7 research outputs found
Hadronic response and e/ separation with the H1 lead/fiber calorimeter
Hadronic response and electron identification performance of the new H1 lead-scintillating fibre calorimeter are investigated in the 1 to 7 GeV energy range using data taken at the CERN Proton Synchrotron. The energy response to minimum ionizing particles and interacting pions are studied and compared to Monte Carlo simulations. The measured energy of pions interacting either in the electromagnetic or in the hadronic section is found to scale linearly with the incident energy, providing an energy resolution within a depth of one interaction length and for a total depth of two interaction lengths. Several electron identification estimators are studied and combined as a function of energy and impact point. The probability for pions to be misidentified as electrons of any measured energy above 1 GeV ranges from 5% (for 2 GeV incident pions) to 0.4% (at 7 GeV) for an electron detection efficiency of 90%. The probability for pions of a given energy to be misidentified as electrons of the same energy falls to 0.25% at 7 GeV
Series tests of fine mesh photomultiplier tubes in magnetic fields of up to 1.2-Tesla
The new lead/scintillating-fibre calorimeter (“SpaCal”) for the backward region of the H1 experiment at HERA (DESY) is equipped with fine mesh phototubes which operate in a magnetic field close to 1 T. A large sample of these tubes of the types Hamamatsu R5505 and R5506, and Hamamatsu R2490-05, have been tested in fields of up to 1.2T. We have investigated the cathode homogeneity with and without magnetic field, the gain loss under the influence of the magnetic field, and stability with time. For a subsample of tubes, we have performed additional studies on stability with respect to temperature changes, variation of gain as a function of the magnetic field, high voltage discharges, single photo-electron response, and linearity. We finally summarize the experience with these tubes after one year of operation in the experiment
The H1 lead / scintillating fiber calorimeter
The backward region of the H1 detector has been upgraded in order to provide improved measurement of the scattered electron in deep inelastic scattering events. The centerpiece of the upgrade is a high-resolution lead/scintillating-fibre calorimeter. The main design goals of the calorimeter are: good coverage of the region close to the beam pipe, high angular resolution and energy resolution of better than 2% for 30 GeV electrons. The calorimeter should be capable of providing coarse hadronic energy measurement and precise time information to suppress out-of-time background events at the first trigger level. It must be compact due to space restrictions. These requirements were fulfilled by constructing two separate calorimeter sections. The inner electromagnetic section is made of 0.5 mm scintillating plastic fibres embedded in a lead matrix. Its lead-to-fibre ratio is 2.3:1 by volume. The outer hadronic section consists of 1.0 mm diameter fibres with a lead-to-fibre ratio of 3.4:1. The mechanical construction of the new calorimeter and its assembly in the H1 detector are described
The Electronics of the H1 lead / scintillating fiber calorimeters
The electronic system developed for the SpaCal lead/scintillating-fibre
calorimeters of the H1 detector in operation at the HERA ep collider is
described in detail and the performance achieved during H1 data-taking is
presented. The 10 MHz bunch crossing rate of HERA puts severe constraints on
the requirements of the electronics. The energy and time readout are performed
respectively with a 14-bit dynamic range and with a resolution of about 0.4 ns.
The trigger branch consists of a nanosecond-resolution calorimetric
time-of-flight for background rejection and an electron trigger based on analog
`sliding windows'. The on-line background rejection currently achieved is
o(10**6). The electron trigger allows a low energy trigger threshold to be set
at about 0.50 +/- 0.08 (RMS) GeV with an efficiency >99.9%. The energy and time
performance of the readout and trigger electronics is based on a
newly-developed low noise (sigma_noise ca. 0.4 MeV) wideband (f < 200 MHz)
preamplifier located at the output of the photomultipliers which are used for
the fibre light readout in the ca. 1 Tesla magnetic field of H1.Comment: 25 pages (LaTeX), 13 figures (PostScript