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Analysis Techniques in High Energy Physics

Analysis Techniques in High Energy Physics. G. Bonvicini, C. Pruneau Wayne State University. Some Observables of Interest. Total Interaction/Reaction Cross Section Differential Cross Section: I.e. cross section vs particle momentum, or production angle, etc. Particle life time or width

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Analysis Techniques in High Energy Physics

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  1. Analysis Techniquesin High Energy Physics G. Bonvicini, C. Pruneau Wayne State University

  2. Some Observables of Interest • Total Interaction/Reaction Cross Section • Differential Cross Section: I.e. cross section vs particle momentum, or production angle, etc. • Particle life time or width • Branching Ratio • Particle Production Fluctuation (HI)

  3. Cross Section • Total Cross Section of an object determines how “big” it is and how likely it is to collide with projectile thrown towards it randomly. Small cross section Large cross section

  4. Scattering Cross Section • Differential Cross Section dW - solid angle Flux q – scattering angle Target Unit Area • Average number of scattered into dW • Total Cross Section

  5. Particle life time or width • Most particles studied in particle physics or high energy nuclear physics are unstable and decay within a finite lifetime. • Some useful exceptions include the electron, and the proton. However these are typically studied for their own sake but to address some other observable… • Particles decay randomly (stochastically) in time. The time of their decay cannot be predicted. Only the the probability of the decay can be determined. • The probability of decay (in a certain time interval) depends on the life-time of the particle. In traditional nuclear physics, the concept of half-life is commonly used. • In particle physics and high energy nuclear physics, the concept of mean life time or simple life time is usually used. The two are connected by a simple multiplicative constant.

  6. Half-Life

  7. Half-Life and Mean-Life • The number of particle (nuclei) left after a certain time “t” can be expressed as follows: • where “t” is the mean life time of the particle • “t” can be related to the half-life “t1/2”via the simple relation:

  8. Examples - particles

  9. Radioactive Decay Reactions Used to data rocks Parent Nucleus Daughter Nucleus Half-Life (billion year) Samarium (147Sa) Neodymium (143Nd) 106 Rubidium (87Ru) Strontium (87Sr) 48.8 Thorium (232Th) Lead (208Pb) 14.0 Uranium (238U) Lead (206Pb) 4.47 Potassium (40K) Argon (40Ar) 1.31 Examples - Nuclei

  10. Particle Widths • By virtue of the fact that a particle decays, its mass or energy (E=mc2), cannot be determined with infinite precision, it has a certain width noted G. • The width of an unstable particle is related to its life time by the simple relation • h is the Planck constant.

  11. Decay Widths and Branching Fractions • In general, particles can decay in many ways (modes). • Each of the decay modes have a certain relative probability, called branching fraction or branching ratio. • Example (K0s) Neutral Kaon (Short) • Mean life time = (0.8926±0.0012)x10-10 s • ct = 2.676 cm • Decay modes and fractions

  12. Elementary Observables • Momentum • Energy • Time-of-Flight • Energy Loss • Particle Identification • Invariant Mass Reconstruction

  13. Momentum Measurements • Special Relativity • Definition • Newtonian Mechanics • But how does one measure “p”?

  14. Momentum Measurements Technique • Use a spectrometer with a constant magnetic field B. • Charged particles passing through this field with a velocity “v” are deflected by the Lorentz force. • Because the Lorentz force is perpendicular to both the B field and the velocity, it acts as centripetal force “Fc”. • One finds

  15. Momentum Measurements Technique • Knowledge of B and R needed to get “p” • B is determined by the construction/operation of the spectrometer. • “R” must be measured for each particle. • To measure “R”, STAR and CLEO both use a similar technique. • Find the trajectory of the charged particle through detectors sensitive to particle energy loss and capable of measuring the location of the energy deposition.

  16. Star Time-Projection-Chamber (TPC) • Large Cylindrical Vessel filled with “P10” gas (10% methane, 90% Ar) • Imbedded in a large solenoidal magnet • Longitudinal Electrical Field used to supply drive force needed to collect charge produced ionization of p10 gas by the passage of charged particles.

  17. STAR TPC

  18. Pad readout • 2×12 super-sectors 190 cm Outer sector 6.2 × 19.5 mm2 pad 3940 pads Inner sector 2.85 × 11.5 mm2 pad 1750 pads 127 cm 60 cm

  19. O S T A R Pixel Pad Readout Readout arranged like the face of a clock - 5,690 pixels per sector JT: 20 The Berkeley Lab

  20. Momentum Measurement B=0.5 T p+ Radius: R Trajectory is a helix in 3D; a circle in the transverse plane Collision Vertex

  21. O S T A R Au on Au Event at CM Energy ~ 130 A GeV Data taken June 25, 2000. The first 12 events were captured on tape! Real-time track reconstruction Pictures from Level 3 online display. ( < 70 ms ) JT: 22 The Berkeley Lab

  22. The CLEO detector

  23. A CLEO III hadronic event

  24. A fast charged particle interacts with matter • Ionization (atom → ion + electron) • Atomic excitation (atom → atom + photon • Molecule breakup (molecule → two molecules/atoms) (eg, CH4 →CH2+H2) (molecular breakup can be avoided only if molecule=atom, that is, noble gases)

  25. Some properties of ionization • Takes about 10 eV to ionize. Typical yield 1e/40eV. • Needs an electric field to separate ion and electron • Needs “gain” (anywhere from 1000 to 100000), therefore a very high electric field. We use wires because the field goes like 1/R →MV/m near the wire, but moderate away from wire.

