14 research outputs found
The novel XYU-GEM to resolve ambiguities
Removing ambiguities within a single stage becomes crucial when one can not
use multiple detectors behind each other to resolve them which naturally is the
case for neutral radiation. An example would be RICH detectors. Commonly
pixilated readout is choosen for this purpose. However, this causes a
remarkable increase in quantity of channels and does not scale up well.
Therefore, the XYU-GEM was proposed as a three coordinate strip-readout which
is combined with a triple GEM detector. The readout complements a common XY
readout with an additional projection which is tilted by 45{\deg}. The
overdetermination due to three projections can be used to resovle ambiguities.
Following the detector design will be explained, first measurements discussed
to understand the response of the detector and a way to change the charge
sharing without changing the manufacturing parameters of the readout
Rate-capability of the VMM3a front-end in the RD51 Scalable Readout System
The VMM3a is an Application Specific Integrated Circuit (ASIC), specifically developed for the readout of gaseous detectors. Originally developed within the ATLAS New Small Wheel (NSW) upgrade, it has been successfully integrated into the Scalable Readout System (SRS) of the RD51 collaboration. This allows, to use the VMM3a also in small laboratory set-ups and mid-scale experiments, which make use of Micro-Pattern Gaseous Detectors (MPGDs). As part of the integration of the VMM3a into the SRS, the readout and data transfer scheme was optimised to reach a high rate-capability of the entire readout system and profit from the VMM3aâs high single-channel rate-capability of 3.6 Mhitsâs. The optimisation focused mainly on the handling of the data output stream of the VMM3a, but also on the development of a trigger-logic between the front-end cards and the DAQ computer. In this article, two firmware implementations of the non-ATLAS continuous readout mode are presented, as well as the implementation of the trigger-logic. Afterwards, a short overview on X-ray imaging results is presented, to illustrate the high rate-capability from an application point-of-view.Peer reviewe
Collins and Sivers transverse-spin asymmetries in inclusive muoproduction of mesons
The production of vector mesons in deep inelastic scattering is an
interesting yet scarsely explored channel to study the transverse spin
structure of the nucleon and the related phenomena. The COMPASS collaboration
has performed the first measurement of the Collins and Sivers asymmetries for
inclusively produced mesons. The analysis is based on the data set
collected in deep inelastic scattering in using a
beam impinging on a transversely polarized target. The
mesons are selected from oppositely charged hadron pairs, and the
asymmetries are extracted as a function of the Bjorken- variable, the
transverse momentum of the pair and the fraction of the energy carried by
the pair. Indications for positive Collins and Sivers asymmetries are observed
Spin Density Matrix Elements in Exclusive Meson Muoproduction
We report on a measurement of Spin Density Matrix Elements (SDMEs) in hard
exclusive meson muoproduction at COMPASS using 160~GeV/ polarised
and beams impinging on a liquid hydrogen target. The
measurement covers the kinematic range 5.0~GeV/ 17.0~GeV/,
1.0 (GeV/) 10.0 (GeV/) and 0.01 (GeV/) 0.5 (GeV/). Here, denotes the mass of the final
hadronic system, the virtuality of the exchanged photon, and
the transverse momentum of the meson with respect to the
virtual-photon direction. The measured non-zero SDMEs for the transitions of
transversely polarised virtual photons to longitudinally polarised vector
mesons () indicate a violation of -channel helicity
conservation. Additionally, we observe a dominant contribution of
natural-parity-exchange transitions and a very small contribution of
unnatural-parity-exchange transitions, which is compatible with zero within
experimental uncertainties. The results provide important input for modelling
Generalised Parton Distributions (GPDs). In particular, they may allow one to
evaluate in a model-dependent way the role of parton helicity-flip GPDs in
exclusive production
Performance of the new RD51 VMM3a/SRS beam telescope â studying MPGDs simultaneously in energy, space and time at high rates
The RD51 collaboration maintains a common infrastructure at CERN for its R & D activities, including two beam telescopes for test beam campaigns. Recently, one of the beam telescopes has been equipped and commissioned with new multi-channel and charge-sensitive front-end electronics based on the ATLAS/BNL VMM3a front-end ASIC and the RD51 Scalable Readout System (SRS). This allows to read out the detectors at high rates (up to the MHz regime) with electronics time resolutions of the order of 1 ns and the ability to handle different detector types and sizes, due to a larger dynamic range compared to the previous front-end electronics based on the APV25 ASIC. Having studied and improved the beam telescope's performance over the course of three test beam campaigns, the results are presented in this paper.Peer reviewe
Development of a high-rate scalable readout system for gaseous detectors
The RD51 collaboration developed the Scalable Readout System (SRS) as part of its R&D; activities on Micro-Pattern Gaseous Detectors. This common multi-purpose readout system allows to read out small R&D; detectors (0.2k channels) up to mid-sized experiments with multiple detectors (2.5k to 5k channels). To cope with increased demands on detectors, electronics and readout speed, a new front-end ASICâthe VMM3aâwas integrated into the SRS. This led to the development of a scalable, self-triggered high-rate readout system that provides energy, space and time information of the interacting particles at the same time
Recoil imaging for directional detection of dark matter, neutrinos, and physics beyond the Standard Model
Recoil imaging entails the detection of spatially resolved ionization tracks
generated by particle interactions. This is a highly sought-after capability in
many classes of detector, with broad applications across particle and
astroparticle physics. However, at low energies, where ionization signatures
are small in size, recoil imaging only seems to be a practical goal for
micro-pattern gas detectors. This white paper outlines the physics case for
recoil imaging, and puts forward a decadal plan to advance towards the
directional detection of low-energy recoils with sensitivity and resolution
close to fundamental performance limits. The science case covered includes: the
discovery of dark matter into the neutrino fog, directional detection of
sub-MeV solar neutrinos, the precision study of coherent-elastic
neutrino-nucleus scattering, the detection of solar axions, the measurement of
the Migdal effect, X-ray polarimetry, and several other applied physics goals.
