters (custom)

Lifetime Tests

- Double-layer line-seed oil RPC with dry gas

- 1% SF6 instead of 4% increases the lifetime

Constant efficiency over the whole period (100 LHC PbPb periods)

100 PbPb periods equivalent to ~5 year running scenario:- 2 years PbPb- 1 year Ar-Ar- 1 years p-Pb- 3 year full intensity pp

Trigger System: Planning

● Summer 2003 end of test RPC1● PRR RPC : October 2003● Production of readout strips : end 2003 (2 months)● Gas gap production : end 2003 to 02/04● Beginning of assembling 01/04● Tests of chambers with cosmics throughout 2004

Absorbers

- Suppress /K decay- Shield from secondaries in particular at small radii.

Front Absorber (FA)

Concrete

Steel

Carbon

Tungsten

● ~10 I (Carbon – Concrete – Steel)

● Design completed

● Stability issues (earth quake) for support structure to be solved

FASS

Small Angle Absorber (SAA)

● Design almost completed after several iterations. Complex integration issues:

– Inner interface● Vacuum system, bake-out, bellows,

flanges– Outer interface

● Tracking chambers, recesses

Tungsten

Lead

0.8°

FA and SAA Planning

● Delivery of “big parts” (W, Pb, Fe ...) : all on site in Oct. 03● Beginning installation FASS : Jan. 2004● End FASS : Feb. 2004● Beginning assembling SA1 & SA2 + FA : May 2004● End of assembling : Sept. 2004● Installation in Oct. & Nov. 2004

Dipole Magnet

● Yoke machining : done (Dec. 2002)

● Yoke delivery : April 2003

– Then beginning of installation in testing area

● Dummy coil : done (Oct. 2002)

● Coil winding : started in Jan. 03

● Coils delivery : August 2003

– Then installation for testing

– Power up Oct. 2003

● Moving to final position : March 2004

● End of installation : June 2004

• 3 Tm, resistive coil•Bnom = 0.7 T•Gap l x h x w =

•5 m x 5.1m x (2.5 – 4.1) m

Yoke Assembly

Dummy Coil

Shaping Tool

Expected Performance

J/

Acceptance down to pT = 0Geometrical acceptance 5%

Mass Resolution

Design values

Contribution from front absorber higher- Non-Gaussian straggling- Electrons produced close to muons

Current value after full simulation and reconstruction:90 MeV (goal < 100 MeV)

Robustness of tracking

● Hit reconstruction– Maximum Likelihood - Expectation Maximization algorithm

● Tracking– Kalman filter

Reduced dependence on background level !

Muon Cocktail

Mass – Spectra

•M =90 MeV/c2 at the • Separation of , ’, “• Total efficiency ~ 75%• Expected statistics (significance @1yr):

central min. bias J/ 310 574 ’ 12 23 39 69 ‘ 19 35 “ 12 22From min. bias events:~ 8k and ~700k J/ /yr

Heavy Flavor Production

Di-muons from beauty production can be used for normalisation.

Conclusions

● ALICE Dimuon Spectrometer project is overall in good shape

● Some improvement and studies ongoing– Station 1 gain homogeneity

– RPC life-time

● Some production already started and the remaining should begin in 2003