28 research outputs found
Diffraction at TOTEM
The TOTEM experiment at the LHC measures the total proton-proton cross
section with the luminosity-independent method and the elastic proton-proton
cross-section over a wide |t|-range. It also performs a comprehensive study of
diffraction, spanning from cross-section measurements of individual diffractive
processes to the analysis of their event topologies. Hard diffraction will be
studied in collaboration with CMS taking advantage of the large common rapidity
coverage for charged and neutral particle detection and the large variety of
trigger possibilities even at large luminosities. TOTEM will take data under
all LHC beam conditions including standard high luminosity runs to maximize its
physics reach. This contribution describes the main features of the TOTEM
physics programme including measurements to be made in the early LHC runs. In
addition, a novel scheme to extend the diffractive proton acceptance for high
luminosity runs by installing proton detectors at IP3 is described.Comment: 10 pages, 9 figures, contribution to the proceedings of the HERA and
the LHC workshop 2007-0
Prospects for Diffractive and Forward Physics at the LHC
The CMS and TOTEM experiments intend to carry out a joint diffractive/forward physics program with an unprecedented rapidity coverage. The present document outlines some aspects of such a physics program, which spans from the investigation of the low-x structure of the proton to the diffractive production of a SM or MSSM Higgs boson
The TOTEM Experiment at the CERN Large Hadron Collider
The TOTEM Experiment will measure the total pp cross-section with the luminosity independent method and study elastic and diffractive 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, will be installed on each side in the pseudorapidity region 3,1 <h< 6,5, and Roman Pot stations will be placed at distances of 147m and 220m from IP5. Being an independent experiment but technically integrated into CMS, TOTEM will first operate in standalone mode to pursue its own physics programme and at a later stage together with CMS for a common physics programme. This article gives a description of the TOTEM apparatus and its performance