38 research outputs found

    Physics at the LHC: a short overview

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    The CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC) started operation a few months ago. The machine will deliver proton-proton and nucleus-nucleus collisions at energies as high as sqrt(s)=14 TeV and luminosities up to L~10^{34} cm^{-2}s^{-1}, never reached before. The main open scientific questions that the seven LHC experiments -- ATLAS, CMS, ALICE, LHCb, TOTEM, LHCf and MOEDAL -- aim to solve in the coming years are succinctly reviewed.Comment: 9 pages, 16 plots. Invited review talk Hot-Quarks 2010, La Londe-Les-Maures, July 2010. J. Phys. Conf. Ser. 270, 012001 (2011). Minor typos correcte

    LHC Optics Measurement with Proton Tracks Detected by the Roman Pots of the TOTEM Experiment

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    Precise knowledge of the beam optics at the LHC is crucial to fulfil the physics goals of the TOTEM experiment, where the kinematics of the scattered protons is reconstructed with the near-beam telescopes -- so-called Roman Pots (RP). Before being detected, the protons' trajectories are influenced by the magnetic fields of the accelerator lattice. Thus precise understanding of the proton transport is of key importance for the experiment. A novel method of optics evaluation is proposed which exploits kinematical distributions of elastically scattered protons observed in the RPs. Theoretical predictions, as well as Monte Carlo studies, show that the residual uncertainty of this optics estimation method is smaller than 0.25 percent.Comment: 20 pages, 11 figures, 5 figures, to be submitted to New J. Phy

    Diamond Detectors for the TOTEM Timing Upgrade

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    This paper describes the design and the performance of the timing detector developed by the TOTEM Collaboration for the Roman Pots (RPs) to measure the Time-Of-Flight (TOF) of the protons produced in central diffractive interactions at the LHC. The measurement of the TOF of the protons allows the determination of the longitudinal position of the proton interaction vertex and its association with one of the vertices reconstructed by the CMS detectors. The TOF detector is based on single crystal Chemical Vapor Deposition (scCVD) diamond plates and is designed to measure the protons TOF with about 50 ps time precision. This upgrade to the TOTEM apparatus will be used in the LHC run 2 and will tag the central diffractive events up to an interaction pileup of about 1. A dedicated fast and low noise electronics for the signal amplification has been developed. The digitization of the diamond signal is performed by sampling the waveform. After introducing the physics studies that will most profit from the addition of these new detectors, we discuss in detail the optimization and the performance of the first TOF detector installed in the LHC in November 2015.Comment: 26 pages, 18 figures, 2 tables, submitted for publication to JINS

    Double diffractive cross-section measurement in the forward region at LHC

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    The first double diffractive cross-section measurement in the very forward region has been carried out by the TOTEM experiment at the LHC with center-of-mass energy of sqrt(s)=7 TeV. By utilizing the very forward TOTEM tracking detectors T1 and T2, which extend up to |eta|=6.5, a clean sample of double diffractive pp events was extracted. From these events, we measured the cross-section sigma_DD =(116 +- 25) mub for events where both diffractive systems have 4.7 <|eta|_min < 6.5 .Comment: 5 pages, 1 figure, submitted for publicatio

    Performance of the TOTEM Detectors at the LHC

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    The TOTEM Experiment is designed to measure the total proton-proton cross-section with the luminosity-independent method and to study elastic and diffractive pp scattering at the LHC. To achieve optimum forward coverage for charged particles emitted by the pp collisions in the interaction point IP5, two tracking telescopes, T1 and T2, are installed on each side of the IP in the pseudorapidity region 3.1 < = |eta | < = 6.5, and special movable beam-pipe insertions - called Roman Pots (RP) - are placed at distances of +- 147 m and +- 220 m from IP5. This article describes in detail the working of the TOTEM detector to produce physics results in the first three years of operation and data taking at the LHC.Comment: 40 pages, 31 figures, submitted to Int. J. Mod. Phys.

