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The Fermilab program for the next decade a response to the Gilman HEPAP subpanel
We have divided this description of our plans for the Laboratory program into seven parts. The first five sections describe the ongoing technical work and the broad range of physics opportunities available at Fermilab. These are organized into: our plans for the accelerator complex; our plans for facilities for performing experiments; the program of experiments we presently foresee; our plans for involvement with the LHC; and our plans for R & D towards a future facility which recaptures the energy frontier. The final sections summarize: our priorities and our planning strategy for making choices for the future, and our budget request to support the Fermilab program as we approach the fundamental challenges of elementary particle physics over the next ten years
The Effects of Dissolved Methane upon Liquid Argon Scintillation Light
In this paper we report on measurements of the effects of dissolved methane
upon argon scintillation light. We monitor the light yield from an alpha source
held 20 cm from a cryogenic photomultiplier tube (PMT) assembly as methane is
injected into a high-purity liquid argon volume. We observe significant
suppression of the scintillation light yield by dissolved methane at the 10
part per billion (ppb) level. By examining the late scintillation light time
constant, we determine that this loss is caused by an absorption process and
also see some evidence of methane-induced scintillation quenching at higher
concentrations (50-100 ppb). Using a second PMT assembly we look for visible
re-emission features from the dissolved methane which have been reported in
gas-phase argon methane mixtures, and we find no evidence of visible
re-emission from liquid-phase argon methane mixtures at concentrations between
10 ppb and 0.1%.Comment: 18 pages, 11 figures Updated to match published versio
Beam instrumentation for the Tevatron Collider
The Tevatron in Collider Run II (2001-present) is operating with six times
more bunches and many times higher beam intensities and luminosities than in
Run I (1992-1995). Beam diagnostics were crucial for the machine start-up and
the never-ending luminosity upgrade campaign. We present the overall picture of
the Tevatron diagnostics development for Run II, outline machine needs for new
instrumentation, present several notable examples that led to Tevatron
performance improvements, and discuss the lessons for future colliders
Adapting SAM for CDF
The CDF and D0 experiments probe the high-energy frontier and as they do so
have accumulated hundreds of Terabytes of data on the way to petabytes of data
over the next two years. The experiments have made a commitment to use the
developing Grid based on the SAM system to handle these data. The D0 SAM has
been extended for use in CDF as common patterns of design emerged to meet the
similar requirements of these experiments. The process by which the merger was
achieved is explained with particular emphasis on lessons learned concerning
the database design patterns plus realization of the use cases.Comment: Talk from the 2003 Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics
(CHEP03), La Jolla, Ca, USA, March 2003, 4 pages, pdf format, TUAT00
Electron Beam Dump Particle Search
The debate over the existence of a new particle postulated to explain the narrow positron spectra seen in heavy ion collisions has focused attention on a region of mass/lifetime where such a particle may exist and yet would not have been seen. To obtain the best possible sensitivity to elementary particles coupling to the electron in this unexplored region, we propose an electron beam dump experiment which will make parasitic use of the newly constructed wide band electron beam
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