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Montreal Joint High Energy Physics SeminarNovember 28, 2002
It takes glue to study the “Glue”
Zisis PapandreouDept. of Physics
University of Regina
Zisis PapandreouDept. of Physics
University of Regina
Canadians:Regina,Carleton
Refe
ren
ces
Design Report will beavailable soon
Nov 2002
Sept/Oct 2000
Feb 2001
Sept 2000
JLab whitepaper
Cover story articleon exotics and Hall D
Articleon exotics and Hall D
All can bedownloaded fromthe Hall D website
Scientific Goals and Means• Definitive and detailed mapping of hybrid meson
spectrum• Quantitative understanding of confinement mechanism
in Quantum Chromodynamics (QCD).• Search for smoking gun signature of exotic JPC hybrid
mesons; these do not mix with qq states• Tools for the GlueX Project:
– Accelerator: 12 GeV electrons, 9 GeV linearly polarized photons with high flux
– Detector: hermiticity, resolution, charged and neutrals, R&D– PWA Analysis: each reaction has multi-particle final states – Computing power: 1 Pb/year data collection, data grids,
distributed computing, web services…
-
u
d s
c
b
t
white
white
Six Flavors of quarks
QCD is the theory of quarks and gluons
3 Colors3 Anti-colors
8 Gluons, each with a color and an anti-color charge.
)(21)(
GGtrmDiLQCD
(colorless objects)
confinement
GlueX Focus: “light-quark mesons”
qqq
Jets at High EnergyDirect evidence for gluons come from high energy jets. But this doesn’t tell us anything about the “static” properties of glue. We learn something about s.
q
q
2-Jet
g
q
q
3-Jet
gluon bremsstrahlung gqqqq )()(
Deep Inelastic Scattering
As the nucleon is probed to smaller and smaller x, the gluons become more and more important. Much of the nucleon momentum and most of its spin is carried by gluons!
Glue is important to hadronic structure.
x = q2/2M, 0<x<1
Strong QCD:See and systems.qq qqq
white
whiteNominally, glue isnot needed to describe hadrons.
Allowed systems: , , ggggg, gqq qqqqGlueballs Hybrids Molecules
Gluonic Excitations
QCD and confinement
Large DistanceLow Energy
Small DistanceHigh Energy
PerturbativeRegime
Non-PerturbativeRegime
High EnergyScattering
GluonJets
Observed
Spectroscopy
GluonicDegrees of Freedom
Missing
Flux Tubes
Color Field: Gluons possess color charge: they couple to each other!
Dipole
Flux Tube
•1 electric charge carries no charge
•3 Color charges•g carry charge
Notion of flux tubes comes about from model-independentgeneral considerations: observed linear dependence of m2 on J.Idea originated with Nambu in the ‘70s.
Flux Tubes and Confinement
Color Field: Because of self interaction, confining flux tubes form between static color charges
mesons
Linear potential: infinite energyrequired to separate qq. -
Confinement arises from flux tubes !
Lattice QCD
Flux tubes realized
Flux
tube
forms
between
linear potential
0.4 0.8 1.2 1.6
1.0
2.0
0.0
r/fm
Vo(
r)
[GeV
]
From G. Bali
Lattice “measurement”of quenched static potential
“Pluck” the Flux Tube
q
q
Normal meson:flux tube in ground state
q
q
Hybrid meson:flux tube in excited state
There are two degenerate first-excited transverse modes with J=1 – clockwise and counter-clockwise – and their linear combinations lead
to JPC = 1– + or JPC=1+ – for the excited flux-tube
How do we look for gluonic degrees of freedom in spectroscopy?
LS
S
1
2
S = S + S1 2
J = L + S
C = (-1)L + S
P = (-1)L + 1
Mass Difference
1 GeV/c2 mass difference
Hybrid mesons
Normal mesons
r - quark separation
Normal Mesons
LS
S
1
2
S = S + S1 2
J = L + S
C = (-1)L + S
P = (-1)L + 1
Spin/angular momentum configurations& radial excitations generate our knownspectrum of light quark mesons
Nonets characterized by given JPC
L=0, S=0: O-+ pseudoscalar mesonsL=0, S=1: 1-- vector mesonsL=1, S=1: O++ scalar, 1++ axial vector, 2++ tensor nonets
m=0 CP=(-1) S+1
m=1 CP=(-1) S
Flux-tube Model
ground-state flux-tube m=0
excited flux-tube m=1
built on quark-model mesons
CP={(-1)L+S}{(-1)L+1} ={(-1)S+1}
S=0,L=0,m=1
J=1 CP=+
JPC=1++,1--
non exotic
S=1,L=0,m=1
J=1 CP=-JPC=0-+,0+-
1-+,1+-
2-+,2+-
exotic
normal mesons
Hybrid Mesons
1-+ or 1+-
,,
exotic
K
linear potential
ground-state flux-tube m=0
excited flux-tube m=1
Gluonic Excitations provide anexperimental measurement of the excited QCD potential.