We also outline the R&D programs necessary to test concepts that are crucial to
advance detector performance towards their fundamental limit: single primary
electron sensitivity with full 3D spatial resolution at the 100
micron-scale. These advancements include: the use of negative ion drift,
electron counting with high-definition electronic readout, time projection
chambers with optical readout, and the possibility for nuclear recoil tracking
in high-density gases such as argon. We also discuss the readout and
electronics systems needed to scale-up such detectors to the ton-scale and
beyond.Comment: 77 pages, 20 figures. Submitted to the Proceedings of the US
Community Study on the Future of Particle Physics (Snowmass 2021
Spin density matrix elements in exclusive
We report on a measurement of Spin Density Matrix Elements (SDMEs) in hard exclusive meson muoproduction at COMPASS using 160Â GeV/c polarised and beams impinging on a liquid hydrogen target. The measurement covers the kinematic range 5.0Â GeV/ 17.0Â GeV/, 1.0 (GeV/c) 10.0 (GeV/c) and 0.01 (GeV/c) 0.5 (GeV/c). Here, W denotes the mass of the final hadronic system, the virtuality of the exchanged photon, and the transverse momentum of the meson with respect to the virtual-photon direction. The measured non-zero SDMEs for the transitions of transversely polarised virtual photons to longitudinally polarised vector mesons () indicate a violation of s-channel helicity conservation. Additionally, we observe a dominant contribution of natural-parity-exchange transitions and a very small contribution of unnatural-parity-exchange transitions, which is compatible with zero within experimental uncertainties. The results provide important input for modelling Generalised Parton Distributions (GPDs). In particular, they may allow one to evaluate in a model-dependent way the role of parton helicity-flip GPDs in exclusive production
Probing transversity by measuring Î polarisation in SIDIS
International audienceBased on the observation of sizeable target-transverse-spin asymmetries in single-hadron and hadron-pair production in Semi-Inclusive measurements of Deep Inelastic Scattering (SIDIS), the chiral-odd transversity quark distribution functions h1q are nowadays well established. Several possible channels to access these functions were originally proposed. One candidate is the measurement of the polarisation of Î hyperons produced in SIDIS off transversely polarised nucleons, where the transverse polarisation of the struck quark might be transferred to the final-state hyperon. In this article, we present the COMPASS results on the transversity-induced polarisation of Î and ÎÂŻ hyperons produced in SIDIS off transversely polarised protons. Within the experimental uncertainties, no significant deviation from zero was observed. The results are discussed in the context of different models taking into account previous experimental results on h1u and h1d
Collins and Sivers transverse-spin asymmetries in inclusive muoproduction of mesons
The production of vector mesons in deep inelastic scattering is an interesting yet scarsely explored channel to study the transverse spin structure of the nucleon and the related phenomena. The COMPASS collaboration has performed the first measurement of the Collins and Sivers asymmetries for inclusively produced mesons. The analysis is based on the data set collected in deep inelastic scattering in using a beam impinging on a transversely polarized target. The mesons are selected from oppositely charged hadron pairs, and the asymmetries are extracted as a function of the Bjorken- variable, the transverse momentum of the pair and the fraction of the energy carried by the pair. Indications for positive Collins and Sivers asymmetries are observed.The production of vector mesons in deep inelastic scattering is an interesting yet scarcely explored channel to study the transverse spin structure of the nucleon and the spin-dependence of fragmentation. The COMPASS collaboration has performed the first measurement of the Collins and Sivers asymmetries for inclusively produced Ï0 mesons. The analysis is based on the data set collected in deep inelastic scattering in 2010 using a 160GeV/cÎŒ+ beam impinging on a transversely polarized NH3 target. The Ï0 mesons are selected from oppositely charged hadron pairs, and the asymmetries are extracted as a function of the Bjorken-x variable, the transverse momentum of the pair and the fraction of the energy z carried by the pair. Indications for positive Collins and Sivers asymmetries are observed.The production of vector mesons in deep inelastic scattering is an interesting yet scarsely explored channel to study the transverse spin structure of the nucleon and the related phenomena. The COMPASS collaboration has performed the first measurement of the Collins and Sivers asymmetries for inclusively produced mesons. The analysis is based on the data set collected in deep inelastic scattering in using a beam impinging on a transversely polarized target. The mesons are selected from oppositely charged hadron pairs, and the asymmetries are extracted as a function of the Bjorken- variable, the transverse momentum of the pair and the fraction of the energy carried by the pair. Indications for positive Collins and Sivers asymmetries are observed