Calorimeters

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Calorimeters A calorimeter is a detector that measures “energy” of the particles that pass through. Ideally it stops all particles of interest. Usually made of an active and a passive layer Passive is usually a high density material that causes a lot of interactions with the particle of interest (LEAD). It serves to slow down the particle. The active layers collect light Two types 1) Hadronic - measures energy of all particles made of quarks 2) Electromagnetic – measures energy of electrons, positrons and photons Electromagnetic can be much thinner because electrons lose energy faster than hadrons due to radiation. Calorimeters stop everything except muons and neutrinos http://cms.web.cern.ch/news/how-cms-detects-particles

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Calorimeters. A calorimeter is a detector that measures “energy” of the particles that pass through. Ideally it stops all particles of interest. Usually made of an active and a passive layer - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Calorimeters

Page 1: Calorimeters

Calorimeters A calorimeter is a detector that measures “energy” of the

particles that pass through. Ideally it stops all particles of interest.

Usually made of an active and a passive layer Passive is usually a high density material that causes a lot of

interactions with the particle of interest (LEAD). It serves to slow down the particle.

The active layers collect light Two types

1) Hadronic - measures energy of all particles made of quarks 2) Electromagnetic – measures energy of electrons, positrons and photons

Electromagnetic can be much thinner because electrons lose energy faster than hadrons due to radiation.

Calorimeters stop everything except muons and neutrinos http://cms.web.cern.ch/news/how-cms-detects-particles

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Cerenkov Counters Based on Cerenkov radiation Cerenkov radiation arises when a charged particle in a material

medium moves faster than the speed of light IN THAT MEDIUM

βC = v =cn

n = index of refraction is 1 in vacuum If particle velocity is > βC then it will emit Cerenkov radiation measurement of angle θC gives particle velocity. often used for electron/pion discrimination.

cosθC =1

βn(ω)

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Super Kamiokande

• located 1000 m underground• Holds 50,000 tons of ultra pure water• Neutrinos scatter off n,p and atomic e• m/e scattering leads to Cerenkov radiation• e- multiple scatter and cause fuzzier rings

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Tracking Detectors

Old Style - Photographic Cloud Chambers Bubble Chamber

Modern - Ionization Multiwire proportional

chambers Time projection

chambers GEM and Silicon

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Cloud Chambers Charles Wilson (1869-1959)

In Wilson's original chamber the air inside the sealed device was saturated with water vapor, then a diaphragm is used to expand the air inside the chamber (adiabatic expansion). This cools the air and water vapor starts to condense. When an ionizing particle passes through the chamber, water vapor condenses on the resulting ions and the trail of the particle is visible in the vapor cloud

Wilson, along with Arthur Compton, received the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1927 for his work on the cloud chamber.

Cosmotron at BNL utilized a cloud chamber ….

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Bubble chambers

Invented by Donald Glaser – won Nobel Prize in 1960

Fill chamber with liquid that serves as nuclear target (Hydrogen)

Overpressure liquid ( heat it up to almost boiling)

Fire up the beamline Superheat the liquid by suddenly

reducing pressure so that Hydrogen T > boiling point.

Remnants of collisions ionize the liquid and form bubbles

Bubbles expand and pictures are taken

Chamber is compressed and ready for new cycle

~1 sec cycle

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Gargamelle – bubble chamber @ CERN that discovered neutral currents.

ν u + e−→ν u + e

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Drift Chambers – Faster!

1) Invented by Georges Charpak (actually MWPC) and won Nobel prize in 1992

2) Fill chamber with evenly spaced wires that are raised to a positive potential WRT to cathode planes (see lines of equipotential -> )

3) Fill chamber with gas 4) Charged particles will ionize

the gas. Electrons move toward wires

5) Electrons accelerate and produce avalanche

6) Produces signals in the wires so you can determine where the charged particle traversed!

-HV

-HV

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Region III Drift chambers in CLAS detector at Jefferson Lab

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Time Projection Chambers1) Invented by Dave Nygren at LBL2) Needed for high track density experiments where drift

chambers are completely saturated3) Huge Chamber full of gas that is ionized by the charged

particles4) Electric field is set up so electrons go toward endcaps5) Often magnetic field is used for charge separation6) Total charge deposited @ ends gives total ionization and

therefore dE/dx and PID7) Endcaps have MWPC on end to collect the signal and determine x,y location.

8) Z location determined by drift time

9) Must know your drift velocity well over time in order to calibrate your TPC

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STAR TPC

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Silicon Detectors

Used for precision tracking Use strips of silicon - each with small amount of mass

so particles don’t deposit much energy. Can use near beamline.

Electrons are knocked out of silicon and collected by metallic strips attached to silicon strips

http://www.atlas.ch/multimedia/#pixel-silicon-tracker

ATLAS CMS

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Detector Packages

http://public.web.cern.ch/public/en/research/Detector-en.html