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Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

Experimentation at the International Linear Collider. Felix Sefkow DESY Seminar on Particle and Astrophysics Uni Zürich, October 20, 2004. Outline. Physics case Physics performance goals Detector design considerations Detector R&D. Anticipated discoveries.

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Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

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  1. Experimentation at the International Linear Collider Felix Sefkow DESY Seminar on Particle and Astrophysics Uni Zürich, October 20, 2004

  2. Outline • Physics case • Physics performance goals • Detector design considerations • Detector R&D Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  3. Anticipated discoveries • The history of particle physics is full of predicted discoveries: • Positron, neutrino, pions • Quarks, gluons • W, Z bosons • Charm, bottom • Most recent example: top • … Mostly made at hadron machines Zooming into the top mass Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  4. Complemented with precision • A success story to be continued: • e+e- colliders needed to investigate in detail the hadron machine discoveries • Charm physics at SPEAR • B physics at CESR and factories • Z (and W) boson properties at LEP Closing up to the Higgs Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  5. 21st century physics • Fundamental questions on matter, energy, space and time: • How do particles acquire mass? • Is there a Higgs boson? Where? • What is the origin of electroweak symmetry breaking? • Do the fundamental forces unify? • How does gravity tie in? • What is the universe made of? What is dark matter? Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  6. New physics around the corner • We expect the answers at the TeV scale • I.e. from the immediate generation of new colliders • For theoretical reasons: • SM w/o Higgs is inconsistent above ~ 1.3 TeV • Fine-tuning problem if nothing between mW and mPlanck • For experimental reasons • Electroweak precision data want Higgs below 200 GeV • Astrophysics wants a dark matter particle of few 100 GeV Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  7. The next steps • Therefore: New physics at the origin of electroweak symmetry breaking is expected to be discovered at the next (or even present) generation of hadron collider experiments • Whatever these discoveries will be… • Light Higgs • Heavy Higgs • New particles • No Higgs, no nothing • .. an e+e- collider with 0.5-1 TeV energy is needed to study it • Case has been worked out and well documented (e.g. TESLA TDR) • Independent of LHC findings, see e.g. answers to ITRP Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  8. The Linear Collider consensus • 200 GeV < √s < 500 GeV • Integrated luminosity ~ 500 fb-1 in 4 years • Upgrade to 1TeV • 2 interaction regions • Concurrent running with the LHC Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  9. If there is a light Higgs • Measure its profile • Quantum numbers • Couplings to fermions • Couplings to gauge bosons • Self coupling • Prove that the Higgs is the Higgs • Do Higgs precision physics • Deviations from SM, admixtures, SUSY Higgs e.g. spin Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  10. Z Z If there is a heavy (or no) Higgs • This is physics beyond the Standard Model • Something must be in the loops • Exploit precision potential of LC (tune energy, polarization, e option) • Really nothing overlooked at LHC? • Probe virtual effects • E.g. sensitivity of triple / quartic gauge couplings reaches far into the TeV range Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  11. If there are new states of matter • Example Supersymmetry • Precision measurements of SUSY particle masses and couplings • E.g. neutralino mass: δm/m ~ 10-3 allows extrapolation to GUT scale Gluino (LHC) (in mSUGRA model) Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  12. Or extra dimensions • Measure the number of extra space dimensions • Via single photon production Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  13. LHC LC synergy (anytime) • LHC  LC: Common interpretation: Example: absolute top Yukawa coupling from gg,qqttH (Hbb,WW) (@LHC) ( rate ~ (gt gb/W)2 ) and BR(H bb,WW) (@LC) (absolute measurement of gb/W ) Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  14. LHC LC synergy (simultanous) • LHC  LC: Common analysis • Example: predict χ04 mass from SUSY parameters as determined from lowest chargino and neutralino states at LC • Know where to look for the edge in the dilepton spectrum at LHC Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  15. LC Physics case • The case for an e+ e- collider with 500 GeV – 1 TeV energy rests on general grounds and is excellent in different scenarios • In particular, it holds independent of LHC findings • LHC and LC complement each other in an exciting fashion • Most fruitfully if run concurrently Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  16. The ILC • 2004: ITRP recommends that the LC be based on superconducting RF technology • ILCSC and ICFA endorse unanimously • GLC, NLC, TESLA merge into ILC • First workshop November at KEK • Goal: TDR in 2007 • Use existing designs! Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  17. Timeline AcceleratorDetector • 2005 CDR Concept study, costing, R&D • 2007 TDR CDRs • 2008 site selection; proposals form Global Lab • 2009 TDRs • 2015 start commissioning Tied together Basic design choices Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  18. ZHH Precision physics • Discoveries and precision measurements • rare processes • often statistics limited • final states with heavy bosons W, Z, H • need to reconstruct their hadronic decay modes, multi-jet events • Excellent track resolution • Flavor tagging 500 events Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  19. Vertexing and Tracking • Vertex detector • Charm tagging (!): H  cc • Multi-jet combinatorics • Need 5 m  10 m / p • Main tracker • Higgs recoil • Slepton decay momentum endpoint • Need to be 10x better than LEP TPCs Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  20. Gaseous or Silicon? + easy pattern recognition + low material budget + robust and fast + no endplates, no HV Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  21. Jet energy resolution • Challenge: separate W and Z in their hadronic mode • Dijet masses in WW, ZZ events: LC design goal LEP-like detector Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  22. W, Z separation • Imagine – there is no Higgs: WW scattering violates unitarity at ~ 1.2 TeV, or new forces show up • irreducible background: ZZ • probe quartic gauge couplings up to EWSB scale of ~3 TeV Dilution factor vs cut: integrated luminosity equivalent Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  23. The Higgs boson total width • gives access to all couplings • for low MH from σ (WW fusion) • and BR (H → WW*) • worth 20% precision, 40% lumi, again 5 s/B in ZH → ZWW → 4jets ℓν 2 jet resol. Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  24. The Higgs potential • Is the Higgs the Higgs? • Check λ = M2H/2v2 6 jets Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  25. Triple Higgs signal • few tens of events • reconstruct observable from 3 dijet masses • impossible with a LEP-like detector Nev (1ab-1) s/√B 5 sigma Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  26. Other requirements • directional resolution • photon impact parameter (need e.g. few cm @ 20 GeV) • hermeticity • suppress two photon background to SUSY events • lepton identification • timing decay of a longlived neutralino Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  27. Time resolution • background pile-up from γγ→ hadrons can be a problem at the LC • ~ 1 event every 2 - 4 BX • on average 6 GeV per event in main calorimeter: • example: Higgs mass signal in WW fusion re-optimize cuts and window for each case preliminary • capability to time-stamp detector signals does affect physics performance Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  28. Physics performance goals • The excellent precision physics potential of an electron positron linear collider has to be matched by an unprecedented detector performance • The W vs. Z boson mass separation dictates a jet energy resolution of 30% / √E - twice as good as achieved in LEP detectors • Some key physics topics are exclusively accessible with such an advanced detector Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  29. Particle Flow Algorithms • Best jet energy resolution with minimum calorimetry • tracking detectors to measure energy of charged particles (65% of the typical jet energy) • EM calorimeter for photons (25%) • EM and HAD calorimeter for neutral hadrons (10%) Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  30. Contributions to s(Ejet) • With anticipated resolutions: Ideally realistically (courtesy D.Karlen) Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  31. The PFLOW paradigm • The confusion term dominates • Each particle should be reconstructed and measured separately • For the jet energy measurement spatial resolution / particle separation power is more important than energy resolution Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  32. Imaging calorimetry red: track based green: calorimeter based ZHHg qqbbbb Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  33. Calorimeter concept • large radius and length • to separate the particles • large magnetic field • to sweep out charged tracks • “no” material in front • stay inside coil • small Moliere radius • to minimize shower overlap • small granularity • to separate overlapping showers • figure of merit: B R2calo / (r2M+r2cell) Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  34. e+e–→ WW @ √s = 800 GeV 14% of events have > 50 GeV (32% for SD) Energy sum of close photons (GeV) Photon hadron separation • for smaller Rcalo can “buy” separation power with B, but… • magnetic field limited by