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Calibration of the new Particle Identification Detector (PID) Tom Jude, Derek Glazier, Dan Watts

Calibration of the new Particle Identification Detector (PID)

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Calibration of the new Particle Identification Detector (PID). Tom Jude, Derek Glazier, Dan Watts. Talk overview. A brief description of the new PID. Energy corrections for light loss in the PID. Calibration of energy deposition in the PID by comparison with simulated data. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Calibration of the new Particle Identification Detector (PID)

Calibration of the new Particle Identification Detector (PID)

Tom Jude, Derek Glazier, Dan Watts

Page 2: Calibration of the new Particle Identification Detector (PID)

Talk overview

• A brief description of the new PID.

• Energy corrections for light loss in the PID.

• Calibration of energy deposition in the PID by comparison with simulated data.

• Particle identification and reconstruction of missing masses using the PID.

Page 3: Calibration of the new Particle Identification Detector (PID)

Description of the PID• The PID is a cylinder of 24 plastic scintillators, surrounding the target and parallel to the beam.

• The PMTs for light collection from the plastic scintillators is upstream from the target.

• The PID can be used for particle identification via E-E plots (Figure 1).

Figure 1. Example of a E-E plot Figure 2. PID cross-section

Page 4: Calibration of the new Particle Identification Detector (PID)

Correcting for light loss in the PID

• At forward angles, protons stop further from the PMTs in the PID elements.

• Less scintillation light from these protons reach the PMT.

Figure 3. Light loss corrections. Mean energy of minimum ionised pions vs. . Red points are without light loss correction, blue with the correction. A 3rd order polynomial was fitted to the data.

•A cut on the minimum ionised pions that punch through the Crystal Ball was made.

•The mean energy was plotted

as a function of •A 3rd order polynomial was fitted and the parameters used to correct for light loss in the Crystal Ball reconstruction software.

Page 5: Calibration of the new Particle Identification Detector (PID)

Calibration of the PID

• A Geant4 simulation was used to simulate Pion and Proton detection.

• E-E plots of the energy in the Crystal Ball Vs. the energy in the PID.

• Sliced into 50 intervals across the Crystal Ball energy axis.

• Projected as one dimensional histograms onto the PID axis.

• Two Gaussian functions fitted, giving peaks over the pions and protons.

Figure 4. A projected slice of the E-E plot of experimental data. First peak is the slice from the pion curve, second peak the slice from the proton curve. Two Gaussian peaks are fitted to the data.

Page 6: Calibration of the new Particle Identification Detector (PID)

Figure 5. Means of the proton peaks from projections. Experimental Vs. simulated data.

/MeV

Page 7: Calibration of the new Particle Identification Detector (PID)

Figure 6. E-E plot at forward angles where a curve of kaons can be seen.

Page 8: Calibration of the new Particle Identification Detector (PID)

Graphically cutting on the E-E plots

Figure 7. Graphical cuts on proton, kaon and pion curves

Page 9: Calibration of the new Particle Identification Detector (PID)

Strange meson production

• The reaction channels in Equations 1 and 2 were reconstructed using the graphical cuts on the previous slide (Figure 6).

• mesons were identified from their decay into two photons.• Other decay channels were avoided by vetoing on charged particles.

(1)

(2)

Page 10: Calibration of the new Particle Identification Detector (PID)

First look at K+ in the Crystal Ball

Figure 8. Missing mass measurements for strange decay channels. In (a),(b) and (c) red lines are simulated data.

(a) K+ missing mass

(b) K+ and 0 combined missing mass

(b) angle between measured and expected recoil from missing 4 momentum

(c) K+ missing mass Vs. K+, 0 combined missing mass

Expected missing masses:

= 1193 MeV

= 1116 MeV

n = 940 MeV

Page 11: Calibration of the new Particle Identification Detector (PID)

Summary

• As a first approximation, the PID was calibrated using simulated data.

• Energy corrections for light loss in the PID were incorporated into the reconstruction software and shown to enhance E-E plots.

• Graphically cutting on E-E plots and vetoing charged particles successfully reproduced missing masses from strange meson production channels.