  26. Some properties of scintillation Takes about 3-5 eV. Typical yield 1 photon per 100 eV • Light travels far • Needs a device to turn light signal into electric signal (photomultiplier)

  27. Neutral particle interacts with matter • Neutral particles do not ionize • When they first interact, they knock out CHARGED particles which do ionize • We measure their ENERGY by measuring the ionization/scintillation of their targets • They are identified in very dense detectors (calorimeters) • A 1 GeV neutron will typically interact and be stopped in 1 meter of iron • A 1 GeV photon will interact and be stopped in 10 cm of lead

  28. Bowling ball hits golf ball • Our typical particle is the pion (M=139 MeV) • It is 270 times heavier than one electron, and 120 times lighter than a carbon nucleus • When a pion hits an electron it mostly loses ENERGY(in gas, 30 keV/cm), but it is hardly deflected – like a BB hitting a GB

  29. Golf ball hits bowling ball • But there are nuclei in there too • When the golf ball hits the bowling ball, it will lose little energy but the momentum will be severely affected (multiple scattering). The bigger the nucleus, the higher the multiple scattering • So, most of the energy is released to electrons, but most of the momentum change is off the nuclei

  30. Some useful kinematic relations • Newtonian: p=mv, E=p2/2m, E=pv/2, etc. • You need two of (p,m,v,E) to find the other two). We need to know the mass to identify the particle, and we need to know its quantity of motion (either p or E) • Relativistic: p=gmv, E=gm, v=p/E, etc. • Same deal, different formulas

  31. Energy Measurement • Definition • Newtonian • Special Relativity

  32. Energy Measurement • Determination of energy by calorimetry • Particle energy measured via a sample of its energy loss as it passes through layers of radiator (e.g. lead) and sampling materials (scintillators)

  33. More Complex Observables • Particle Identification • Invariant Mass Reconstruction • Identification of decay vertices

  34. Particle Identification • Particle Identification or PID amounts to the determination of the mass of particles. • The purpose is not to measure unknown mass of particles but to measure the mass of unidentified particles to determine their species e.g. electron, pion, kaon, proton, etc. • In general, this is accomplished by using to complementary measurements e.g. time-of-flight and momentum, energy-loss and momentum, etc

  35. Time-of-Flight (TOF) Measurements • Typically use scintillation detectors to provide a “start” and “stop” time over a fixed distance. • Electric Signal Produced by scintillation detector • Use electronic Discriminator • Use time-to-digital-converters (TDC) to measure the time difference = stop – start. • Given the known distance, and the measured time, one gets the velocity of the particle Time S (volts)

  36. PID by TOF • Since • The mass can be determined • In practice, this often amounts to a study of the TOF vs momentum.

  37. PID with a TPC • The energy loss of charged particles passing through a gas is a known function of their momentum. (Bethe-Bloch Formula)

  38. O S T A R Particle Identification by dE/dx Anti - 3He dE/dx PID range: ~ 0.7 GeV/c for K/ ~ 1.0 GeV/c for K/p

  39. Invariant Mass Reconstruction • In special relativity, the energy and momenta of particles are related as follow • This relation holds for one or many particles. In particular for 2 particles, it can be used to determine the mass of parent particle that decayed into two daughter particles.

  40. Invariant Mass Reconstruction (cont’d) • Invariant Mass • Invariant Mass of two particles • After simple algebra

  41. But – remember the jungle of tracks… Large likelihood of coupling together tracks that do not actually belong together…

  42. Example – Lambda Reconstruction Good pairs have the right invariant mass and accumulate in a peak at the Lambda mass. Bad pairs produce a more or less continuous background below and around the peak.

  43. STAR STRANGENESS! (Preliminary) _ K+ _ W-+ L W+ f K0s L X- _ X+ K*

  44. Finding V0s proton Primary vertex pion

  45. After Before In case you thought it was easy…

  46. _ Reconstruct: Reconstruct: _ ~0.006 X-/ev, ~0.005 X+/ev ~0.84 L/ev, ~ 0.61 L/ev Ratio = 0.82 ± 0.08 (stat) Ratio = 0.73 ± 0.03 (stat) Strange Baryon Ratios STAR Preliminary

  47. Resonances f K+ K-

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