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laus Föhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006 Disc DIRC

Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

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Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006. Disc DIRC. ... the intended agenda. quick orientation for non-pandas brief particle ID motivation Cherenkov radiation flypast lightguides and simulations photo readout and B-field Plexiglass? Temperature! ToP - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Klaus Föhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Disc DIRC

Page 2: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

• quick orientation for non-pandas• brief particle ID motivation• Cherenkov radiation flypast• lightguides and simulations• photo readout and B-field• Plexiglass?• Temperature!• ToP• Test Experiments ...

... the intended agenda ...

Page 3: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

the current GSI

Gesellschaft für Schwerionenforschung

Page 4: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

the new FAIR

SIS 100/300

Facility for Antiproton and Ion Research

planning as of 2004

Page 5: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Antiprotons at FAIR

SIS 100/300

Panda

HESR

1 GeV/c – 15 GeV/c

planning as of 2004

Page 6: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

PANDA Side View

Pbar AND A AntiProton ANihilations at DArmstadt

Page 7: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Particle ID in PANDA

Page 8: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

5 degrees

22 degrees

Particle ID in PANDA

Page 9: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Particle ID & Kinematicspp KK T=5,10,15 GeV/c

pp DD D K T=6.6 GeV/c

pp i.e. charmonium production

need to measure two quantities:

dE/dxenergymomentumvelocitymomentum (tracking in magnetic field)velocity (Cherenkov Radiation)momentum (tracking in magnetic field)velocity (Cherenkov Radiation)

if mass known, particle identified

K K K

K evenor K

--

--

+ +

+ +

+ +

+ +

+ +

-

- +

+

distinguish and K (K and p) ...

D

For what channels do we not have this factor 2-3 reduction?

Page 10: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Cerenkov Radiation

prism: correcting dispersionlens: turning angle into position

parallel light pathschromatic dispersion

=1

<1Cerenkov angle depends on particle speed the cone gives a ring image on a detector plane

material witha differentdispersion

Page 11: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

4-fold direction ambiguityangle and edges crucial

2-fold ambiguity in disc, lifted at readoutonly parallel surfaces required

DIRC: BaBar-type versus Disc

Page 12: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

conservingangles andcircles

90 degrees

45

Solid Angle onto flat surface

Page 13: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

conservingangles andcircles

90 degrees

45

Light transmitted in DISC

Page 14: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

conservingangles andcircles

90 degrees

45

Colour fringes on rings

Page 15: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

90 degrees

45

coordinates measured at rim

Page 16: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

90 degrees

45

3-prong event in DISC

Page 17: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

LiF

side view

front viewfused silica

LiF

polynomialcoefficients:c2= -3.0/(60^2)c3= -0.5/(60^3)c4= -0.1/(60^4)

focussing is better than 1mmover the entire linechosen as focal plane

side view

fused silica

completely within mediumall total reflectioncompact designall solid materialflat focal plane

DIRC Detector Idea

5cm

Page 18: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Location Changes

Page 19: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Location Changes

Page 20: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Location Changes

Page 21: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Lightguide-Designs

polynomialcoefficients:c2= -3.0/(60^2)c3= -0.5/(60^3)c4= -0.1/(60^4)

focussing is better than 1mmover the entire linechosen as focal plane

polynomialcoefficients:c2= -5.4/(60^2)c3= -0.9/(60^3)c4= -0.5/(60^4)

possibly difficult design requirements:1) vertical focal plane (normal to B-field)2) short focal plane (high dispersion deg/mm)

Page 22: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Status of simple Disc Simulations– perfect surfaces– proper directions

• recent improvements– true 3D– analysis of pixel hits

• in the pipeline– angular straggling -important for (e,) and (,)– further optimising– include upstream tracking (necessary?)

