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Testbeam Requirements for LC Calorimetry

Testbeam Requirements for LC Calorimetry. S. R. Magill for the Calorimetry Working Group. Physics/Detector Goals for LC Calorimetry E-flow implications for CAL Design/Testing Optimization for E-flow Testbeam Goals Hardware/Readout mode tests

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Testbeam Requirements for LC Calorimetry

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  1. Testbeam Requirements for LC Calorimetry S. R. Magill for the Calorimetry Working Group • Physics/Detector Goals for LC Calorimetry • E-flow implications for CAL Design/Testing • Optimization for E-flow • Testbeam Goals • Hardware/Readout mode tests • E-flow/Detector simulation validation/verification • Test Beam Programs and Venues • Summary

  2. Physics/Detector Goals for LC Calorimetry • For example, explore EWSB thru the interactions : • e+e- -> WW and e+e- -> ZZ • -> Requires Z,W ID • -> Can’t always use (traditional) constrained fits Physics Requirement : separately id W, Z using dijet mass in hadronic decay mode (~70% BR)-> higher statistics physics analyses Detector Goal : measure jets with energy resolution -> /E ~ 30%/E W,Z 75%/M • Calorimeter challenge :match tracks • to charged hadrons – requires separation • of charged/neutral hadron showers in Cal, • and isolation of photons –> E-flow approach • -> high granularity, both transverse and longitudinal, to reconstruct showers in 3-D 30%/M

  3. E-Flow Implications for Calorimetry Traditional Standards Hermeticity Uniformity Compensation Single Particle E measurement Outside “thin” magnet (~1 T) E-Flow Modification Hermeticity Optimize ECAL/HCAL separately Longitudinal Segmentation Particle shower reconstruction Inside “thick” coil (~4 T) Optimized for best single particle E resolution Optimized for best particle shower separation/reconstruction

  4. ECAL E-flow Optimization • Priorities : • Measure (isolated) photon energy • Separate charged/neutral hadron showers • For good isolation of photon showers : • -> small rM (Moliere radius) – dense calorimeter • -> If the transverse segmentation is of size rM, get optimal transverse separation of electromagnetic clusters • -> If X0/I is small, then the longitudinal separation between starting points of electromagnetic and hadronic showers is large • All of the above help to separate hadron showers as well A dense ECAL with high granularity (small transverse size cells), high segmentation (many thin absorber layers), and with X0/I small is optimal for E-Flow. -> 3-D shower reconstruction • Some examples : • Material Z A X0/I • Fe 26 56 0.0133 • Cu 29 64 0.0106 • W 74 1840.0019 • Pb 82 2070.0029 • U 92 2380.0016

  5. HCAL E-flow Optimization • Priorities : • Measure neutral hadron energy • Separate charged/neutral hadron showers • To optimize the HCAL for E-Flow requires : • full containment of (neutral) hadronic showers • good precision on energy measurement • high segmentation in transverse and longitudinal directions in • order to separate in 3-D close-by clusters in jets • Integrated approach including other detector sub- • components in the design phase, with E-Flow algorithms • Assume a tracking system optimized for, e.g., di-lepton • measurements • Assume a dense ECAL optimized for photon reconstruction • Vary HCAL parameters, e.g., absorber material, thickness, size of • readout cells in both transverse and longitudinal directions, to • determine optimal performance in an E-Flow Algorithm.

  6. Testbeam Goals for Calorimetry • Test detector hardware technologies and readout configurations • -> flexible configurations of absorber type and thickness, active media types • -> linearity, uniformity, signal response, energy resolution, analog/digital readout schemes • Study reconstruction algorithms • -> flexible configurations of transverse granularity, longitudinal segmentation • -> E-flow properties, particle shower shapes • -> beam particle tracking? • Validate/verify MC simulation • -> shower libraries

  7. Calorimeter Hardware/Readout Schemes ECAL Si pixel/W sandwichAnalog “SD Detector” Scin Tile/W sandwich Analog Si-Scin/W hybridAnalog Dense CrystalsAnalog Cerenkov compensated Analog HCAL Scin Tile/SS sandwichAnalog “CALICE” Scin “pixels”/SSDigital RPC/SSDigital GEM/SSDigital Same absorber – hanging file configuration at Testbeam?

  8. E-flow/Simulation validation Testbeam Requirements • Design of CAL relies on simulation for E-flow algorithm applications • Simulations need to be verified in testbeam at particle shower level • Ultimate goal is jet energy/particle mass resolution - not possible in test beam • So, since EFAs require separation/id of photons, charged hadrons, and neutrals - • Verify photon shower shape in ECAL prototype (Si/W with fine granularity - 1X1 cm**2 or better – see plot) • Verify pion shower probability in ECAL as function of longitudinal layer • Verify pion shower shapes in ECAL/HCAL prototype (must be able to contain the hadron shower both transverse and longitudinally – see plot) • Try to get beams with particle energies as in Z jets from e+e- -> ZZ at 500 GeV ->

  9. e+e- -> ZZ @ 500 GeV Energy (GeV) Energy (GeV) Energy (GeV)

  10. 3 GeV e- in SD Cal 70% of e- energy in layers 3-9 13,15.5 Shower Radius (black) Ampl. Fraction (red) 5.2,6.2 ECAL/HCAL Boundary 2.6,3.1 cm (front,back) ECAL Layer

  11. 10 GeV - in SD Cal 80 cm X 80 cm (min.) X 34 layer HCAL 15.5,26 Shower Radius (red) Ampl. Fraction (blue) 7.8,12.6 20 cm X 20 cm X 30 layer ECAL Need all 34 layers 3.1,5.2 cm (front,back) HCAL

  12. Summary of SD Calorimeter Properties • On average, 94% of pion energy is contained within an ECAL area of 20 X 20 cm2 • -> 20% of 10 GeV pions appear as MIPS throughout the entire ECAL volume, therefore are 100% contained • In the SD CAL, 95% of pion energy is contained for 35% of 10 GeV pions in a 20 X 20 cm2 ECAL coupled with an 80 X 80 cm2 HCAL (90% containment for 66% of these pions) • -> important to tag leakage from ECAL/HCAL in all directions • In a digital SD HCAL, 90% of pion hits are contained in a 90 X 90 cm2 area • -> again, important to tag leakage from ECAL/HCAL in all directions • Readout Channels for Testbeam CAL : • 30 X 30 cm2 SD ECAL (0.5 cm X 0.5 cm pixels in 30 layers) • -> 108K channels!!! • 1 X 1 m2 SD HCAL (1 cm X 1 cm cells in 40 layers) • -> 400K channels!!!

  13. LC CAL Testbeam Configuration Beam halo veto scintillator paddles Tagging scintillator paddles surround CAL modules Scintillator hodoscopes Beam ECAL Dead material HCAL Wire Chambers (3-views) HCAL : 1 X 1 X 1 m3

  14. Testbeam Programs Several scenarios suggested so far :

  15. Testbeam Venues • Testbeam requirements : • Electron and photon beam • Pion and other hadron beam • Energies of EM and Hadrons: 5 - 150 ~ 250 GeV (If possible as low energies as possible, down to 1~2 GeV) • Muon beam at energies 1-100 GeV or so --> This is for calorimeter tracking algorithm studies.

  16. Summary • The Calorimeter Working Group has begun to think about testbeam programs – first working document written which addresses : • -> Compatibility of various hardware configurations in the same testbeam area • -> Challenge of testbeam programs for E-flow calorimetry • -> Challenge of several readout configurations, large number of channels • -> First look at possible venues • -> Cooperation with European (CALICE) colleagues

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