Observations of exotic quantum number nonets are thebest experimental signal of gluonic excitations.
QCD Potential
Meson Map 1
Glueballs
Hybrids
Mas
s (G
eV)
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
qq Mesons
L = 0 1 2 3 4
S
I 3
K
– o
K o
Ko
K–
Pseudoscalar
S
I 3
K *o K *
K *oK *–
– o
Vector
JPC = 1--
JPC = 0-+
(L = qq angular momentum)
Each box correspondsto 4 nonets (2 for L=0)
(2S+1)LJ=3S1
(2S+1)LJ=1S0
Mas
s (G
eV)
1.0
1.5
2.0
2.5
qq Mesons
L = 0 1 2 3 4
Each box correspondsto 4 nonets (2 for L=0)
Radial excitations
(L = qq angular momentum)
exoticnonets
0 – +
0 + –
1 + +
1 + –
1– +
1 – –
2 – +
2 + –2 + +
0 – +
2 – +
0 + +
Glueballs
Hybrids
Meson Map
0++ 1.6 GeV
Lattice 1-+ 1.9 GeV
Hybrid Predictions
Lattice calculations --- 1-+ nonet is the lightest UKQCD (97) 1.87 0.20MILC (97) 1.97 0.30MILC (99) 2.11 0.10Lacock(99) 1.90 0.20Mei(02) 2.01 0.10
~2.0 GeV/c2
1-+
0+-
2+-
Splitting 0.20
Flux-tube model: 8 degenerate nonets 1++,1-- 0-+,0+-,1-+,1+-,2-+,2+- ~1.9 GeV/c2
S=0 S=1
Production of Exotics
A pion or kaon beam, when scattering occurs,
can have its flux tube excitedor
beam
Quark spins anti-aligned
Much data in hand with some evidence for gluonic excitations(exotic hybrids are suppressed)
q
q
befo
req
qaft
er
q
q
aft
er
q
q
befo
re
beamAlmost no data in hand
in the mass regionwhere we expect to find exotic hybrids
when flux tube is excited
Quark spins aligned
__
__
Phenomenology
Model predictions for regular vs exotic meson prodution with pion (S=0) and photon (S=1) probes
Szczepaniak & Swat
N N
e
X
,,
1 IG(JPC)=1-(1-+)
’1 IG(JPC)=0+(1-+)
1 IG(JPC)=0+(1-+)
K1 IG(JPC)= ½ (1-)
1
1 b1 ,
’1
Couple to V.M + e
1-+ nonet
Exotics in Photoproduction
Hybrid Decays modes need to be measured
Partial Wave Analysis (PWA)
A simple example - identifying states which decay into
Decay into implies J=L, P=(-1)L and C=(-1)L
Production and decay
point the way
N N
e
b
p n m p1 p2 2
t pb p1 p2 2
b e
C.M.S.
dNd cos
YJ0 2
Line shape and phase consistent with Breit-Wigner line shape
Low t
production
•Identify the JPC of a meson•Determine production amplitudes & mechanisms•Include polarization of beam, target, spin and parity of resonances and daughters, relative angular momentum.
f()= (1/k) (Cl/l)sinlPl(cos)
d = f()2d
coscos cos
Decay Angular Distributions
JPC=2++ JPC=3--
b e
C.M.S.
dNd cos
YJ0 2
JPC=1--
Place PWA tools on firm footing, years before experiment•effects of polarized and unpolarized beam•detector acceptance (hermetic)•Leakage of non-exotics into exotic signal
GlueX uses two parallel PWA codes for cross-checking!