• NOT:– no diffraction– no polarisation– no background (particles and photons)– no maximum likelihood analysis– not free of minor approximations (KISS)

Page 23: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

status of simulationsvertex providedposition providedall from DISC data

64 lightguides (no pixels) 128 (no pixels)

nondispersive materials

fluctuations numerical artefact- it’s on the “to do” list...

unpixelised focal planeno chromatic correction

REALLY

PRELIMIN

ARY

Page 24: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

• further optimisation

• resolution scaling with pixels

• resolution not scaling with pixel size

(momentum resolution) ~ (pixel number * quantum efficiency)4

Page 25: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Yoke

Solenoid Housing

Solenoid and Yoke Environment

Page 26: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Photon Detectors

• phototubes

• APDs

• channel plate phototubes

• optical fibres and external phototubes

• HPDs with magnetic imaging

Page 27: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Position-sensitive Phototubes

H8500 H9500

R3292 10cm

B-field probably too strong

Page 28: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Yoke

Light guide or fibre readout?

determination

determination

Page 29: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

HPD with magnetic imaging

Klaus Föhl 2-June-2004

Page 30: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

fusedsilica

E

BSilicon Strip Detector

e-

photocathode

HPD readout possible?

fused silica

EB

photocathode

Silicon Strip Detector

e-

possibly higherquantum efficiencyin reflectivephotocathodegeometry

Page 31: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Temperature

• cold solenoid, cold EMC

• maybe coolde APDs

• SiO2, LiF different expansion coefficients

• dew, condensation on surfaces

Page 32: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Yoke

Radiation Countermeasures?

what radiation fields?

do we need radiation shielding?

will PB act:--as absorber-or as converter?

Page 33: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Plexiglass as Cerenkov radiator?

maybe not such a stupid idea

• transmission– SiO2 300-600nm N0/mm=14– plexi 400-600nm N0/mm= 7

• radiation hardness– BaBar “Spectrosil” proven– plexiglass “hamm wer doa” not proven

• but: radiation length X0 three times larger– 36cm versus 12cm (40.5g/cm2 vs 26g/cm2) more photons per X0

less chromatic dispersion no UV-grade material necessary (glass, glue, PMT)– focussing optics probably ok for thicker radiator– availability? time stability? radiation hardness?

higher lower dispersion

maybe not such a stupid idea

Page 34: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Time-of-Propagationin a dispersive medium

fused silica (aka quartz)

2%

6%

Light propagation speed perpendicularto Cherenkov-light-emitting particle track:

=300nm photon is 6% slower than 600nm

larger Cherenkov angle – 2% shorter path

4% time difference (=600nm is “faster”) difference equivalent to =0.04

for 120cm radial distance ToP=8.3ns (400nm)

0.33 ns spread in arrival time

Page 35: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

ToP in DISC – some thoughs...

• chromatic time correction – do not see how (I see no space for red light to run extra length) (unless photon detector timing can be made colour-dependent)

• disc not self-timing “GPS altitude problem”• external time reference should be 100ps/sqrt(N)• if time reference from target vertex factor 2

betteroverall situation equivalent to 4.5 metres TOF • >>50*multiplicity pixels needed• multiple hits can be separated if spaced apart

Page 36: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Towards Test Experiments

• Radiator slab (fused silica, plexiglass)

• Focussing lightguide– Edinburgh workshop:

• perspex: ok • quartz: we are happy to try (difficulties anticipated)

• photon readout

• DAQ

Page 37: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Conclusions?

Page 38: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Conclusions?

Page 39: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Material Test

Testing transmission and total internal reflectionof a fused silica sample (G. Schepers and C. Schwarz, GSI)

Page 40: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

• FAIR international accelerator facility

• Particle ID – the physics requirements

• Cerenkov Radiation

• DIRC in PANDA

• Detector performance

• Conclusions and Outlook

Outline

working on Cerenkov detectors for PANDA:

Edinburgh, GSI, Erlangen, Gießen, Dubna, Jülich, Vienna, Cracow, Glasgow

Page 41: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Pion-Kaon-Separation

K

K

K threshold

centrehole

figure of merit N = 152cmN(ideal) = N x 1cm x sin () = 82geometric transmittanceN(detected) = 82 x 0.61 = 50

02

-1

3

fused silica plate 10mm thickness(density 2.2g/cm thus 8% radiation length) detection efficiency 20% (=300-600nm)