mechanical stability : B2Rcoil < ~ 60 T2m • photons closer than rM to ch. hadron are difficult to reconstruct Eγ/ E SD TDR push rM and photon reconstruction to the limit rM (SD: R=1.27 m, here with 6T, TESLA TDR: R=1.68m, B=4T) (JC Brient) Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  35. Tungsten vs. iron • elm./had separation: keep X0 / λI small X0 = 1.8cm, λI=17cm X0 = 0.35cm, λI=9.6cm • Moliere Radius for W: rM = 0.9cm • effectively a factor ( 1 + Gap / 2.5mm ) more • technology challenge: thin readout gap Iron Tungsten (images courtesy H.Videau) Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  36. Silicon cost and area Curves of constant cost • optimize together with tracking system: # layers, radius and length • PFLOW emphasizes size over sampling 50 20 layers TESLA TDR cost/area ($/cm²) Length of the ECAL barrel 10 25 layers 30 layers DATA from H.F-W. Sadrozinski, UC-Santa Cruz SiD detector 2 $/cm² Internal radius of the ECAL Blank wafer price 6'' (JCB) 1 ~3000 m2 needed Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  37. ECAL optimization • overall detector geometry • thin sampling layer technology • photon reconstruction / separation Follow also other lines of development: • don’t completely forget energy resolution! • lead or tungsten scintillator calorimeters (Asia, Colorado) • hybrid silicon and scintillator sampling (Italy, Kansas) Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  38. Huge Detector concepts • Sizes • :5T 4T 3T • Si Tracker Gasous Tracker (+Si?) Gasous Tracker • SiW ECAL SiW or Hybrid ECAL Hybrid or Scint ECAL Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  39. Hybrid ECAL (Italy) • at Frascati • and CERN LCcal collaboration S.Miscetti Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  40. Joint European /Asian tests • 6 GeV electrons (slide from Tohru Takeshita) Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  41. Hadron calorimeter concepts • The HCAL should be imaging, too • Tungsten would be best, but chose iron for cost reasons Readout options: • Digital: radically imaging; counting hits with gas or scintillator • Analogue: classical scintillator – but pushing the granularity • semi-digital: scint. with small # of thresholds (2 bit ADC) Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  42. Number of cells hit Energy (GEV) Analog vs. digital • Digital: pad size 1cm asymptotic value • suppress Landau fluctuations: at low E superior to analogue • need ideas for high E, e.g. multiple thresholds (semi-digital) (V.Zutshi) Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  43. RPC analog Scint. digital Gas vs. scintillator • width of shower pattern appears larger in scintillator • will be recovered using amplitude or density information (L.Xia) Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  44. Gas HCAL optimization • RPC: comparison avalanche vs. streamer mode • pad multiplicity and energy resolution Geant 3 m= 2 1.4 • Alternative: GEM foils • R&D issues for both: • large area detectors, reliability • low cost electronics concept 1 (V.Ammosov) Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  45. Scintillator granularity • new photodetectors allow individual readout of small tiles Si Photo-Multiplier • optimize granularity for shower separation (A.Raspareza) Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  46. HCAL optimization For the scintillator option • granularity vs. amplitude for position and energy • optimize the new photodetectors • and study alternatives (APD, … ) • calibration and monitoring • nonlinear systems • pattern recognition software • (De-) tails are important: • confront high granularity HCALs with hadron beam stack for different HCAL options Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  47. Required sensitivity • 10’000 particles, compare Geant 3 (histo) vs. Geant 4 (points) (study by D.Ward) 1 GeV p+ longitud. (ECAL+HCAL) 50 GeV p+ Scintillator RPC transverse in HCAL 5 GeV p+ • differences vary with energy, particle type, detector material,… Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  48. Model dependence • There are no data to which this could have been tuned… Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  49. International effort • Linear collider detector R&D is partially organized in (open) proto-collaborations, e.g. CALICE: 164 Physicists, 28 Institutes, 9 Countries: 3 Regions • CALICE prepares beam test series in 2005-06 • ECAL and HCAL together, different options • electron and hadron beams, start end 2004 at DESY Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

  50. Detector / Calorimeter concept • The linear collider physics represents a formidable challenge for calorimeters, • met by a world-wide R&D effort, internationally coordinated • An interesting test beam period is ahead of us, to sharpen our views on imaging calorimetry and particle flow algorithms, • to further push for overall optimized detector concepts Experimentation at the International Linear Collider

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