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A High Granularity Timing Detector for the Phase-2 Upgrade of the ATLAS Calorimeter

The expected increase of the particle flux at the high luminosity phase of the LHC with instantaneous luminosities up to L ≃ 7.5 × 10^{34} cm^{−2} s^{−1} will have a severe impact on pile-up. The pile-up is expected to increase on average to 200 interactions per bunch crossing. The reconstruction an...

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Autor principal: Grinstein, Sebastian
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2017
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2282857
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author Grinstein, Sebastian
author_facet Grinstein, Sebastian
author_sort Grinstein, Sebastian
collection CERN
description The expected increase of the particle flux at the high luminosity phase of the LHC with instantaneous luminosities up to L ≃ 7.5 × 10^{34} cm^{−2} s^{−1} will have a severe impact on pile-up. The pile-up is expected to increase on average to 200 interactions per bunch crossing. The reconstruction and trigger performance for especially jets and transverse missing energy will be severely degraded in the end-cap and forward region. A High Granularity Timing Detector (HGTD) is proposed in front of the liquid Argon end-cap calorimeters for pile-up mitigation at Level-0 (L0) trigger level and in the offline reconstruction. This device cover the pseudo-rapidity range of 2.4 to about 4.2. Four layers of Silicon sensors, possibly interleaved with Tungsten, are foreseen to provide precision timing information for charged and neutral particles with a time resolution of the order of 30 pico-seconds per readout cell in order to assign the energy deposits in the calorimeter to different proton-proton collision vertices. Each readout cell has a transverse size of only a few mm, leading to a highly granular detector with several hundred thousand readout cells. The expected improvements in performance are relevant for physics processes, i.e, vector-boson fusion and vector-boson scattering processes, and for physics signatures with large missing transverse energy. Silicon sensor technologies under investigation are Low Gain Avalanche Detectors (LGAD), pin diodes, and HV-CMOS sensors. In this presentation, starting from the physics motivations and expected performance of the High Granular Timing Detector, the proposed detector layout and Front End readout, laboratory and beam test characterization of sensors and the results of radiation tests will be discussed. Abstract submitted on behalf of the ATLAS Liquid Argon Speaker's Committee Speaker to be nominated later
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2017
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spelling cern-22828572019-09-30T06:29:59Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2282857engGrinstein, SebastianA High Granularity Timing Detector for the Phase-2 Upgrade of the ATLAS CalorimeterParticle Physics - ExperimentThe expected increase of the particle flux at the high luminosity phase of the LHC with instantaneous luminosities up to L ≃ 7.5 × 10^{34} cm^{−2} s^{−1} will have a severe impact on pile-up. The pile-up is expected to increase on average to 200 interactions per bunch crossing. The reconstruction and trigger performance for especially jets and transverse missing energy will be severely degraded in the end-cap and forward region. A High Granularity Timing Detector (HGTD) is proposed in front of the liquid Argon end-cap calorimeters for pile-up mitigation at Level-0 (L0) trigger level and in the offline reconstruction. This device cover the pseudo-rapidity range of 2.4 to about 4.2. Four layers of Silicon sensors, possibly interleaved with Tungsten, are foreseen to provide precision timing information for charged and neutral particles with a time resolution of the order of 30 pico-seconds per readout cell in order to assign the energy deposits in the calorimeter to different proton-proton collision vertices. Each readout cell has a transverse size of only a few mm, leading to a highly granular detector with several hundred thousand readout cells. The expected improvements in performance are relevant for physics processes, i.e, vector-boson fusion and vector-boson scattering processes, and for physics signatures with large missing transverse energy. Silicon sensor technologies under investigation are Low Gain Avalanche Detectors (LGAD), pin diodes, and HV-CMOS sensors. In this presentation, starting from the physics motivations and expected performance of the High Granular Timing Detector, the proposed detector layout and Front End readout, laboratory and beam test characterization of sensors and the results of radiation tests will be discussed. Abstract submitted on behalf of the ATLAS Liquid Argon Speaker's Committee Speaker to be nominated laterATL-LARG-SLIDE-2017-737oai:cds.cern.ch:22828572017-09-10
spellingShingle Particle Physics - Experiment
Grinstein, Sebastian
A High Granularity Timing Detector for the Phase-2 Upgrade of the ATLAS Calorimeter
title A High Granularity Timing Detector for the Phase-2 Upgrade of the ATLAS Calorimeter
title_full A High Granularity Timing Detector for the Phase-2 Upgrade of the ATLAS Calorimeter
title_fullStr A High Granularity Timing Detector for the Phase-2 Upgrade of the ATLAS Calorimeter
title_full_unstemmed A High Granularity Timing Detector for the Phase-2 Upgrade of the ATLAS Calorimeter
title_short A High Granularity Timing Detector for the Phase-2 Upgrade of the ATLAS Calorimeter
title_sort high granularity timing detector for the phase-2 upgrade of the atlas calorimeter
topic Particle Physics - Experiment
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/2282857
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