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The future GSI facility Physics with antiprotons at the GSI future facility

Kai-Thomas Brinkmann Sep. 17, 2003 VERTEX 2003 Low Wood, Lake Windermere. PANDA at the GSI Future Facility. supported by BMBF. The future GSI facility Physics with antiprotons at the GSI future facility The PANDA detector Target options and vertex detector, triggers

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The future GSI facility Physics with antiprotons at the GSI future facility

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  1. Kai-Thomas Brinkmann Sep. 17, 2003 VERTEX 2003 Low Wood, Lake Windermere PANDA at the GSI Future Facility supported by BMBF • The future GSI facility • Physics with antiprotons at the GSI future facility • The PANDA detector • Target options and vertex detector, triggers • Summary and outlook KTB

  2. Press Release 16/2003, http://www.bmbf.de 05.02.2003 Bulmahn gives green light for large-scale research equipment "We are securing an international top position for German basic research" ...Basic research in the natural sciences has a long tradition in Germany. Its success is inseparably linked with the use of large-scale equipment at national and international research centres. "With the new concept, basic research in Germany will start from an excellent position when entering a new decade of successful work", Minister Bulmahn said. Together with European partners, the Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung (GSI) in Darmstadt shall extend its equipment in a phased approach and become a leading European physics centre. At least 25% of the costs amounting to €675 million are to be supplied by foreign partners. KTB

  3. Primary Beams http://www-new.gsi.de/zukunftsprojekt/index_e.html Intensity upgrade of the existing accelerator complex 1012/s, 1.5 A GeV 238U28+ Acceleration in SIS 100 2(4)·1013/s 30 GeV protons 1010/s 238U73+ to 25 (- 35) A GeV Storage in SIS 200 Technical prerequisites Beam cooling Fast-ramping superconducting magnets SIS 100/200 SIS 18 KTB

  4. Secondary Beams Secondary beams Radioactive beams from 1.5 to 2 A GeV, 104 more intensive than at present Antiprotons from 3 (0) to 30 GeV Storage rings, beam cooling Radioactive beams e – A collider 1011 stored and cooled antiprotons of 0.8 to 14.5 GeV/c HESR CR SuperFRS NESR KTB

  5. Secondary Beams – Antiprotons Extraction into HESR for experiments 1011 stored antiprotons 0.8 to 14.5 GeV x/x ≥ 100 µm L = 2·1032 cm-2s-1p/p ≥ 10-4 L = 1·1031 cm-2s-1 p/p ≥ 10-5 KTB

  6. antiProton ANnihilation experiment located at the new accelerator facility at DArmstadt ..in short: PANDA • Many open questions in non-perturbative QCD • - Charmonium spectroscopy - Hybrids - New states • Chiral symmetry in SU(3) and SU(4) • - Hadrons in nuclear matter • Hypernuclei: “3rd dimension of the chart of nuclides“ • CP violation in the charm sector, virtual Compton scattering, baryon spectroscopy, antiproton physics at low energies ... KTB

  7. 100 keV Structure of Hadrons: Quark-Gluon Dynamics Charmonium spectroscopy Superior resolution in formation KTB

  8. Structure of Hadrons: Quark-Gluon Dynamics Hybrids Quarks in mesons are well-localized objects connected by gluons which can be excited (qqg, gg states) Expectation: Hybrid states better separated from fewer states in charm region KTB

  9. SPS g,p-,p - beams RHIC LHC SIS 18 SIS 200 T [MeV] 300 Mesons in Nuclear Matter Hadrons in nuclear matter and chiral restoration Mesons in cold baryonic matter: production with antiprotons KTB

  10. Mesons in Nuclear Matter Interpretation: effective mass in the medium differs from the free mass GSI CBM and PANDA FOPI, KaoS, ANKE pionic atoms SIS: increased K- yield in nuclei through medium modification KTB

  11. Mesons in Nuclear Matter Hadrons in nuclei D effective mass opens strong decay channels → properties of (vector) mesons changed KTB

  12. vertex detector Detectors • Fixed-target experiment •  Forward-backward asymmetry required • Solenoid + dipole • Granularity increase with decreasing scattering angle 1m C. Schwarz, GSI Lower quality requirements for backward hemisphere  Access to most detectors will be possible through the upstream end of the detector (e.g. DIRC) only. KTB

  13. Detectors PANDA, top view PANDA, side view KTB

  14. 1 mm Targets Pellet target: 1016 atoms/cm2 , pellets of 20-40 µm diameter L= 1031 cm-2s-1 with 5·1010 p in HESR, suited for high resolution mode, Dp/p ~ 10-5, with e--cooling (up to 8 GeV) KTB

  15. Targets Cluster jet target: Up to 1015 atoms/cm2 about 1 cm long in interaction region L=2·1032/cm2s with 2·1011 p in HESR (Dp/p ~ 10-4 with stochastic cooling) A. Khoukaz, U Münster Superfluid Helium targets: 1015 atoms/cm2, droplets, 0.5-100 µm ø with little divergence only (<0.1°) Heavy ion targets: heavy gases, wires, and foils KTB

  16. Targets and Trigger • Panda will have to cope with an extended interaction region • Primary vertex often unknown • Wires and (perhaps) pellets define z with ~20 µm accuracy, displacement observable • 107 interactions per second have to be handled and efficiently searched for events of desired shape KTB

  17. C. Schwarz, GSI Detectors: Forward Spectrometer • Forward dipole: • Max. B-field 2 Tm, actual field given by beam energy • 1 m gap • Tracking with drift chambers • PID with Cherenkov • e-m calorimeter • Hadronic calorimeter • Muon chambers KTB

