661 research outputs found
On the basic mechanism of Pixelized Photon Detectors
A Pixelized Photon Detector (PPD) is a generic name for the semiconductor
devices operated in the Geiger-mode, such as Silicon PhotoMultiplier and
Multi-Pixel Photon Counter, which has high photon counting capability. While
the internal mechanisms of the PPD have been intensively studied in recent
years, the existing models do not include the avalanche process. We have
simulated the multiplication and quenching of the avalanche process and have
succeeded in reproducing the output waveform of the PPD. Furthermore our model
predicts the existence of dead-time in the PPD which has never been numerically
predicted. For serching the dead-time, we also have developed waveform analysis
method using deconvolution which has the potential to distinguish neibouring
pulses precisely. In this paper, we discuss our improved model and waveform
analysis method.Comment: 4pages, 5figures, To appear in the proceedings of 5th International
Conference on New Developments in Photodetection (NDIP08), Aix-les-Bains,
France, 15-20 Jun 200
Witten index and phase diagram of compactified N=1 supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory on the lattice
Owing to confinement, the fundamental particles of N=1 Supersymmetric
Yang-Mills (SYM) theory, gluons and gluinos, appear only in colourless bound
states at zero temperature. Compactifying the Euclidean time dimension with
periodic boundary conditions for fermions preserves supersymmetry, and
confinement is predicted to persist independently of the length of the
compactified dimension. This scenario can be tested non-perturbatively with
Monte-Carlo simulations on a lattice. SUSY is, however, broken on the lattice
and can be recovered only in the continuum limit. The partition function of
compactified N=1 SYM theory with periodic fermion boundary conditions
corresponds to the Witten index. Therefore it can be used to test whether
supersymmetry is realized on the lattice. Results of our recent numerical
simulations are presented, supporting the disappearance of the deconfinement
transition in the supersymmetric limit and the restoration of SUSY at low
energies.Comment: 7 pages, 3 figures, Proceedings of the 33rd International Symposium
on Lattice Field Theory (Lattice 2015), 14-18 July 2015, Kobe International
Conference Center, Kobe, Japa
Silicon photomultiplier arrays - a novel photon detector for a high resolution tracker produced at FBK-irst, Italy
A silicon photomultiplier (SiPM) array has been developed at FBK-irst having
32 channels and a dimension of 8.0 x 1.1 mm^2. Each 250 um wide channel is
subdivided into 5 x 22 rectangularly arranged pixels. These sensors are
developed to read out a modular high resolution scintillating fiber tracker.
Key properties like breakdown voltage, gain and photon detection efficiency
(PDE) are found to be homogeneous over all 32 channels of an SiPM array. This
could make scintillating fiber trackers with SiPM array readout a promising
alternative to available tracker technologies, if noise properties and the PDE
are improved
Phase structure of the N=1 supersymmetric Yang-Mills theory at finite temperature
Supersymmetry (SUSY) has been proposed to be a central concept for the
physics beyond the standard model and for a description of the strong
interactions in the context of the AdS/CFT correspondence. A deeper
understanding of these developments requires the knowledge of the properties of
supersymmetric models at finite temperatures. We present a Monte Carlo
investigation of the finite temperature phase diagram of the N=1 supersymmetric
Yang-Mills theory (SYM) regularised on a space-time lattice. The model is in
many aspects similar to QCD: quark confinement and fermion condensation occur
in the low temperature regime of both theories. A comparison to QCD is
therefore possible. The simulations show that for N=1 SYM the deconfinement
temperature has a mild dependence on the fermion mass. The analysis of the
chiral condensate susceptibility supports the possibility that chiral symmetry
is restored near the deconfinement phase transition.Comment: 26 pages, 12 figure
Charmonia in moving frames
Lattice simulation of charmonium resonances with non-zero momentum provides
additional information on the two-meson scattering matrices. However, the
reduced rotational symmetry in a moving frame renders a number of states with
different in the same lattice irreducible representation. The
identification of for these states is particularly important, since
quarkonium spectra contain a number of states with different in a
relatively narrow energy region. Preliminary results concerning
spin-identification are presented in relation to our study of charmonium
resonances in flight on the Nf=2+1 CLS ensembles.Comment: 6 pages, presented at the 35th International Symposium on Lattice
Field Theory, 18-24 June 2017, Granada, Spai
A Scintillating Fiber Tracker With SiPM Readout
We present a prototype for the first tracking detector consisting of 250
micron thin scintillating fibers and silicon photomultiplier (SiPM) arrays. The
detector has a modular design, each module consists of a mechanical support
structure of 10mm Rohacell foam between two 100 micron thin carbon fiber skins.
Five layers of scintillating fibers are glued to both top and bottom of the
support structure. SiPM arrays with a channel pitch of 250 micron are placed in
front of the fibers. We show the results of the first module prototype using
multiclad fibers of types Bicron BCF-20 and Kuraray SCSF-81M that were read out
by novel 32-channel SiPM arrays from FBK-irst/INFN Perugia as well as
32-channel SiPM arrays produced by Hamamatsu. A spatial resolution of 88 micron
+/- 6 micron at an average yield of 10 detected photons per minimal ionizig
particle has been achieved.Comment: 5 pages, 7 figures, submitted as proceedings to the 11th Topical
Seminar on Innovative Particle and Radiation Detectors (IPRD08
Radiation Damage Studies of Silicon Photomultipliers
We report on the measurement of the radiation hardness of silicon
photomultipliers (SiPMs) manufactured by
Fondazione Bruno Kessler in Italy (1 mm and 6.2 mm), Center of
Perspective Technology and Apparatus in Russia (1 mm and 4.4 mm), and
Hamamatsu Corporation in Japan (1 mm). The SiPMs were irradiated using a
beam of 212 MeV protons at Massachusetts General Hospital, receiving fluences
of up to protons per cm with the SiPMs at operating
voltage. Leakage currents were read continuously during the irradiation. The
delivery of the protons was paused periodically to record scope traces in
response to calibrated light pulses to monitor the gains, photon detection
efficiencies, and dark counts of the SiPMs. The leakage current and dark noise
are found to increase with fluence. Te leakage current is found to be
proportional to the mean square deviation of the noise distribution, indicating
the dark counts are due to increased random individual pixel activation, while
SiPMs remain fully functional as photon detectors. The SiPMs are found to
anneal at room temperature with a reduction in the leakage current by a factor
of 2 in about 100 days.Comment: 35 pages, 25 figure
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