1,526 research outputs found

    Hadron colliders as the "neutralino factory": Search for a slow decay of the lightest neutralino at the CERN LHC

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    Prospects are examined for the detection of a slow decay of the lightest neutralino (or any other longlived particles) at the CERN LHC and at Very Large Hadron Collider (VLHC). We first point out that such hadron colliders will become the ``neutralino factory'' producing 10^6--10^9 neutralinos/yr, if gluinos and/or squarks actually exist below O(1) TeV. The lightest neutralino superparticles such as the gravitino (\gra) or axino (\axi) exist, or R-parity is not conserved. The decay signal would, however, be missed in usual collider experiments, particularly when the decay mostly occurs outside the detector. In order to search for such a slow decay of \neu, we propose a dedicated experiment where the collision products are dumped by a thick shield, which is followed by a long decay tunnel. The decay product of \neu can be detected by a detector located at the end of the tunnel. The slow arrival time and the large off angle (to the direction of the interaction point) of the decay product will provide a clear signature of slowly decaying \neu's. One can explore the decay length (c\tau) in a wide range, i.e., 0.2 m to 1x10^5 km for \mneu=25 GeV and 1 m to 2 km for \mneu=200 GeV at the LHC. This corresponds to the range of the SUSY breaking scale \rtF=2x10^5 to 2x10^7 GeV in case of the \neu\to\gamma\gra decay predicted in gauge-mediated SUSY breaking models. At VLHC, one can extend the explorable range of \mneu up to 1000 GeV, and that of \rtF up to 1x10^8 GeV. In case of the \neu\to\gamma\axi decay, the Peccei- Quinn symmetry breaking scale F_a can be explored up to 5x10^11 GeV. The mass of the decaying particle can be determined by using the correlation between the energy and the arrival time of the decay product

    Large-Area Scintillator Hodoscope with 50 ps Timing Resolution Onboard BESS

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    We describe the design and performance of a large-area scintillator hodoscope onboard the BESS rigidity spectrometer; an instrument with an acceptance of 0.3 m^{2}sr. The hodoscope is configured such that 10 and 12 counters are respectively situated in upper and lower layers. Each counter is viewed from its ends by 2.5 inch fine-mesh photomultiplier tubes placed in a stray magnetic field of 0.2 Tesla. Various beam-test data are presented. Use of cosmic-ray muons at ground-level confirmed 50 ps timing resolution for each layer, giving an overall time-of-flight resolution of 70 ps rms using a pure Gaussian resolution function. Comparison with previous measurements on a similar scintillator hodoscope indicates good agreement with the scaling law that timing resolution is proportional to 1/Npe\sqrt{N_{\rm pe}}, where NpeN_{\rm pe} is the effective number of photoelectrons.Comment: 16 pages, 14 figure

    Development of a Large-Area Aerogel Cherenkov Counter Onboard BESS

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    This paper describes the development of a threshold type aerogel Cherenkov counter with a large sensitive area of 0.6 m2^2 to be carried onboard the BESS rigidity spectrometer to detect cosmic-ray antiprotons. The design incorporates a large diffusion box containing 46 finemesh photomultipliers, with special attention being paid to achieving good performance under a magnetic field and providing sufficient endurance while minimizing material usage. The refractive index of the aerogel was chosen to be 1.03. By utilizing the muons and protons accumulated during the cosmic-ray measurements at sea level, a rejection factor of 104^4 was obtained against muons with ÎČ≈1\beta \approx 1, while keeping 97% efficiency for protons below the threshold.Comment: 13 pages, LaTex, 9 eps figures included, submitted to NIM

    Development of an advanced Compton camera with gaseous TPC and scintillator

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    A prototype of the MeV gamma-ray imaging camera based on the full reconstruction of the Compton process has been developed. This camera consists of a micro-TPC that is a gaseous Time Projection Chamber (TPC) and scintillation cameras. With the information of the recoil electrons and the scattered gamma-rays, this camera detects the energy and incident direction of each incident gamma-ray. We developed a prototype of the MeV gamma-ray camera with a micro-TPC and a NaI(Tl) scintillator, and succeeded in reconstructing the gamma-rays from 0.3 MeV to 1.3 MeV. Measured angular resolutions of ARM (Angular Resolution Measure) and SPD (Scatter Plane Deviation) for 356 keV gamma-rays were 18∘18^\circ and 35∘35^\circ, respectively.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures. Proceedings of the 6th International Workshop On Radiation Imaging Detector
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