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s of the SHBD for the NUMI OPERA exposu tiero IPN Lyon der about the proposed setup for the SHBD s of the sub-detectors ls on the operation of the silicon telescope in Oct

3/1/05 Status of the SHBD for the NUMI OPERA exposure D. Autiero IPN Lyon Reminder about the proposed setup for the SHBD Status of the sub-detectors

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Page 1: 3/1/05 Status of the SHBD for the NUMI OPERA exposure D. Autiero IPN Lyon  Reminder about the proposed setup for the SHBD  Status of the sub-detectors

3/1/05

Status of the SHBD for the NUMI OPERA exposure

D. Autiero IPN Lyon

Reminder about the proposed setup for the SHBD Status of the sub-detectors Details on the operation of the silicon telescope in October 2004

Page 2: 3/1/05 Status of the SHBD for the NUMI OPERA exposure D. Autiero IPN Lyon  Reminder about the proposed setup for the SHBD  Status of the sub-detectors

Hybrid sophysticated detector:

The high intensity of the NUMI beam at the near detector location allows to work with a small target mass and compact and sophisticated detectors (not possible with CNGS), made with all recycled componentsIt is possible to build a precise detector around a single brick

It is a good occasion to perform a precise measurement of all what is produced in the neutrino interaction in the brick and to check also the production of backward particles which is relevant in OPERA for the BF analysis. We are interested in particular in the HE run

These results are also useful for the neutrino community for the investigation of nuclear effects, bricks can be made in Pb, Fe

This is not a new experiment (in competition with MINERVA) but just a test-beam performed with a small setup with the goal of collecting a few hundreds CC well measured.

Page 3: 3/1/05 Status of the SHBD for the NUMI OPERA exposure D. Autiero IPN Lyon  Reminder about the proposed setup for the SHBD  Status of the sub-detectors

• Precise tracking in the forward and backward direction• Forward calorimetry• Detector for backward neutrons

ECC ECAL

Minos nearDetector

(HCALMuon ID)

Detector forBackward Neutrals

(scintillator bars)

Silicon tracker planes

Veto

1.5 m Max

Page 4: 3/1/05 Status of the SHBD for the NUMI OPERA exposure D. Autiero IPN Lyon  Reminder about the proposed setup for the SHBD  Status of the sub-detectors

The detector is made with existing/recycled componentsWe can afford a sophisticated detector for one brick, given its small size. This is possible due to the high neutrino flux.

The detector can fit in a space of 1.5 m longitudinal, < 1 m transverse which, can be available in between Minerva and Minos due to the MINOS ND coils (The magnetic field map should be checked). The idea is to change the brick exposed a few times per day (depending on the max number of interactions we want to accept per brick (HE run: 27 interactions per day).

The neutron detector will be made of scintillator strips ‘we can recycle some of the TT building waste) with WLS fibers readout and M64 photomultipliers + standard opera TT electronics. The layers of strips will be crossed in X and Y.

Page 5: 3/1/05 Status of the SHBD for the NUMI OPERA exposure D. Autiero IPN Lyon  Reminder about the proposed setup for the SHBD  Status of the sub-detectors

For the neutron detector one possibility is to have just in the side close to the brick a thin foil of lead to be used as preshower in order to distinguish photons from neutrons. This could be put just at the beginning or after a few layers (2 layers) of scintillator in order to allow to detect some soft particles which would die in the lead (to be optimized with the ongoing simulation)

Some passive material could also be introducedamong the scintillator layers for a better containement, probably we will have to put an absorber in between the veto and neutron detector in order not to reject interesting events

Pb, in this case put at the beginning

ECC

np

Backward Neutron detectorEff=60%

50 planes of8 strips 20 cm

400 channels

Page 6: 3/1/05 Status of the SHBD for the NUMI OPERA exposure D. Autiero IPN Lyon  Reminder about the proposed setup for the SHBD  Status of the sub-detectors

