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Detection of antihydrogen with a Si- mu -strip and CsI-crystal detector at cryogenic temperature

ATHENA, one of 3 experiments at the new low energy antiproton facility at CERN (AD), is designed for testing fundamental physic principles (CPT, Gravitation) to a high degree of precision by comparing cold antihydrogen to hydrogen. To monitor the production of the antihydrogen atoms and their spectr...

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Autor principal: Regenfus, C
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2001
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/884992
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author Regenfus, C
author_facet Regenfus, C
author_sort Regenfus, C
collection CERN
description ATHENA, one of 3 experiments at the new low energy antiproton facility at CERN (AD), is designed for testing fundamental physic principles (CPT, Gravitation) to a high degree of precision by comparing cold antihydrogen to hydrogen. To monitor the production of the antihydrogen atoms and their spectroscopic response, a new detector dedicated for the endproducts of antihydrogen annihilations was developed. To meet the requirements of low temperature operation (77 K) in a high magnetic field, compact size, low power consumption and high granularity, a combination of two layers of each 16 double sided Si- mu -strip modules (16 cm long) was chosen, surrounded by 192 pure-CsI crystals (each approximately= 4 cm/sup 3/), which are read by UV sensitive photo diodes. The frontend electronics (working point 77 K), realised in VLSI CMOS technique, features a self triggering capability of independent sub modules.
id cern-884992
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2001
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spelling cern-8849922019-09-30T06:29:59Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/884992engRegenfus, CDetection of antihydrogen with a Si- mu -strip and CsI-crystal detector at cryogenic temperatureNuclear PhysicsATHENA, one of 3 experiments at the new low energy antiproton facility at CERN (AD), is designed for testing fundamental physic principles (CPT, Gravitation) to a high degree of precision by comparing cold antihydrogen to hydrogen. To monitor the production of the antihydrogen atoms and their spectroscopic response, a new detector dedicated for the endproducts of antihydrogen annihilations was developed. To meet the requirements of low temperature operation (77 K) in a high magnetic field, compact size, low power consumption and high granularity, a combination of two layers of each 16 double sided Si- mu -strip modules (16 cm long) was chosen, surrounded by 192 pure-CsI crystals (each approximately= 4 cm/sup 3/), which are read by UV sensitive photo diodes. The frontend electronics (working point 77 K), realised in VLSI CMOS technique, features a self triggering capability of independent sub modules.oai:cds.cern.ch:8849922001
spellingShingle Nuclear Physics
Regenfus, C
Detection of antihydrogen with a Si- mu -strip and CsI-crystal detector at cryogenic temperature
title Detection of antihydrogen with a Si- mu -strip and CsI-crystal detector at cryogenic temperature
title_full Detection of antihydrogen with a Si- mu -strip and CsI-crystal detector at cryogenic temperature
title_fullStr Detection of antihydrogen with a Si- mu -strip and CsI-crystal detector at cryogenic temperature
title_full_unstemmed Detection of antihydrogen with a Si- mu -strip and CsI-crystal detector at cryogenic temperature
title_short Detection of antihydrogen with a Si- mu -strip and CsI-crystal detector at cryogenic temperature
title_sort detection of antihydrogen with a si- mu -strip and csi-crystal detector at cryogenic temperature
topic Nuclear Physics
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/884992
work_keys_str_mv AT regenfusc detectionofantihydrogenwithasimustripandcsicrystaldetectoratcryogenictemperature