1 / 15

Gas detectors in a ZDC (at LHC)

Gas detectors in a ZDC (at LHC). Edwin Norbeck and Yasar Onel University of Iowa For7 th CMS Heavy-Ion meeting at Delphi June 2003. TAN. Neutral Energy Absorber. Between beam pipes 140 m from IP For pp receives ~210 W of neutrons and photons Radiation levels up to 50 Grad/yr.

stan
Download Presentation

Gas detectors in a ZDC (at LHC)

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Gas detectors in a ZDC (atLHC) Edwin Norbeck and Yasar Onel University of Iowa For7th CMS Heavy-Ion meeting at Delphi June 2003

  2. TAN Neutral Energy Absorber Between beam pipes 140 m from IP For pp receives ~210 W of neutrons and photons Radiation levels up to 50 Grad/yr Use neutral flux to measure and optimize luminosity. For PbPb use to measure impact parameter Measure with a Zero Degree Calorimeter, ZDC E. Norbeck U. of Iowa Gas-ZDC Delphi June 11, 2003

  3. ZDC signal vs impact parameter E. Norbeck U. of Iowa Gas-ZDC Delphi June 11, 2003

  4. Absolute luminosity for PbPb Use correlated forward-backward neutrons. Cuts out beam-air and beam-wall collisions. s1n,1n =.535 b s1n,xn =1.89 b sxn,xn =14.8 b S.N.White NIM A 417 (1998) 1 E. Norbeck U. of Iowa Gas-ZDC Delphi June 11, 2003

  5. Requirements for detectors in TAN Energy measurements within 25 ns (for pp) 100 ns (for PbPb) Timing to within 300 ps Four quadrants for beam location (Neutral “beam” is about 2 cm in diameter) Fit within 8 cm x 8 cm x 100 cm (along beam) Simple, reliable, radiation hard Require little or no maintenance E. Norbeck U. of Iowa Gas-ZDC Delphi June 11, 2003

  6. Detectors and absorbers inTAN Neutrons and photons come in on left end. W tungsten metal (generates showers) P PPAC (time) IC ion chamber (energy) • Beam people want one IC in TAN at all times. • We must at least consider the logical extension presented here. E. Norbeck U. of Iowa Gas-ZDC Delphi June 11, 2003

  7. Typical low-pressure PPAC (Parallel Plate Avalanche Counter) • Two flat plates • Separated by2 mm • Filled with 10 torr isobutane • Most MIPs leave no signal • 700 V between plates • Timing resolution better than 300 ps • Not useful for HEP until LHC E. Norbeck U. of Iowa Gas-ZDC Delphi June 11, 2003

  8. for PPAC in TAN • Three flat plates, separated by2 mm • Middle plate at high voltage • Outer plates hold atmospheric pressure • Not separated into quadrants • Filled with 10-40 torr of a suitable gas • Gas flows in one side and out the other • Timing resolution better than 300 ps Use in Zero level trigger • Plate composition chosen to maximize signal, i.e. maximize conversion of soft photons to electrons E. Norbeck U. of Iowa Gas-ZDC Delphi June 11, 2003

  9. Test PPAC and electronics At heavy-ion facility (NSCL, GANIL…) Chose energy of heavy-ion beam so that after passing through the outer plate it will have an energy that will produce a signal the same size as a shower at LHC. Rough calculation finds that 35 A MeV Ar gives the same signal in a PPAC as the shower maximum from one 2.75 TeV neutron. The heavy-ion laboratories use many PPACs and have a good supply of gas handlers, etc. E. Norbeck U. of Iowa Gas-ZDC Delphi June 11, 2003

  10. IonizationChamber • Four quadrants • Beryllium-copper plates • Ceramic and sapphire insulators • Plated strip on ceramic circuit board plate bias connections • Isolated instrumentation ground and local ground shielding enclosures W.C. Turner et al., NIM A 461 (2001) 107 E. Norbeck U. of Iowa Gas-ZDC Delphi June 11, 2003

  11. Parameters for an ionization chamber module . Active area per quadrant 40mm x 40mm Plate gap 0.5 mm No. of gaps 60 (6 series x 10 parallel) Capacitance/gap 28.3 pF Gas Ar+N2(1%), 4x760 Torr Gap voltage 150 V Electron gap transit time 21.7 ns Integration time constant 2.0 ns Time between bunches 25 ns mip per pp int. 268 Electron/ion pairs/cm-mip 388 S/N for average pp int. 6 E. Norbeck U. of Iowa Gas-ZDC Delphi June 11, 2003

  12. Optimization of IC for PbPb • Increase time constant to 20 ns in front end electronics. • Ample time Time between bunches is 100 ns. • Possibly increase gas pressure E. Norbeck U. of Iowa Gas-ZDC Delphi June 11, 2003

  13. Detectors and absorbers inZDC Need simulations to optimize location of first two modules. (Might need four modules.) Radiation length only 0.35 cm in W 7 nuclear interaction lengths of tungsten Energy in ICs from a neutron depends on the location of first interaction. W metal + detectors has more stopping power than the copper metal it replaces. E. Norbeck U. of Iowa Gas-ZDC Delphi June 11, 2003

  14. PPAC energy resolution Poor for single heavy ion Current per mm2is huge! Same size signal from shower may have good resolution. Measure resolution with double PPAC Look at ratio between two sides Perhaps use PPACs also for energy E. Norbeck U. of Iowa Gas-ZDC Delphi June 11, 2003

  15. CONCLUSIONS Zero Degree Calorimeter of W and gas: • Is radiation hard • Can be left in place for both pp and PbPb • Provides good energy and time resolution, but how does it compare to a quartz fiber ZDC? E. Norbeck U. of Iowa Gas-ZDC Delphi June 11, 2003

More Related