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Results of Beam Tests of a Prototype Calorimeter for a Linear Collider
The proposed International Linear Collider (ILC) requires a detector with superior jet energy resolution of 30%/√E or better near the Z-pole region (91GeV). The Calorimeter for the Linear Collider Collaboration (CALICE) is developing and testing prototype detectors with this goal in mind. One major...
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Lenguaje: | eng |
Publicado: |
2018
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | http://cds.cern.ch/record/2637391 |
Sumario: | The proposed International Linear Collider (ILC) requires a detector with superior
jet energy resolution of 30%/√E or better near the Z-pole region (91GeV). The
Calorimeter for the Linear Collider Collaboration (CALICE) is developing and testing
prototype detectors with this goal in mind. One major limitation on detector resolution is
the size of the hadron calorimeter contained within a magnetic coil. To compensate for
“thin” calorimeters that cannot contain the highest energy particle showers, the Tail
Catcher/Muon Tracker (TCMT) has been designed to include calorimetric functions and
higher granularity than existing muon tracking systems. The prototype design also
provided an opportunity to simulate the impact of a magnetic coil on energy resolution
and to study the use of silicon photomultipliers (SiPMs) in particle detectors.
This analysis shows that a TCMT six interaction lengths deep contains leakage
and improves energy resolution when added to the CALICE electromagnetic and
hadronic calorimeters. The effect of the TCMT both with and without a coil is more
significant as energy increases. The addition of all sixteen layers of the TCMT to a 3.5
interaction length thick calorimeter improves pion resolution by 9.3% at 20 GeV and
10.8% at 80 GeV. For a 5.5 interaction length thick calorimeter system, typical of those
under consideration for ILC detectors, the addition of TCMT layers after a coil of 1.8
interaction lengths improves energy resolution of 20 GeV pions by 1% and for 80 GeV
pions by 2%. |
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