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Particle Physics Design Group Studies

BLAND. Particle Physics Design Group Studies. Big Liquid Argon Neutrino Detector Subgroup. The BLAND Group. Patrick Owen Resolution and Efficiency Laurie Hudson General design and Charge readout Stewart Hawkley Triggering and Event reconstruction

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Particle Physics Design Group Studies

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  1. BLAND Particle Physics Design Group Studies Big Liquid Argon Neutrino Detector Subgroup Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  2. The BLAND Group • Patrick Owen • Resolution and Efficiency • Laurie Hudson • General design and Charge readout • Stewart Hawkley • Triggering and Event reconstruction • Cheryl Shepherd and James Mugliston • Magnetics and Cryogenics • Oliver Cartz and Jeanette Avon • Calibration and Background • Dee Campbell-Jackson • Avalanche Photodiodes and Purification Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  3. Introduction • General Setup and Material Choice • Collection Plate • Magnetisation • Photomultipliers • Electronics • Calibration • Background and Location • Purification • Triggering • Simulations • Sensitivity & Resolution • Cost • Summary Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  4. General Setup -Tank has cylindrical geometry - Gaseous argon at the top for bi-phase LEM that will used in charge readout. - Non-magnetic tank and dome. - Anti-coincidence shield - This will all be contained within a cryostat. (Liquid Nitrogen) - Magnet & a return yoke to provide a uniform B field. Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  5. Near Detector • Exactly the same (except size) • Cylindrical shape • 6m diameter, 5m height • Identical in functionality - • Used for measuring cross sections and initial energy spectrum Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  6. Material Choice • $0.6 kg-1 ≈ $10 million (for 1 detector) • High density (1.4 gcm-3) and stability. • εr = 1.6 • μ = 475 cm2V-1s-1 • High scintillation yield; 40,000 γ per MeV • Background rejection of NC and junk CC interactions Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  7. Collection Plate Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  8. Magnet • Far detector - magnetises ~ 17 kTonnesof liquid argon • Solenoid produces a uniform field of 0.55 T • Correction currents with a return yoke • Total coil ~ 5.5 kTonnes • Iron yoke ~ 16.1 kTonnes • Magnet Cooling system • Feasible power consumption of 19.2MW

  9. BLAND magnet demonstration Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  10. Simulation result Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  11. Photomultipliers • Avalanche photodiodes (APD) • Small size • Low dead time • Low temperatures • High B-field • Gain 106 Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  12. Electronics • Current collected is of order pC. • Install pre-amps inside cryostat to reduce capacitance. • Extended lifetime of electronics • High signal: noise ratio • 4 bytes per digitisation, 2.5MHz. • Bandwidth distributed around PC farm. Collection Plate Pre-amplifier ADC Cryostat Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  13. Calibration • Why calibrate? • Initial • Signal Level-> Energy • Test beam • Cosmic ray muons (anti-coincidence shield) • Electronics • Ongoing calibration • Constantly changing variables • Correction factors • Cosmic ray muons Before After Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  14. Background • Projected direction • Known energy range • Location • Expected background: • 10-8 s-1 neutrinos • 1s-1 cosmic ray muons at 1km underground Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  15. Location • Underground • Low background radiation • Few nuclear power plants • High available energy • Existing underground facilities Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  16. Triggering • Average data rate ~45MB/s. • Trigger above background pedestal. • Scintillation light detected by PMTs used to trigger for 'interesting' events. • Effectively segments detector, only reading out locally active regions. • An anti-coincidence shield is used to reject background. Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  17. Purification of LAr • Electron drift ~ 25m • Minimisation of recombination • Purity of <0.1ppb • Monitor contact materials • Hermetic system • Continual purification • 100Watts Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  18. Purity Testing Schematics Signals Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  19. Simulations Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  20. Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  21. Charged current electron production Incident neutrinos Charged current muon production Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  22. Sensitivity http://www.fnal.gov/directorate/DirReviews/Neutrino_Wrkshp_files/Fleming.pdf The QECC cross section (red line) is found to be 7.5x10-43 m2 and 6x10-43 m2 for the far detector and middle detector respectively (Half these values for antineutrinos). Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  23. Sensitivity The average active thickness for the detector, t = 2d/π =14.1m The number density under the average pressure, n = 2.0x1028 d =22m Again these values are halved for antineutrinos Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  24. Energy Resolution • A 1GeV electron will ionise 1.45x107 atoms • The contribution from quantum fluctuations is • Another contribution is from the time resolution which is a systematic error. • Noise and avalanche variation is expected to be negligible. • Other effects such as electronics and dead zones. • These values are best estimates. Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  25. Momentum Resolution • Spatial resolution arises from diffusion and channel size • Total spatial resolution is 6.7mm • Momentum resolution: • Radiation length calculated to be 5.6km – multiple scattering contribution is negligible. • Heavily dependent on path length, L – not constant. Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  26. Momentum Resolution Average fractional momentum resolution is 1% and 3% for the middle and far detectors respectively (worse than energy resolution). Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  27. Cost Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  28. Summary… • Liquid Argon Time Projection Chamber • LEM readout • Uniform 0.55T B-field • Triggering using APDs • Calibration using test beams • Underground • Data Rate 45MB/sec • Purity < 0.1ppb • Great energy resolution, good momentum resolution • Cost ~ $264 mil + running costs Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  29. References • Neutrino Scattering in Liquid Argon TPC Detectors, Fleming. • Radiation Detection and Measurement; 2nd ed, Knoll. • Measurement of the muon decay spectrum with the ICARUS liquid Argon TPC, ICARUS Collaboration. • Detectors for particle radiation, Kleinknecht. • Calorimetry, Wigmans. Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

  30. Questions? Particle Physics Design Group Studies: The BLAND Subgroup

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