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The Heavy Photon Search Test Detector

Authors :
Battaglieri, Marco
Boyarinov, Sergey
Bueltmann, Stephen
Burkert, Volker
Celentano, Andrea
Charles, Gabriel
Cooper, William
Cuevas, Chris
Dashyan, Natalia
DeVita, Raffaella
Desnault, Camille
Deur, Alexandre
Egiyan, Hovanes
Elouadrhiri, Latifa
Essig, Rouven
Fadeyev, Vitaliy
Field, Clive
Freyberger, Arne
Gershtein, Yuri
Gevorgyan, Nerses
Girod, Francois-Xavier
Graf, Norman
Graham, Mathew
Griffioen, Keith
Grillo, Alexander
Guidal, Michel
Haller, Gunther
Adrian, Per Hansson
Herbst, Ryan
Holtrop, Maurik
Jaros, John
Kaneta, Scott
Khandaker, Mahbub
Kubarovsky, Alexey
Kubarovsky, Valery
Maruyama, Takashi
McCormick, Jeremy
Moffeit, Ken
Moreno, Omar
Neal, Homer
Nelson, Timothy
Niccolai, Silvia
Odian, Al
Oriunno, Marco
Paremuzyan, Rafayel
Partridge, Richard
Phillips, Sarah
Rauly, Emmanuel
Raydo, Benjamin
Reichert, Joseph
Rindel, Emmanuel
Rosier, Philippe
Salgado, Carlos
Schuster, Philip
Sharabian, Youri
Sokhan, Daria
Stepanyan, Stepan
Toro, Natalia
Uemura, Sho
Ungaro, Maurizio
Voskanyan, Hakop
Walz, Dieter
Weinstein, Larry
Wojtsekhowski, Bogdan
Battaglieri, Marco
Boyarinov, Sergey
Bueltmann, Stephen
Burkert, Volker
Celentano, Andrea
Charles, Gabriel
Cooper, William
Cuevas, Chris
Dashyan, Natalia
DeVita, Raffaella
Desnault, Camille
Deur, Alexandre
Egiyan, Hovanes
Elouadrhiri, Latifa
Essig, Rouven
Fadeyev, Vitaliy
Field, Clive
Freyberger, Arne
Gershtein, Yuri
Gevorgyan, Nerses
Girod, Francois-Xavier
Graf, Norman
Graham, Mathew
Griffioen, Keith
Grillo, Alexander
Guidal, Michel
Haller, Gunther
Adrian, Per Hansson
Herbst, Ryan
Holtrop, Maurik
Jaros, John
Kaneta, Scott
Khandaker, Mahbub
Kubarovsky, Alexey
Kubarovsky, Valery
Maruyama, Takashi
McCormick, Jeremy
Moffeit, Ken
Moreno, Omar
Neal, Homer
Nelson, Timothy
Niccolai, Silvia
Odian, Al
Oriunno, Marco
Paremuzyan, Rafayel
Partridge, Richard
Phillips, Sarah
Rauly, Emmanuel
Raydo, Benjamin
Reichert, Joseph
Rindel, Emmanuel
Rosier, Philippe
Salgado, Carlos
Schuster, Philip
Sharabian, Youri
Sokhan, Daria
Stepanyan, Stepan
Toro, Natalia
Uemura, Sho
Ungaro, Maurizio
Voskanyan, Hakop
Walz, Dieter
Weinstein, Larry
Wojtsekhowski, Bogdan
Publication Year :
2014

Abstract

The Heavy Photon Search (HPS), an experiment to search for a hidden sector photon in fixed target electroproduction, is preparing for installation at the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility (JLab) in the Fall of 2014. As the first stage of this project, the HPS Test Run apparatus was constructed and operated in 2012 to demonstrate the experiment's technical feasibility and to confirm that the trigger rates and occupancies are as expected. This paper describes the HPS Test Run apparatus and readout electronics and its performance. In this setting, a heavy photon can be identified as a narrow peak in the e$^+$e$^-$ invariant mass spectrum, above the trident background or as a narrow invariant mass peak with a decay vertex displaced from the production target, so charged particle tracking and vertexing are needed for its detection. In the HPS Test Run, charged particles are measured with a compact forward silicon microstrip tracker inside a dipole magnet. Electromagnetic showers are detected in a PbW0$_{4}$ crystal calorimeter situated behind the magnet, and are used to trigger the experiment and identify electrons and positrons. Both detectors are placed close to the beam line and split top-bottom. This arrangement provides sensitivity to low-mass heavy photons, allows clear passage of the unscattered beam, and avoids the spray of degraded electrons coming from the target. The discrimination between prompt and displaced e$^+$e$^-$ pairs requires the first layer of silicon sensors be placed only 10~cm downstream of the target. The expected signal is small, and the trident background huge, so the experiment requires very large statistics. Accordingly, the HPS Test Run utilizes high-rate readout and data acquisition electronics and a fast trigger to exploit the essentially 100% duty cycle of the CEBAF accelerator at JLab.<br />Comment: Revised version to match published version, 16 pages, 18 figures, published in Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A, editor: Per Hansson Adrian

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.ocn884981503
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016.j.nima.2014.12.017