1 / 33

30 Aprile 2007

Study of a Compensating Calorimeter for a e + e - Linear Collider at Very High Energy. 30 Aprile 2007. Vito Di Benedetto. ILC A future project for a e + e - Linear Collider. electron-positron collider; ILC's design consist of two facing linear accelerators, each 20 kilometers long;

kobe
Télécharger la présentation

30 Aprile 2007

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Study of a Compensating Calorimeter for a e+ e- Linear Collider at Very High Energy 30 Aprile 2007 Vito Di Benedetto

  2. ILCA future project for a e+ e- Linear Collider • electron-positron collider; • ILC's design consist of two facing linear accelerators, each 20 kilometers long; • c.m. energy 0.5 - 1 TeV; • ILC target luminosity: • 500 fb-1 in 4 years.

  3. Fourth Concept Detector (“4th”) • Basic conceptual design: 4 subsystems • Vertex Detector 20-micron pixels • Time Projection Chamber • Drift Chamber as alternative to overcome known limitations of the TPC technology • Double-readout calorimeters • Fibers hadronic calorimeter: scintillation/Čerenkov • Crystals EM calorimeter • Muon dual-solenoid spectrometer

  4. Requirements for ILC Detectors • Physics goal of ILC • Wide variety of processes • Energy range: Mz<ECM<1 TeV • Basic detectors requirements • Efficient identification and precise 4-momentum measurement of the particles • Extremely good jet energy resolution to separate W and Z • Efficient jet-flavor identification capability • Excellent charged-particle momentum resolution • Hermetic coverage to veto 2-photon background

  5. Calorimetry at ILC Most of the important physics processes to be studied in the ILC experiment have multi-jets in the final state Jet energy resolution is the key in the ILC physics The world-wide consensus of the performance goal for the jet energy resolution is:

  6. Problems in Hadron Calorimeters LESSONS FROM 25 YEARS OF R&D Energy resolution determined by fluctuations To improve hadronic calorimeter performance reduce/eliminate the (effects of) fluctuations that dominate the performance The most important fluctuation is in the em shower fraction, fem

  7. Solution: Dual Readout Calorimeter • Measurement of fem value event by event by comparing two different signals from scintillation light and Ĉerenkov light in the same device. Dual REAdout Module (DREAM) http://www.phys.ttu.edu/dream/ Back end of 2-meter deep module Physical channel structure Unit cell

  8. From DREAM to the 4th Concept HCAL • Cu + scintillating fibers • + Ĉerenkov fibers • ~1.5° aperture angle • ~ 10 intdepth • Fully projective geometry • Azimuth coverage • down to 3.8° • Barrel: 13924 cells • Endcaps: 3164 cells

  9. Simulation/Reconstruction Stepsinside ILCRoot Framework MC Simulation  Energy Deposits in Detector Digitization Detector response combined Pattern Recognition Recpoints Track Finding  Tracks Track Fitting  Track Parameters

  10. ILCRoot: summary of features • CERN architecture (based on Alice’s Aliroot) • Full support provided by Brun, Carminati, Ferrari, et al. • Uses ROOT as infrastructure • All ROOT tools are available (I/O, graphics, PROOF, data structure, etc) • Extremely large community of users/developers • Six MDC have proven robustness, reliability and portability • Single framework, from generation to reconstruction through simulation. Don’t forget analysis!!!

  11. Calibration • Energy of HCAL calibrated in 2 steps: • Calibrate with single 40 GeV e- • EC and ES • Calibrate with single 40 GeV  • C andS

  12. Once HCAL calibrated, calorimeter energy: Reconstructed energy

  13. HCAL Resolution Plots C EHCAL S 40 GeV e- C S EHCAL 40 GeV π-

  14. Reconstructed vs Beam Energy Visible energy fully measured Pions data all HCAL energy single recpart energy Total Energy c & s Independent on Energy Pattern Recognition

  15. Resolution for hadrons Total Energy Pions data all HCAL energy single recpart energy /ndf 1.351e-05/4 P0 0.3545± 0.01041 P1 0.001335±0.001704 Pattern Recognition /ndf 1.435e-05/4 P0 0.3803± 0.01072 P1 0.0002627±0.001756 Low statistics

  16. Particle Identification e • 40 GeV particles     e

  17. Jets Studies e+ e- -> q q (uds)

  18. The Jet Finder Algorithm • Look for the jet axis using a Durham algorithm • Charged tracks • Calorimeter cells • Calorimeter Clusters • Jet core • Open a cone increasingly bigger around the jet axis (< 60°) • Run a Durham j.f. on the cells of the calorimeter inside the cone • Jet outliers • Check leftover/isolated calo cluster/cells for match with a track from TPC+VXD • Add calorimetric or track momentum • Add low Pt tracks not reaching the calorimeter • Muons • Add tracks reconstructed in the MUD

  19. Total Energy Plots • No jet finder • Energy calibration with no material in front

  20. Energy Resolution • Single jet (jet finding included) • Total visible Energy (no jet finding)

  21. Physics Studies e+e- -> ZoHo -> cc

  22. Jet Finder Performance • Angular resolution < 2° • Energy resolution = 4 GeV

  23. Jet-Jet Mass Plot

  24. The 4th Concept has chosen a Calorimeter with Dual Readout The technology has been tested at a test beam, but never in a real experiment Performance of Calorimeter is expected to be extremely good: σE/E = 38%/√E (single particles) σE/E = 39%/√E (jets) An ECAL design with Dual Readout crystal technology is under way Conclusions

  25. Hadronic Calorimeter Cells Bottom view of single cell Bottom cell size: ~4.8 × 4.8 cm2 Top cell size: ~ 8.8 × 8.8 cm2 Prospective view of clipped cell Cell length: 150 cm Number of fibers inside each cell: 1980 equally subdivided between Scintillating and Cerenkov Fiber stepping ~2 mm

  26. Simulation (1)‏ Light production in the fibers simulated through 2 separate steps: Energy deposition (hits) in active materials calculated by the tracking algorithm of the MC Conversion of the energy into the number of S and C photons by specific routins taking account several factors: energy of the particle, angle between the particle and the fiber, etc. Poisson uncertaintity introduced in the number of photon produced

  27. Simulation (2)‏ • Response function of the electronics not yet simulated (digits)‏ • Random noise generated to test the ability of reconstruction algorithm to reject such spurious “hits”

  28. Reconstruction • Clusterization ( pattern recognition) • cluster = collection of nearby “digits” • Build Clusters from cells distant no more than two towers away • Unfold overlapping clusters through a Minuit fit to cluster shape • Reconstructed energy E adding separately ES and EC of all the cells belonging to the reconstructed cluster

  29. e+e- -> ZoHo -> cc • Pandora-Pythia (Ecm=350 GeV, MH=140 GeV) + Fluka • No MUD (use MC truth) • Cut recoil mass 20 GeV around Zo mass • Maximize j.f. efficiency through yt cut (ff=97%)

More Related