1,136 research outputs found

    Heavy-ion physics studies for the Future Circular Collider

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    The Future Circular Collider (FCC) design study is aimed at assessing the physics potential and the technical feasibility of a new collider with centre-of-mass energies, in the hadron-hadron collision mode including proton and nucleus beams, more than seven-times larger than the nominal LHC energies. An electron-positron collider in the same tunnel is also considered as an intermediate step, which would provide the electron-hadron option in the long term. First ideas on the physics opportunities with heavy ions at the FCC are presented, covering the physics of Quark-Gluon Plasma, gluon saturation, photon-induced collisions, as well as connections with ultra-high-energy cosmic rays.Comment: 4 pages, 3 figures, proceedings of Quark Matter 2014, Darmstadt, Germany, submitted to Nucl. Phys.

    Momentum distribution of charm hadrons in a fluid-dynamic approach

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    Exploiting a mapping between transport theory and fluid dynamics, we show how a fluid-dynamic description of the diffusion of charm quarks in the QCD plasma is feasible. We show results for spectra of charmed hadrons obtained with a fluid-dynamic description of the quark-gluon plasma (QGP) coupled with the conservation of a heavy-quark - antiquark current. We compare our calculations with the most recent experimental data in order to provide further constraints on the transport coefficients of the QGP.Comment: Hard Probes 202

    Fluid dynamics of charm quarks in the quark--gluon plasma

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    A fluid-dynamic approach to charm-quark diffusion in the quark-gluon plasma (QGP) is developed for the first time. Results for integrated yields and momentum distributions of charmed hadrons obtained with a fluid-dynamic description for the dynamics of the QGP coupled to an additional heavy-quark-antiquark current are shown. In addition to the thermodynamic Equation of State (EoS), this description uses a heavy-quark diffusion constant which we take from Lattice QCD calculations. The results describe quantitatively experimental data measured at the LHC at the center-of-mass energy of sNN\sqrt{s_{\rm NN}} = 5.02 TeV up to pTp_{\rm T}\sim 4-5 GeV/cc, showing that charm quarks undergo a very fast hydrodynamization in the medium created by ultrarelativistic heavy-ion collisions.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure

    Heterovalent BiIII/PbII ionic substitution in one-dimensional trimethylsulfoxonium halide pseudo-perovskites (X = I, Br)

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    We report on the synthesis and characterization of novel lead and bismuth hybrid (organic 12inorganic) iodide and bromide pseudo-perovskites (ABX3) containing the trimethylsulfoxonium cation (CH3)3SO+ (TMSO) in the A site, Pb/Bi in the Bsite, and Br or I as X anions. All of these compounds are isomorphic and crystallize in the orthorhombic Pnma space group. Lead-based pseudo-perovskites consist of one-dimensional (1D) chains of facesharing [PbX6] octahedra, while in the bismuth-based ones, the chains of [BiX6] are interrupted, with one vacancy every third site,leading to a zero-dimensional (0D) local structure based on separated [Bi2I9] 3 12 dimers. Five solid solutions for the iodide with different Pb2 +/Bi3 + ratios between (TMSO)PbI3 and (TMSO)3Bi2I9, and two for the bromide counterparts, were synthetized. Due to the charge compensation mechanism, these systems are best described by the (TMSO)3Pb3xBi2(1 12x)I9 (x = 0.98, 0.92, 0.89, 0.56, and 0.33) and (TMSO)3Pb3xBi2(1 12x)Br9 (x = 0.83 and 0.37) formulae. X-ray powder diffraction (XRPD) measurements were employed to determine the crystal structure of all studied species and further used to test the metal cation miscibility within monophasic samples not showing cation segregation. These systems can be described through an ionic defectivity on the pseudo-perovskite B site, where the Pb2+/Bi3+ replacement is compensated by one Pb2+ vacancy for every Bi3+ pair. This leads to a wide range of possible different (numerical and geometrical) chain configurations, leading to the unique features observed in XRPD patterns. The optical band gap of the iodide samples falls in the 2.11 122.74 eV range and decreases upon increasing the Bi3+ content. Interestingly, even a very low loading of Bi3+ (1%) is sufficient to reduce the band gap substantially from 2.74 to 2.25 eV. Periodic density functional theory (DFT) calculations were used to simulate the atomic and electronic structures of our samples, with predicted band gap trends in good agreement with the experimental ones. This work highlights the structural flexibility of such systems and accurately interprets the ionic defectivity of the different pseudo-perovskite structures

    Digital Pixel Test Structures implemented in a 65 nm CMOS process

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    The ALICE ITS3 (Inner Tracking System 3) upgrade project and the CERN EP R&D on monolithic pixel sensors are investigating the feasibility of the Tower Partners Semiconductor Co. 65 nm process for use in the next generation of vertex detectors. The ITS3 aims to employ wafer-scale Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors thinned down to 20 to 40 um and bent to form truly cylindrical half barrels. Among the first critical steps towards the realisation of this detector is to validate the sensor technology through extensive characterisation both in the laboratory and with in-beam measurements. The Digital Pixel Test Structure (DPTS) is one of the prototypes produced in the first sensor submission in this technology and has undergone a systematic measurement campaign whose details are presented in this article. The results confirm the goals of detection efficiency and non-ionising and ionising radiation hardness up to the expected levels for ALICE ITS3 and also demonstrate operation at +20 C and a detection efficiency of 99% for a DPTS irradiated with a dose of 101510^{15} 1 MeV neq/_{\mathrm{eq}}/cm2^2. Furthermore, spatial, timing and energy resolutions were measured at various settings and irradiation levels.Comment: Updated threshold calibration method. Implemented colorblind friendly color palette in all figures. Updated reference

    Characterisation of analogue Monolithic Active Pixel Sensor test structures implemented in a 65 nm CMOS imaging process

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    Analogue test structures were fabricated using the Tower Partners Semiconductor Co. CMOS 65 nm ISC process. The purpose was to characterise and qualify this process and to optimise the sensor for the next generation of Monolithic Active Pixels Sensors for high-energy physics. The technology was explored in several variants which differed by: doping levels, pixel geometries and pixel pitches (10-25 μ\mum). These variants have been tested following exposure to varying levels of irradiation up to 3 MGy and 101610^{16} 1 MeV neq_\text{eq} cm2^{-2}. Here the results from prototypes that feature direct analogue output of a 4×\times4 pixel matrix are reported, allowing the systematic and detailed study of charge collection properties. Measurements were taken both using 55^{55}Fe X-ray sources and in beam tests using minimum ionizing particles. The results not only demonstrate the feasibility of using this technology for particle detection but also serve as a reference for future applications and optimisations

    Optimization of a 65 nm CMOS imaging process for monolithic CMOS sensors for high energy physics

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    The long term goal of the CERN Experimental Physics Department R&D on monolithic sensors is the development of sub-100nm CMOS sensors for high energy physics. The first technology selected is the TPSCo 65nm CMOS imaging technology. A first submission MLR1 included several small test chips with sensor and circuit prototypes and transistor test structures. One of the main questions to be addressed was how to optimize the sensor in the presence of significant in-pixel circuitry. In this paper this optimization is described as well as the experimental results from the MLR1 run confirming its effectiveness. A second submission investigating wafer-scale stitching has just been completed. This work has been carried out in strong synergy with the ITS3 upgrade of the ALICE experiment
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