1,049 research outputs found
A Study of Dielectric Breakdown Along Insulators Surrounding Conductors in Liquid Argon
High voltage breakdown in liquid argon is an important concern in the design
of liquid argon time projection chambers, which are often used as neutrino and
dark matter detectors. We have made systematic measurements of breakdown
voltages in liquid argon along insulators surrounding negative rod electrodes
where the breakdown is initiated at the anode. The measurements were performed
in an open cryostat filled with commercial grade liquid argon exposed to air,
and not the ultra-pure argon required for electron drift. While not addressing
all high voltage concerns in liquid argon, these measurements have direct
relevance to the design of high voltage feedthroughs especially for averting
the common problem of flash-over breakdown. The purpose of these tests is to
understand the effects of materials, of breakdown path length, and of surface
topology for this geometry and setup. We have found that the only
material-specific effects are those due to their permittivity. We have found
that the breakdown voltage has no dependence on the length of the exposed
insulator. A model for the breakdown mechanism is presented that can help
inform future designs.Comment: 15 pages, 12 figures. Accepted to JINS
Design and operation of LongBo: a 2 m long drift liquid argon TPC
In this paper, we report on the design and operation of the LongBo time
projection chamber in the Liquid Argon Purity Demonstrator cryostat. This
chamber features a 2 m long drift distance. We measure the electron drift
lifetime in the liquid argon using cosmic ray muons and the lifetime is at
least 14 ms at 95\% confidence level. LongBo is equipped with preamplifiers
mounted on the detector in the liquid argon. Of the 144 channels, 128 channels
were readout by preamplifiers made with discrete circuitry and 16 channels were
readout by ASIC preamplifiers. For the discrete channels, we measure a
signal-to-noise (S/N) ratio of 30 at a drift field of 350 V/cm. The measured
S/N ratio for the ASIC channels was 1.4 times larger than that measured for the
discrete channels.Comment: 19 pages, 17 figure
The Liquid Argon Purity Demonstrator
The Liquid Argon Purity Demonstrator was an R&D test stand designed to
determine if electron drift lifetimes adequate for large neutrino detectors
could be achieved without first evacuating the cryostat. We describe here the
cryogenic system, its operations, and the apparatus used to determine the
contaminant levels in the argon and to measure the electron drift lifetime. The
liquid purity obtained by this system was facilitated by a gaseous argon purge.
Additionally, gaseous impurities from the ullage were prevented from entering
the liquid at the gas-liquid interface by condensing the gas and filtering the
resulting liquid before returning to the cryostat. The measured electron drift
lifetime in this test was greater than 6 ms, sustained over several periods of
many weeks. Measurements of the temperature profile in the argon, to assess
convective flow and boiling, were also made and are compared to simulation.Comment: 28 pages, 22 figures, 3 table
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Reconstruction and measurement of (100) MeV energy electromagnetic activity from π0 arrow γγ decays in the MicroBooNE LArTPC
We present results on the reconstruction of electromagnetic (EM) activity from photons produced in charged current νμ interactions with final state π0s. We employ a fully-automated reconstruction chain capable of identifying EM showers of (100) MeV energy, relying on a combination of traditional reconstruction techniques together with novel machine-learning approaches. These studies demonstrate good energy resolution, and good agreement between data and simulation, relying on the reconstructed invariant π0 mass and other photon distributions for validation. The reconstruction techniques developed are applied to a selection of νμ + Ar → μ + π0 + X candidate events to demonstrate the potential for calorimetric separation of photons from electrons and reconstruction of π0 kinematics
Determination of muon momentum in the MicroBooNE LArTPC using an improved model of multiple Coulomb scattering
We discuss a technique for measuring a charged particle's momentum by means
of multiple Coulomb scattering (MCS) in the MicroBooNE liquid argon time
projection chamber (LArTPC). This method does not require the full particle
ionization track to be contained inside of the detector volume as other track
momentum reconstruction methods do (range-based momentum reconstruction and
calorimetric momentum reconstruction). We motivate use of this technique,
describe a tuning of the underlying phenomenological formula, quantify its
performance on fully contained beam-neutrino-induced muon tracks both in
simulation and in data, and quantify its performance on exiting muon tracks in
simulation. Using simulation, we have shown that the standard Highland formula
should be re-tuned specifically for scattering in liquid argon, which
significantly improves the bias and resolution of the momentum measurement.
With the tuned formula, we find agreement between data and simulation for
contained tracks, with a small bias in the momentum reconstruction and with
resolutions that vary as a function of track length, improving from about 10%
for the shortest (one meter long) tracks to 5% for longer (several meter)
tracks. For simulated exiting muons with at least one meter of track contained,
we find a similarly small bias, and a resolution which is less than 15% for
muons with momentum below 2 GeV/c. Above 2 GeV/c, results are given as a first
estimate of the MCS momentum measurement capabilities of MicroBooNE for high
momentum exiting tracks
Noise Characterization and Filtering in the MicroBooNE Liquid Argon TPC
The low-noise operation of readout electronics in a liquid argon time
projection chamber (LArTPC) is critical to properly extract the distribution of
ionization charge deposited on the wire planes of the TPC, especially for the
induction planes. This paper describes the characteristics and mitigation of
the observed noise in the MicroBooNE detector. The MicroBooNE's single-phase
LArTPC comprises two induction planes and one collection sense wire plane with
a total of 8256 wires. Current induced on each TPC wire is amplified and shaped
by custom low-power, low-noise ASICs immersed in the liquid argon. The
digitization of the signal waveform occurs outside the cryostat. Using data
from the first year of MicroBooNE operations, several excess noise sources in
the TPC were identified and mitigated. The residual equivalent noise charge
(ENC) after noise filtering varies with wire length and is found to be below
400 electrons for the longest wires (4.7 m). The response is consistent with
the cold electronics design expectations and is found to be stable with time
and uniform over the functioning channels. This noise level is significantly
lower than previous experiments utilizing warm front-end electronics.Comment: 36 pages, 20 figure
Ionization Electron Signal Processing in Single Phase LArTPCs II. Data/Simulation Comparison and Performance in MicroBooNE
The single-phase liquid argon time projection chamber (LArTPC) provides a
large amount of detailed information in the form of fine-grained drifted
ionization charge from particle traces. To fully utilize this information, the
deposited charge must be accurately extracted from the raw digitized waveforms
via a robust signal processing chain. Enabled by the ultra-low noise levels
associated with cryogenic electronics in the MicroBooNE detector, the precise
extraction of ionization charge from the induction wire planes in a
single-phase LArTPC is qualitatively demonstrated on MicroBooNE data with event
display images, and quantitatively demonstrated via waveform-level and
track-level metrics. Improved performance of induction plane calorimetry is
demonstrated through the agreement of extracted ionization charge measurements
across different wire planes for various event topologies. In addition to the
comprehensive waveform-level comparison of data and simulation, a calibration
of the cryogenic electronics response is presented and solutions to various
MicroBooNE-specific TPC issues are discussed. This work presents an important
improvement in LArTPC signal processing, the foundation of reconstruction and
therefore physics analyses in MicroBooNE.Comment: 54 pages, 36 figures; the first part of this work can be found at
arXiv:1802.0870
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