0

64 segments in each with 48 rectangular pixels

overall 3072 pixels

Page 42: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Conclusions

• optical properties of this design are good enough

• performance depends on number of pixels

• optical test bench

• phototubes + electronics

• operational detector slice

• testbeam experiments

Page 43: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Side View

10mm fused silica plate (density 2.2g/cm , 8% radiation length)

plate radius 1500mm , detection plane radius 2000mmwavelength range 300-600nm, detection efficiency 20%figure of merit N = 152cmN(ideal) = N x 1cm x sin () = 82N(detected) = 82 x 0.61 = 50 geometry transmittance

0

02

-1

3

1500mm

2000mm

Page 44: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Photon Lines in space

target

particlevertices

point

Page 45: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Lensing

cylinder lense

N.B. to be comparedwith 10mm pixel height

spread over prism width

Page 46: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Chromatic Correction

higherdispersionglass

spread =300nm to 600nm

Page 47: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Lensing

cylinder lense

N.B. to be comparedwith 10mm pixel height

spread over prism width

Page 48: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Chromatic Correction

higherdispersionglass

spread =300nm to 600nm

Page 49: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Chromatic Correction

higherdispersionglass

effective pixel heightspread =300nm to 600nm

+

Page 50: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Cherenkov radiation

wavefrontPoyn

ting

vect

orc

Page 51: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Cherenkov radiationin a dispersive medium

wavefrontPoynt

ing

vect

orc

Page 52: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Cherenkov radiationin a dispersive medium

fused silica (aka quartz)

2%

6%

Page 53: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Momentum Thresholds

fused silica n=1.47

aerogel n=1.05

K

K p

p

total internal reflection limit

n=1.47

K p

Page 54: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

tracks in Solenoid field

solenoid field taken to be homogenous

within the real field shape the particlesare better aligned with the field lines

Page 55: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

fused silica

B. Morosov, P. Vlasov et al.December 2004

fused silica

LiF side view

front view

fused silica

LiF

Page 56: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

adjusting polynomial coefficients(c2 fixed, c3 and c4 so far used only)to find a mirror shape that providesoverall acceptable focussing alonga straight line (easier to instrument)

concurrent optimisation goals

minimise:• lensing errors• warping of focal plane

1.

2.

Page 57: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

conservingangles andcircles

Page 58: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006
Page 59: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006
Page 60: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

side view

fused silica polynomialcoefficients:c2= 1/1200c3= -0.5/(60^3)c4= -0.1/(60^4)

focussing is better than 1mmover the entire linechosen as focal plane

completely within mediumall total reflectioncompact designall solid materialflat focal plane

Page 61: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Particle ID in PANDA

5 degrees

22 degrees

For particle ID, two quantities are required:dE/dxenergymomentum (tracking in magnetic field)velocity (Cherenkov Radiation)

If particle mass is known, the particle is identified.

For particle ID, two quantities are required:dE/dxenergymomentum (tracking in magnetic field)velocity (Cherenkov Radiation)

Page 62: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

briefly on Barrel-DIRC

time-of-propagation version

Klaus Föhl, FAIR-Panda-PID-meeting, 5/12/2005

Page 63: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Cherenkov radiationin a dispersive medium

=0.95

=1

incident particleat 45 degrees

fused silica slab3m long

=600nm=300nm correction1=300nm=300nm correction2

=0.99

Page 64: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

Cherenkov radiationin a dispersive medium

fused silica (aka quartz)

2%

6%

reduce wavelength rangeto improve sensitivity

Page 65: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

dispersion correction

correction needs to cover entire angular range of incident particles

Page 66: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

dispersion correction

no correction improving over the entire angular range

Page 67: Klaus F öhl, PANDA Cerenkov workshop in Glasgow, 11 May 2006

my conclusions Barrel-DIRC

• photon group velocity in dispersive medium

• photon detector number set by statistics

• dispersive correction not covering all relevant angles

• reference timing provided by first arriving photons

standard PMT timing is enoughconsider to cut out <400nm

photons/pixel << 1most stringent requirement

configuration angle-dependentuseless for the barrel

no external timing requiredto analyse barrel DIRC data