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CMS (LHC) Measurements and Unusual Cosmic Ray Events

At the LHC, for the first time, laboratory energies are sufficiently large to reproduce the kind of reactions that occur when energetic cosmic rays strike the top of the atmosphere. The reaction products of interest for cosmic ray studies are produced at small angles, even with colliding beams. Most...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Norbeck, E., Onel, Y.
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2010
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/1303539
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author Norbeck, E.
Onel, Y.
author_facet Norbeck, E.
Onel, Y.
author_sort Norbeck, E.
collection CERN
description At the LHC, for the first time, laboratory energies are sufficiently large to reproduce the kind of reactions that occur when energetic cosmic rays strike the top of the atmosphere. The reaction products of interest for cosmic ray studies are produced at small angles, even with colliding beams. Most of the emphasis at the LHC is on rare processes that are studied with detectors at large angles. It is precision measurements at large angles that are expected to lead to discoveries of Higgs bosons and super symmetric particles. CMS currently has two small angle detectors, CASTOR and a Zero Degree Calorimeter (ZDC). CASTOR, at 0.7º down to 0.08º, is designed to study "Centauro" and "long penetrating" events, observed in VHE cosmic-ray data. As a general purpose detector it also makes measurements of reaction products at forward angles from p-p collisions, which provide input for cosmic ray shower codes. The ZDC is small, 9 cm. wide, between the incoming and outgoing beam pipes out at a distance of 140 m. The ZDC measures neutral objects that follow the direction of the beam at the interaction point. If the long penetrating objects are spectators they could be seen in the ZDC if their charge to mass ratio, Z/A, is less than 0.2.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
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publishDate 2010
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spelling cern-13035392023-03-12T20:50:10Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1303539engNorbeck, E.Onel, Y.CMS (LHC) Measurements and Unusual Cosmic Ray EventsParticle Physics - ExperimentAt the LHC, for the first time, laboratory energies are sufficiently large to reproduce the kind of reactions that occur when energetic cosmic rays strike the top of the atmosphere. The reaction products of interest for cosmic ray studies are produced at small angles, even with colliding beams. Most of the emphasis at the LHC is on rare processes that are studied with detectors at large angles. It is precision measurements at large angles that are expected to lead to discoveries of Higgs bosons and super symmetric particles. CMS currently has two small angle detectors, CASTOR and a Zero Degree Calorimeter (ZDC). CASTOR, at 0.7º down to 0.08º, is designed to study "Centauro" and "long penetrating" events, observed in VHE cosmic-ray data. As a general purpose detector it also makes measurements of reaction products at forward angles from p-p collisions, which provide input for cosmic ray shower codes. The ZDC is small, 9 cm. wide, between the incoming and outgoing beam pipes out at a distance of 140 m. The ZDC measures neutral objects that follow the direction of the beam at the interaction point. If the long penetrating objects are spectators they could be seen in the ZDC if their charge to mass ratio, Z/A, is less than 0.2.At the LHC, for the first time, laboratory energies are sufficiently large to reproduce the kind of reactions that occur when energetic cosmic rays strike the top of the atmosphere. The reaction products of interest for cosmic ray studies are produced at small angles, even with colliding beams. Most of the emphasis at the LHC is on rare processes that are studied with detectors at large angles. It is precision measurements at large angles that are expected to lead to discoveries of Higgs bosons and super symmetric particles. CMS currently has two small angle detectors, CASTOR and a Zero Degree Calorimeter (ZDC). CASTOR, at $0.7^{\circ}$ down to $0.08^{\circ}$, is designed to study Centauro and long penetrating events, observed in VHE cosmic-ray data. As a general purpose detector it also makes measurements of reaction products at forward angles from p-p collisions, which provide input for cosmic ray shower codes. The ZDC is small, 9 cm. wide, between the incoming and outgoing beam pipes out at a distance of 140 m. The ZDC measures neutral objects that follow the direction of the beam at the interaction point. If the long penetrating objects are spectators they could be seen in the ZDC if their charge to mass ratio, Z/A, is less than 0.2.arXiv:1010.6017C49C49oai:cds.cern.ch:13035392010-10-29
spellingShingle Particle Physics - Experiment
Norbeck, E.
Onel, Y.
CMS (LHC) Measurements and Unusual Cosmic Ray Events
title CMS (LHC) Measurements and Unusual Cosmic Ray Events
title_full CMS (LHC) Measurements and Unusual Cosmic Ray Events
title_fullStr CMS (LHC) Measurements and Unusual Cosmic Ray Events
title_full_unstemmed CMS (LHC) Measurements and Unusual Cosmic Ray Events
title_short CMS (LHC) Measurements and Unusual Cosmic Ray Events
title_sort cms (lhc) measurements and unusual cosmic ray events
topic Particle Physics - Experiment
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/1303539
work_keys_str_mv AT norbecke cmslhcmeasurementsandunusualcosmicrayevents
AT onely cmslhcmeasurementsandunusualcosmicrayevents