2,043 research outputs found

    Micromegas for Imaging Calorimetry

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    International audienceTwo Micromegas chambers of 1 m2 size and 1 cm2 cell segmentation have recently been built. Designed for Particle-Flow hadron calorimetry, each chamber features ten thousand channels with embedded front-end electronics and three readout thresholds (concept of semi-digital hadron calorimeter or SDHCAL). The chambers have been tested in a muon beam and also exposed to hadron showers inside a steel structure. Excellent performance such as low noise, high efficiency and very uniform spatial response have been measured and will be reported. The measurements will be confronted to the predictions of a Monte Carlo simulation for which a complete digitisation procedure has been established. Finally, prospects towards the use of a Micromegas SDHCAL at a future linear collider will be discussed based on the scalability of current prototypes to larger sizes and on the expected energy resolution and linearity of such a device

    RD51, a world-wide collaboration for the development of Micro Pattern Gaseous Detectors

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    International audienceOriginally introduced to improve the rate capability of traditional wire chambers, Micro Pattern Gaseous Detectors (MPGD) actually demonstrate many more benefits. Be it for medical and industry imaging, collider experiments or more interestingly in the framework of this conference for the search of rare events, they are the subject of constant research and development in several laboratories over the world. The RD51 collaboration has been coordinating this work since April 2008 and is meant to advance the technological development and application of MPGD. The collaboration is presented and emphasis is put on its latest achievements which do make these devices an attractive option for the detection of low energy rare events: the possibility to instrument large area and to detect UV photons

    Environmental study of a Micromegas detector

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    We report on measurements of the basic performance of a Micromegas detector for a digital hadronic calorimeter. Electron collection efficiency, energy resolution and gas gain were measured in various mixtures of Ar and CO2. Also the dependence of the gain on environmental variables (pressure, temperature), gas parameters (flow, mixing ratio) and geometry (amplication gap size) is studied. Eventually, predictions on the impact of these variables on the detection efficiency of thin Micromegas detectors are drawn

    Status of the Micromegas semi-DHCAL

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    The activities towards the fabrication and test of a 1 m3 semi-digital hadronic calorime- ter are reviewed. The prototype sampling planes would consist of 1 m2 Micromegas chambers with 1 cm2 granularity and embedded 2 bits readout suitable for PFA calorime- try at an ILC detector. The design of the 1 m2 chamber is presented first, followed by an overview of the basic performance of small prototypes. The basic units composing the 1 m2 chamber are 32 \times 48 cm2 boards with integrated electronics and a micro-mesh. Results of character- ization tests of such boards are shown. Micromegas as a proportional detector is well suited for semi-digital hadronic calorimetry. In order to quantify the gain in perfor- mance when using one or more thresholds, simulation studies are being carried out, some of which will be reported in this contribution

    Test in a beam of large-area Micromegas chambers for sampling calorimetry

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    Application of Micromegas for sampling calorimetry puts specific constraints on the design and performance of this gaseous detector. In particular, uniform and linear response, low noise and stability against high ionisation density deposits are prerequisites to achieving good energy resolution. A Micromegas-based hadronic calorimeter was proposed for an application at a future linear collider experiment and three technologically advanced prototypes of 1×\times1 m2^{2} were constructed. Their merits relative to the above-mentioned criteria are discussed on the basis of measurements performed at the CERN SPS test-beam facility

    The detection of single electrons by means of a Micromegas-covered MediPix2 pixel CMOS readout circuit

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    A small drift chamber was read out by means of a MediPix2 readout chip as direct anode. A Micromegas foil was placed 50 μ\mum above the chip, and electron multiplication occurred in the gap. With a He/Isobutane 80/20 mixture, gas multiplication factors up to tens of thousands were achieved, resulting in an efficiency for detecting single electrons of better than 90% . We recorded many frames containing 2D images with tracks from cosmic muons. Along these tracks, electron clusters were observed, as well as delta-rays.Comment: 15 pages, 9 included postscript figures, 5 separate jpeg figures, submitted to Nucl. Instr. and Meth. A. A complete postscript version with high resolution figures 1, 3, 11, 12 and 14 can be found at http://www.nikhef.nl/~i06/RandD/final/letter4.p

    Readout of GEM Detectors Using the Medipix2 CMOS Pixel Chip

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    We have operated a Medipix2 CMOS readout chip, with amplifying, shaping and charge discriminating front-end electronics integrated on the pixel-level, as a highly segmented direct charge collecting anode in a three-stage gas electron multiplier (Triple-GEM) to detect the ionization from 55^{55}Fe X-rays and electrons from 106^{106}Ru. The device allows to perform moderate energy spectroscopy measurements (20 % FWHM at 5.9 keV XX-rays) using only digital readout and two discriminator thresholds. Being a truly 2D-detector, it allows to observe individual clusters of minimum ionizing charged particles in Ar/CO2Ar/CO_2 (70:30) and He/CO2He/CO_2 (70:30) mixtures and to achieve excellent spatial resolution for position reconstruction of primary clusters down to 50μm\sim 50 \mu m, based on the binary centroid determination method.Comment: 18 pages, 14 pictures. submitted to Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research

    Characterization of microbulk detectors in argon- and neon-based mixtures

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    A recent Micromegas manufacturing technique, so called Microbulk, has been developed, improving the uniformity and stability of this kind of detectors. Excellent energy resolutions have been obtained, reaching values as low as 11% FWHM at 5.9 keV in Ar+5%iC4H10. This detector has other advantages like its flexible structure, low material budget and high radio-purity. Two microbulk detectors with gaps of 50 and 25 um have been characterized in argon- and neon-based mixtures with ethane, isobutane and cyclohexane. The results will be presented and discussed. The gain curves have been fitted to the Rose-Korff gain model and dependences of the electron mean free path and the threshold energy for ionization have been obtained. The possible relation between these two parameters and the energy resolution will be also discussed.Comment: Submitted to the Journal of Instrumentatio

    Technological aspects of gaseous pixel detectors fabrication

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    Integrated gaseous pixel detectors consisting of a metal punctured foil suspended in the order of 50μm over a pixel readout chip by means by SU-8 insulating pillars have been fabricated. SU-8 is used as sacrificial layer but metallization over uncrosslinked SU-8 presents adhesion and stress problems. In this paper we describe the several methods we have investigated to fabricate a metal layer on top of a partially crosslinked SU-8 film and the challenges we have encountered. The fabrication process using wafer post processing has been proven, but in cases where single chip processing is desirable, edge bead is a major problem to overcome as it can cover a considerable chip area, reducing the detector performance; we show different techniques to reduce this edge bead and improve detection efficiency
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