500
400
300
200
100
0
1.81.61.41.2
PWA fit
Finding the Exotic Wave
PC The J exotic was in themix with other wavesat the level of 2.5%
The generated mass andwidth are compared withthose from PWA fits:
Mass
Input: 1600 MeV
Width
Input: 170 MeV
Output: 1598 +/- 3 MeV
Output: 173 +/- 11 MeV
500
400
300
200
100
0
1.81.61.41.2
Mass (3 pions) (GeV)
events/20 MeV generated
Statistics correspond to a few days of running
Double-blind MC exercise
p n
JPC=1-+1
Current Evidence
Glueballs Hybrids
Overpopulation of thescalar nonet and LGT
predictions suggest thatthe f0(1500) is a glueball
See results fromCrystal Barrel
JPC = 1-+ states reported
1(1400) 1(1600)
See results fromBNL E852
Complication ismixing with conventional qq
statesNot withoutcontroversy
Have gluonic excitations already
been observed ?
f0(1500)
f2(1270)
f0(980)
f2(1565)+
700,000 000 Events
Crystal Barrel Results
f0(1500)
250,000 0 Events
Discovery of the f0(1500) f0(1500) ’, KK, 4f0(1370)
Crystal Barrel Results Establishes the scalar nonetSolidified the f0(1370)Discovery of the a0(1450)
p p 30
An Exotic Signal in E852
LeakageFrom
Non-exotic Wavedue to imperfectly
understood acceptance
ExoticSignal
1
Correlation ofPhase
&Intensity
M( ) GeV / c2 3 m=1593+-8+28
-47 =168+-20+150-12
’ m=1597+-10+45-10 =340+-40+-50
1(1600)
What is Needed for the GlueX Experiment?
PWA requires that the entire event be kinematically identified - all particles detected, measured and identified. It is also important that there be sensitivity to a wide variety of decay channels to test theoretical predictions for decay modes.
The detector should be hermetic for neutral and charged particles, with excellent resolution and particle identification capability. The way to achieve this is with a solenoidal-based detector.
Hermetic Detector:
Linear Polarization is required by the PWA
Linearly Polarized, CW Photon Beam:
CW beam minimizes detector deadtime, permitting much higher rates
What Electron Beam Characteristics Are Required?
Coherent bremsstrahlung will be used to produce photons with linearpolarization so the electron energy must be high enough to allowfor a sufficiently high degree of polarization - which drops as the energy of the photons approaches the electron energy.
At least 12 GeV electrons
In order to reduce incoherent bremsstrahlung background collimation willbe employed using 20 µm thick diamond wafers as radiators. Small spot size and superior emittance
The detector must operate with minimum dead time
Duty factor approaching 1 (CW Beam)
What Photon Beam Energy is Needed?
The mass reach of GlueX is up to about 2.5 GeV/c2 so the photon energy must at least be 5.8 GeV. Energy must be higher than this so that:
1. Mesons have enough boost so decay products are detected and measured with sufficient accuracy.
2. Line shape distortion for higher mass mesons is minimized.
3. Meson and baryon resonance regions are kinematically distinguishable.
But the photon energy should be low enough so that:
1. An all-solenoidal geometry (ideal for hermeticity) can still measure decay products with sufficient accuracy.
2. Background processes are minimized.
9 GeV photons ideal
Photon Beam Energy Figure of Merit
12
10
8
6
4
2
0
flux
of
phot
ons:
mill
ions
/sec
121110987
photon beam momentum (GeV)
endpoint energy = 12 GeV = 11 GeV = 10 GeV
Photon Flux inCoherent Peak
Total Hadronic RateConstant at
approx 20 KHz
0.6
0.5
0.4
0.3
0.2
0.1
0.0lin
ear
pola
riza
tion
121110987
photon beam momentum (GeV)
endpoint energy = 12 GeV = 11 GeV = 10 GeV
LinearPolarization
electron energy
photon energy
Electron energy
Photon energy
Given that 9 GeV photons are ideal - 12 GeV electron energy suffices; lower than this seriously degrades polarization and tagged hadronic rate.
flu
x
photon energy (GeV)
12 GeV electronsCoherent Bremsstrahlung
This technique provides requisite energy, flux and
polarization
collimated
Incoherent &coherent spectrum
tagged
with 0.1% resolution
40%polarization
in peak
electrons in
photons out
spectrometer
diamondcrystal
Linear Polarization
Linear polarization is:
Essential to isolate the production mechanism (M) if X is known
A JPC filter if M is known (via a kinematic cut)
Degree of polarization is directly related to required statistics
Linear polarization separates natural and unnatural parity
States of linear polarization are eigenstates of parity. States of circular polarization are not.
