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Status of the CMS High Granularity Calorimeter

Calorimetry in high-energy physics is rapidly evolving, with new specifications (e.g. higher energies, enormous particle densities) and a wide variety of technologies being employed, both for signal creation and detection. Advances in large-area highly-segmented detectors based on, for example, sili...

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Autor principal: Onel, Yasar
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.1109/NSSMIC.2018.8824392
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2653018
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author Onel, Yasar
author_facet Onel, Yasar
author_sort Onel, Yasar
collection CERN
description Calorimetry in high-energy physics is rapidly evolving, with new specifications (e.g. higher energies, enormous particle densities) and a wide variety of technologies being employed, both for signal creation and detection. Advances in large-area highly-segmented detectors based on, for example, silicon and scintillators, are providing possibilities for high-granularity calorimetry, providing unprecedented levels of information from particle showers. Here, we focus on one example of high-granularity calorimetry: The CMS HGCAL, being designed to replace the existing endcap calorimeters for the HL-LHC era.HGCAL is a sampling calorimeter, featuring unprecedented transverse and longitudinal readout segmentation for both electromagnetic (CE-E) and hadronic (CE-H) compartments. This will facilitate particle-flow calorimetry, where the fine structure of showers can be measured and used to enhance pileup rejection and particle identification, whilst still achieving good energy resolution. The CE-E and a large fraction of CE-H will use silicon as active detector material: the sensors will be of hexagonal shape, maximizing the available 8-inch circular wafer area. The lower-radiation environment will be instrumented with scintillator tiles with on-tile SiPM readout. This concept borrows heavily from designs produced by the CALICE collaboration, but the challenges of such a detector at a hadron collider are considerably larger than at the linear colliders. In addition to the hardware aspects, the reconstruction of signals - both online for triggering and offline - is a quantum leap from existing detectors.We present the reasoning and ideas behind the HGCAL, its current status including design and prototype performance.
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spelling cern-26530182020-01-21T13:38:38Zdoi:10.1109/NSSMIC.2018.8824392http://cds.cern.ch/record/2653018engOnel, YasarStatus of the CMS High Granularity CalorimeterDetectors and Experimental TechniquesCalorimetry in high-energy physics is rapidly evolving, with new specifications (e.g. higher energies, enormous particle densities) and a wide variety of technologies being employed, both for signal creation and detection. Advances in large-area highly-segmented detectors based on, for example, silicon and scintillators, are providing possibilities for high-granularity calorimetry, providing unprecedented levels of information from particle showers. Here, we focus on one example of high-granularity calorimetry: The CMS HGCAL, being designed to replace the existing endcap calorimeters for the HL-LHC era.HGCAL is a sampling calorimeter, featuring unprecedented transverse and longitudinal readout segmentation for both electromagnetic (CE-E) and hadronic (CE-H) compartments. This will facilitate particle-flow calorimetry, where the fine structure of showers can be measured and used to enhance pileup rejection and particle identification, whilst still achieving good energy resolution. The CE-E and a large fraction of CE-H will use silicon as active detector material: the sensors will be of hexagonal shape, maximizing the available 8-inch circular wafer area. The lower-radiation environment will be instrumented with scintillator tiles with on-tile SiPM readout. This concept borrows heavily from designs produced by the CALICE collaboration, but the challenges of such a detector at a hadron collider are considerably larger than at the linear colliders. In addition to the hardware aspects, the reconstruction of signals - both online for triggering and offline - is a quantum leap from existing detectors.We present the reasoning and ideas behind the HGCAL, its current status including design and prototype performance.CMS-CR-2018-414oai:cds.cern.ch:26530182018-12-10
spellingShingle Detectors and Experimental Techniques
Onel, Yasar
Status of the CMS High Granularity Calorimeter
title Status of the CMS High Granularity Calorimeter
title_full Status of the CMS High Granularity Calorimeter
title_fullStr Status of the CMS High Granularity Calorimeter
title_full_unstemmed Status of the CMS High Granularity Calorimeter
title_short Status of the CMS High Granularity Calorimeter
title_sort status of the cms high granularity calorimeter
topic Detectors and Experimental Techniques
url https://dx.doi.org/10.1109/NSSMIC.2018.8824392
http://cds.cern.ch/record/2653018
work_keys_str_mv AT onelyasar statusofthecmshighgranularitycalorimeter