    Measurement of elastic pp scattering at √ s = 8 TeV in the Coulomb-nuclear interference region : determination of the rho-parameter and the total cross-section

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    The TOTEM experiment at the CERN LHC has measured elastic proton-proton scattering at the centre-of-mass energy root s = 8 TeV and four-momentum transfers squared, vertical bar t vertical bar, from 6 x 10(-4) to 0.2GeV(2). Near the lower end of the t-interval the differential cross-section is sensitive to the interference between the hadronic and the electromagnetic scattering amplitudes. This article presents the elastic cross-section measurement and the constraints it imposes on the functional forms of the modulus and phase of the hadronic elastic amplitude. The data exclude the traditional Simplified West and Yennie interference formula that requires a constant phase and a purely exponential modulus of the hadronic amplitude. For parametrisations of the hadronic modulus with second-or third-order polynomials in the exponent, the data are compatible with hadronic phase functions giving either central or peripheral behaviour in the impact parameter picture of elastic scattering. In both cases, the.-parameter is found to be 0.12 +/- 0.03. The results for the total hadronic cross-section are sigma(tot) = (102.9 +/- 2.3) mb and (103.0 +/- 2.3) mb for central and peripheral phase formulations, respectively. Both are consistent with previous TOTEM measurements.Peer reviewe

    Diamond detectors for the TOTEM timing upgrade

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    This paper describes the design and the performance of the timing detector developed by the TOTEM Collaboration for the Roman Pots (RPs) to measure the Time-Of-Flight (TOF) of the protons produced in central diffractive interactions at the LHC. The measurement of the TOF of the protons allows the determination of the longitudinal position of the proton interaction vertex and its association with one of the vertices reconstructed by the CMS detectors. The TOF detector is based on single crystal Chemical Vapor Deposition (scCVD) diamond plates and is designed to measure the protons TOF with about 50 ps time precision. This upgrade to the TOTEM apparatus will be used in the LHC run 2 and will tag the central diffractive events up to an interaction pileup of about 1. A dedicated fast and low noise electronics for the signal amplification has been developed. The digitization of the diamond signal is performed by sampling the waveform. After introducing the physics studies that will most profit from the addition of these new detectors, we discuss in detail the optimization and the performance of the first TOF detector installed in the LHC in November 2015.Peer reviewe

    Elastic differential cross-section measurement at root s=13 TeV by TOTEM

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    The TOTEM collaboration has measured the velastic proton-proton differential cross section d sigma/dt at root s = 13 TeV LHC energy using dedicated beta* = 90 m beam optics. The Roman Pot detectors were inserted to 10s distance from the LHC beam, which allowed the measurement of the range [0.04 GeV2; 4 GeV2] in four-momentum transfer squared vertical bar t vertical bar. The efficient data acquisition allowed to collect about 10(9) elastic events to precisely measure the differential cross-section including the diffractive minimum (dip), the subsequent maximum (bump) and the large-vertical bar t vertical bar tail. The average nuclear slope has been found to be B = (20.40 +/- 0.002(stat) +/- 0.01(syst)) GeV-2 in the vertical bar t vertical bar-range 0.04-0.2 GeV2. The dip position is vertical bar t(dip)vertical bar = (0.47 +/- 0.004(stat)+/- 0.01(syst)) GeV2. The differential cross section ratio at the bump vs. at the dip R = 1.77 +/- 0.01(stat) has been measured with high precision. The series of TOTEM elastic pp measurements show that the dip is a permanent feature of the pp differential cross-section at the TeV scale.Peer reviewe

    Elastic differential cross-section dσ/dt{\rm d}\sigma/{\rm d}t at s=\sqrt{s}=2.76 TeV and implications on the existence of a colourless 3-gluon bound state

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    The proton-proton elastic differential cross section dσ/dt{\rm d}\sigma/{\rm d}t has been measured by the TOTEM experiment at s=2.76\sqrt{s}=2.76 TeV energy with β=11\beta^{*}=11 m beam optics. The Roman Pots were inserted to 13 times the transverse beam size from the beam, which allowed to measure the differential cross-section of elastic scattering in a range of the squared four-momentum transfer (t|t|) from 0.360.36 GeV2^{2} to 0.740.74 GeV2^{2}. The differential cross-section can be described with an exponential in the t|t|-range between 0.360.36 GeV2^{2} and 0.540.54 GeV2^{2}, followed by a diffractive minimum (dip) at tdip=0.61±0.03|t_{\rm dip}| = 0.61 \pm 0.03 GeV2^{2} and a subsequent maximum (bump). The ratio of the dσ/dt{\rm d}\sigma/{\rm d}t at the bump and at the dip is 1.7±0.21.7\pm 0.2. When compared to the ppˉ\rm p\bar{p} measurement of the D0 experiment at s=1.96\sqrt s = 1.96 TeV, a significant difference can be observed. Under the condition that the effects due to the energy difference between TOTEM and D0 can be neglected, the result provides evidence for a colourless 3-gluon bound state exchange in the tt-channel of the proton-proton elastic scattering.Comment: 75 authors, 17 pages, 10 figures, 3 table
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