  18. Detectors: e-m Calorimeter Barrel APD readout, fast scintillator to handle high rate KTB

  19. Detectors: DIRC PID (e, m, p, K, p): below 50 hadronic calorimeter 50<Θ<220aerogel Cherenkov counter or forward RICH 220<Θ<1400 DIRC (BABAR@SLAC) Simulated DIRC response: p / K sep. KTB

  20. Detectors • DIRC provides particle ID above 700 MeV/c only, • but dynamic range of particles extends down to much lower momenta, esp. in backward direction • Time-of-flight and/or energy loss measurement required! Add plastic barrel, use Silicon detector pulse height … KTB

  21. Detectors: Outer Tracker Straw tubes • Alternating tilted layers • 15 double layers • 9000 tubes • Layers 2-14 are inclined with skew angles between 4-9o • Tube length –1.5 m • Tube diameters –4, 6, 8 mm • 20 µm aluminized mylar, anode wire 20 µm thick • Light materials • Self-supporting structure • High rate capability due to single-straw readout KTB

  22. Detectors: Outer Tracker Performance studies (GEANT4) Transverse resolution 150 µm Longitudinal resolution 1 mm KTB KTB Feb. 04, 2003

  23. A. Sokolov, GSI Detectors: Inner Vertex Micro-vertex detector Conceptual design adopts state-of-the-art silicon sensor techniques (ATLAS/CMS/ALICE inner tracker layers) • Design features: • 5 layers forward of 90° • Barrel and forward disk structures • Smallest possible inner radius • Fast readout KTB

  24. forward wheels pixels 100 µm X 150 µm barrel pixels 50 µm X 300 µm ToF beam pipe pellet pipe total area < 0.2 m2 Detectors: Inner Vertex 7.2M barrel pixels, 50 μm x 300 μm 2M forward pixels, 100 μm x 150 μm 5 layers, 200 μm thick sensors (0.25%X0) Bump-bonded readout, 300 µm thick (0.37% X0) KTB

  25. Detectors: Inner Vertex Radial deviation Longitudinal dev. track y z x KTB KTB April 24, 2003

  26. Detectors: Inner Vertex Micro-vertex detector optimisation KTB

  27. Detectors: Inner Vertex Micro-vertex detector optimisation Change in beam pipe diameter 2 cm  4 cm (may be needed for vacuum and pumping) distance / mm KTB

  28. Detectors: Inner Vertex Barrel 90 staves, forward 120 staves Thickness: staves 0.32% X0 cooling 0.4% X0 TOTAL 0.96% to 3.6% X0 Beam pipe now BeAl alloy, 500 µm KTB

  29. (A. Sokolov, GSI) Detectors: Inner Vertex Present round of simulations Conversion probabilities (from pp  3p0 at 8 GeV/c) Beam pipe 0.9% Vertex detector 3.1% Straw tracker 3.5% (2% from support) DIRC 20% KTB

  30.  / mm  / mm  / deg  / deg Detectors: Inner Vertex Spatial resolution Multiple scattering of µ with Pc = 1 GeV KTB

  31. Mean resolution for pp4mevents at 8 GeV Detectors: Inner Vertex Modification of pixel orientation (size 50 µm x 400 µm) 1st and 3rd – 5th layers with pads  to beam 2nd layer || to beam direction Pad intrinsic resolution 12 µm x 70 µm KTB

  32. D [mm] Z [mm] Detectors: Inner Vertex Y(3770)D+D- K++K-+2p++2p- Only longitudinal coordinate sensitive to D-mesons KTB

  33. 8 GeV/c Detectors: Inner Vertex KTB

  34. Hypernuclei KTB

  35. Detectors: Inner Vertex Considerations on radiation hardness Multiplicity of neutrons/protons, p+Fe, 7 GeV/c, about 10 (total particle multiplicity 30)[UrQMD, Galoyan&Polanski hep-ph/0304196] Neutron flux: HI targets aiming at 107 interactions/s, Mn = 10 => Φn 106 cm-2s-1in innermost layer (r = 1 cm) 3·1013neutrons per year, probably less in case of Hydrogen targets KTB

  36. DAQ and Trigger • Self-triggered detector readout • Flash ADCs • Synchronization via distributed clock, 50 ps resolution • NO trigger signals, but FPGA-based flexible data reduction, feature extraction and filtering on the fly • High-performance computer nodes and high-bandwidth connections, Gbit Ethernet • Hardware: PC memories and FPGAs • Self-Triggered Data Push Architecture to allow parallel selection of different event types KTB

  37. Summary PANDA @ GSI will have a rich physics programme. A broad range of physics topics will be covered with one multi-purpose detector setup. For most of these topics, a micro-vertex detector is essential. Studies for the detector layout are under way. Also under investigation: alternative designs, e.g. employing MAPS and/or strip detectors. KTB

  38. U Bochum U Bonn U & INFN Brescia U Catania U Cracow GSI Darmstadt TU Dresden JINR Dubna I + II U Erlangen NWU Evanston U & INFN Ferrara U Frankfurt LNF-INFN Frascati U & INFN Genova U Glasgow U Gießen 40 Institutes (32 Locations) from 9 Countries:Austria - Germany – Italy – Netherlands – Poland – Russia – Sweden – United Kingdom – USA KVI Groningen IKP Jülich I + II U Katowice LANL Los Alamos U Mainz TU München U Münster BINP Novosibirsk U Pavia U of Silesia U Torino Politechnico di Torino U & INFN Trieste U Tübingen U & TSL Uppsala ÖAdW Vienna SINS Warsaw KTB

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