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Study of Cherenkov Detectors for High Momentum Charged Particle Identification in ALICE Experiment at LHC

This study explores the use of Cherenkov detectors to identify high momentum charged particles in the ALICE experiment at the LHC. It examines different gas choices and detector setups, as well as the impact of background and occupancy on particle identification.

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Study of Cherenkov Detectors for High Momentum Charged Particle Identification in ALICE Experiment at LHC

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  1. Study of Cherenkov detectors for high momentum charged particle identification in ALICE experiment at LHC Guy Paic Instituto de Ciencias Nucleares UNAM For the VHMPID group

  2. New aspects of physics at LHC • Hard collisions among partons • collisions SPS: 98% soft, il 2% hard; • collisions RHIC : 50% soft, 50 % hard; • collisions LHC: 2% soft, 98 % hard. Results of RHIC @ BNL RHIC measured an increase of the production of baryons and antibaryons with respect to mesons at momenta pT ≈ 2 – 5 GeV/c,

  3. Predictions for LHC • The results of RHIC are interpreted in the framework of partonic recombination or coalescence • The high density of particles favors the recombination of partons in baryons • Some predictions for LHC favor strongly the production of baryons in a large momentum range pT ≈ 10 – 20 GeV/c (ref. Rudolph C. Hwa, C. B. Yang, arXiv:nucl-th/0603053 v2 21 Jun 2006)

  4. The detectors of ALICE HMPID RICH , PID @ high pT TRD Electron ID, Tracking TOF PID @ intermediate pT TPC Main Tracking, PID with dE/dx ITS Vertexing, low pt tracking and PID with dE/dx MUON m-ID PHOS g,p0 -ID L3 Magnet B=0.2-0.5 T pioni + T0,V0, PMD,FMD and ZDC Forward rapidity region pioni

  5. THe experiment ALICE p/K TPC + ITS (dE/dx) K/p e /p p/K TOF K/p p/K HMPID (RICH) K/p 0 1 2 3 4 5 p (GeV/c) TRD e /p 1 10 100 p (GeV/c) • Excellent particle identification: • ITS + TPC : • TOF : • TRD : • HMPID : (1÷5 GeV/c).

  6. VHMPID • At present there is no identification track by track available in ALICE for p > 5 GeV/c • We are studying 5÷10 GeV/c  VHMPID (Very High MomentumParticle Identifier Detector). • We tried several posibilities of designing a Cherenkov counter which will allow us to obtain an identification from ~10 to ~30 GeV/c for protons • Aerogel • Gas Cherenkov in different geometries

  7. Gas choice • CF4 produces scintillation photons which produce unwanted background (Nph≈ 1200/MeV), • C4F10 is no more produced because of the ozone hole • We therefore continue our work with C5F12.

  8. Impulso momentum C4F10 C5F12 Particle Id. Particle Id. < 3 GeV/c < 2.5 GeV/c 0 0 e e 3< p < 9 GeV/c 2.5< p < 8 GeV/c 1 1 p p 0 0 K, p K, p 8 < p < 15 GeV/c 9 < p < 17 GeV/c 1 1 p, K p, K 0 0 p p > 17 GeV/c > 15 GeV/c 1 1 p p 3< p < 9 GeV/c 9 < p < 17 GeV/c CF4 (n ≈ 1.0005, gth ≈ 31.6) C4F10 (n ≈ 1.0014, gth ≈ 18.9) C5F12 (n ≈ 1.002, gth ≈ 15.84) 2.5< p < 8 GeV/c Momentum intervals for different particles 8 < p < 15 GeV/c

  9. Setups Proximity-geometry setup: the signal from the MIP is present. The gas length is the same in all positions TIC (Threshold Imaging Cherenkov) setup: the photons are reflected into the detector of phoptons by a mirror – the MIP signal is absent

  10. Study of the particle identification with the focusing geometry information 25 GeV/c proton Radius of the blob Number of pad in the blob Photon detector

  11. Topology of the blobs in the TIC setup Nph(b = 1) ≈ (1.4 eV-1cm-1)*(3 eV)*(115 cm) ≈ 480, 3 GeV/c <N> ≈ 24 <N> ≈ 55 15 GeV/c

  12. Topology of the blobs – proximity focusing setup Nph(b = 1) ≈ (1.4 eV-1cm-1)*(3 eV)*(180 cm) ≈ 760, MA 15 GeV/c <N> ≈ 43 3 GeV/c

  13. Diameter of the photon blob A special algorithm was developed to determine the photon blob We consider that the radius R is given by the circle which contains of the pads registered.

  14. Separation power

  15. Study of background and occupancy in ALICE Interaction point VHMPID box We have simulated a detector inserted in the ALICE simulation framework with all the other detector present • The coordinates in the ALICE reference system are C(0, 5.04 m, 4 m). • we simulated 3000 HIJING events; • B = 0.5 Tesla;

  16. Particelle cariche totali <N> ≈ 47 Particelle cariche con impulso maggiore dell’impulso di soglia Cherenkov <N> ≈ 17

  17. Occupancy ≈ 5.8 % Occupancy

  18. Conclusions I • We abandon the TIC geometry • It is difficult to build large size detectors in this geometry • The form of the blob depends from the point of imapact • the absence of the MIP signal in conditions of large background as in PbPb collisions at LHC is making the tracking difficult

  19. ID for a single particle

  20. ID in Pb-Pb events

  21. Conclusion II • The proximity focusing design is very sensitive to background and therefore difficult to identify without substantial misidentification

  22. Focussing VHMPID focusing properties of spherical mirrors which have been successfully used in many RICH detectors the photons emitted in the radiator focus in a plane that is located at 120cm from the mirror center. The spherical mirror radius is 240 cm, the hexagon radius is 30 cm, the radiator tank is 60 x 60 x 120 cm, and the detector 60 x 10 x 2 cm.

  23. Digitization & Detector Response The simulations include the CsI quantum efficiency of the photocathode, the gas transmittance, and the optical characteristics of the proposed materials. Plus the response and digitization of the CsI+MWPC photon detector

  24. Number of detected photons

  25. Occupancy

  26. PID separation

  27. PID separation 24 GeV/c 16 GeV/c 26 GeV/c

  28. Background

  29. Conclusions III • The focusing geometry offers a real possibility to identify the protons in a large momentum range • We are working on deatiled pattern recognition for this setup • We are working on the photon detector design and tests using gas electron multipliers (GEM)

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