The Si tracker can be recycled from a CMS prototype

The ECAL can be recycled from NOMAD lead-glass prototypes

The trigger will be based on the ECAL + VETOIn order to isolate the interactions really happening in the brick instead than in the ECAL or the neutron detector one has to look at the hit/tracks pattern in the Si tracker planes (check before the brick extraction)

The connection with the events measured with the MINOS DAQ (as for the SFT detector) will be done on the basis of the time-stamp(GPS signal)

Page 7: 3/1/05 Status of the SHBD for the NUMI OPERA exposure D. Autiero IPN Lyon  Reminder about the proposed setup for the SHBD  Status of the sub-detectors
Page 8: 3/1/05 Status of the SHBD for the NUMI OPERA exposure D. Autiero IPN Lyon  Reminder about the proposed setup for the SHBD  Status of the sub-detectors

Status (January 2005):

8 Multianode PM Hamamatsu M64 have been bought for the construction of the backward neutron detector. The corresponding readout electronics is available from the OPERA Target tracker. The construction of the detector recycling strips and fibers from the OPERA TT has to be started.

The 9 lead-glass blocks can be recuperated from the old NOMAD electromagnetic calorimeter in order to assemble the forward Ecal.

Silicon telescope operating in October 2003 for the OPERA measurement of large angle muon scattering in lead

• It was built from material recuperated from CMS• The telescope has succesfully collected more than 70 millions of events during the run at the SPS X5 test-beam in October 2004• The structure of the telescope is already the one that would be needed for the SHBD (3 X + 3 Y views before and after the brick, 12 planes in total)• The mechanical structure hosting the silicon detectors will have to be redone since it has no space in the middle to host a brick, all the rest can be kept unchanged• The CMS people who have been collaborating for the OPERA test suggest for the FNAL run to involve their US collaborators, this will easy a lot the installation and operation of the detector. First direct discussions will take place at CERN at the beginning of February

Page 9: 3/1/05 Status of the SHBD for the NUMI OPERA exposure D. Autiero IPN Lyon  Reminder about the proposed setup for the SHBD  Status of the sub-detectors

Silicon detectors: Recuperated from CMS TOB (Outern Barrel):

500 micron tickness512 strips with 180 microns pitchDimensions 9.6 cm x (9.6 x2)

Front-end with Optoelectronic readoutADC 8 bitsFast electronics (LHC) working on 25ns cycles

Resolution:

Single strip 180/sqrt(12)=50 microns

Charge centroid: about 25-30 microns

20 mrad -> 1.8 mm displacement among two consecutive planes of the same view

Page 10: 3/1/05 Status of the SHBD for the NUMI OPERA exposure D. Autiero IPN Lyon  Reminder about the proposed setup for the SHBD  Status of the sub-detectors

Telescope assembly frame (recuperated from an old MSG telescope):

Hosting 12 planes: 6 planes (alternatively X and Y) before + 6 after the target

Target position

Planes (X or Y) pitch 91 mm

The planes are orthogonal, overlapping for a surface 9.6x9.6 cm2 and rotated by 45 degrees with respect to the vertical

Redone: Silicon detectors supports and cooling system

Page 11: 3/1/05 Status of the SHBD for the NUMI OPERA exposure D. Autiero IPN Lyon  Reminder about the proposed setup for the SHBD  Status of the sub-detectors

Telescope new readout card centralising controls, clock, Vbias

Optoelectronic cards

Page 12: 3/1/05 Status of the SHBD for the NUMI OPERA exposure D. Autiero IPN Lyon  Reminder about the proposed setup for the SHBD  Status of the sub-detectors

Water cooling circulation in the support frames

Page 13: 3/1/05 Status of the SHBD for the NUMI OPERA exposure D. Autiero IPN Lyon  Reminder about the proposed setup for the SHBD  Status of the sub-detectors

T2

MWDC2

Magnet

The telescope in its insulated and ligth tight box

Water Cooling Nytrogen flow

T=19 C constantly monitoredR.H.=30%

T3