M
BNLSLAC
18 GeV/c19 GeV
p n
p p
a2 a2
We will use for comparison – the yields for production of the well-established and understood a2 meson
Compare Pion and Photoproduction Data Rates
Photoproduction of 3π at SLAC and JLab
SLAC
similar cuts
p n
SLAC 19 GeVCLAS
5.7 GeV
a2 a2
Experiment a2 yield Exotic Yield
SLAC 102 --BNL (published) 104 250
BNL (in hand - to be analyzed) 105 2500
GlueX 107 5x 106
More than104 increase
GlueX estimates are based on 1 year of low intensity running (107 photons/sec)
Even if the exotics were produced at the suppressed rates measured in -production, we would have 250,000 exotic mesons in 1 year, and be able to carry out a full program of hybrid meson spectroscopy
How GlueX Compares to Existing Data
Computational Challenge
• GlueX will collect data at 100 MB/sec or 1 Petabyte/year - comparable to LHC-type experiments.
• GlueX will be able to make use of much of the infrastructure developed for the LHC including the multi-tier computer architecture and the seamless virtual data architecture of the Grid.• To get the physics out of the data, GlueX relies entirely on an amplitude-based analysis - PWA – a challenge at the level necessary for GlueX. For example, visualization tools need to be designed and developed. Methods for fitting large data sets in parallel on processor farms need to be developed.
• Close collaboration with computer scientists has started and the collaboration is gaining experience with processor farms; Data Grid Workshop in Indiana in two weeks.
10-2
1990 2000 2010
Lattice gauge theory invented
Quenched Hybrid Spectrum
Hybrid Mixing
Hybrids in Full QCD
Exotic candidate at BNL
First data from CEBAF @12 GeV
Tflop-year
100
10-1
10-4
10-6
1974
Lattice Meson spectrum agrees with Experiment.
101
102
10-3
10-5
Flux tubes between Heavy Quarks
FY03 Clusters 0.5 TFlop/sec
FY06 Clusters 8 Tflop/sec
LQCD
LRP
www.nscl.msu.edu/future/lrp2002.html
NSAC Long Range
Plan
LRP
www.nscl.msu.edu/future/lrp2002.html
Jefferson Lab FacilityNewport News, Virginia
A B C
Hall D will belocated here D
6 GeV CEBAF
11
CHL-2CHL-2
12Upgrade magnets Upgrade magnets
and power and power suppliessupplies
Two 0.6 GV linacs1.1
Beam Power: 1MWBeam Current 5 µA
Emittance: 10 nm-radEnergy Spread: 0.02%
GlueX Collaboration
US Experimental Groups
A. Dzierba (Spokesperson) - IUC. Meyer (Deputy Spokesperson) - CMUE. Smith (JLab Hall D Group Leader)
L. Dennis (FSU) R. Jones (U Conn)J. Kellie (Glasgow) A. Klein (ODU)G. Lolos (Regina) (chair) A. Szczepaniak (IU)
Collaboration Board
Carnegie Mellon University
Catholic University of America
Christopher Newport University
University of Connecticut
Florida International University
Florida State University
Indiana University
Jefferson Lab
Los Alamos National Lab
Norfolk State University
Old Dominion University
Ohio University
University of Pittsburgh
Renssalaer Polytechnic Institute
University of Glasgow
Institute for HEP - Protvino
Moscow State University
Budker Institute - Novosibirsk
University of Regina
CSSM & University of Adelaide
Carleton University
Carnegie Mellon University
Insitute of Nuclear Physics - Cracow
Hampton University
Indiana University
Los Alamos
North Carolina Central University
University of Pittsburgh
University of Tennessee/Oak Ridge
Other Experimental Groups
Theory Group
100 collaborators25 institutions
The impact of
• Chair of Collaboration board: George Lolos• Hardware working group co-leader: Zisis Papandreou• Software working group co-leader : Ed Brash• Co-editors/co-authors of Conceptual Design Report:
– Physics (G. Lolos), Detector (Z. Papandreou), Software (E. Brash).
• Most recent Hall D Collaboration meeting was held at UofR.
• SPARRO has been tasked with the design and construction of the full barrel calorimeter: weight of 30 tons, 5,000 km of fibers, and a price tag of US$4,000,000.
• Initial R&D is ongoing at Regina; JLab discretionary funds • Assembly and machining of full modules in Edmonton.
Subatomic Physics At Regina with Research Offshore
GlueX Detector
Lead GlassDetector
Superconducting Solenoid
Electron Beam from CEBAF
Coherent BremsstrahlungPhoton Beam
Tracking
Target
CerenkovCounter
Time ofFlight
BarrelCalorimeter
Note that tagger is80 m upstream of
detector
Coils
Iron Yokes
FDC
Barrel Calorimeter
CDC
Vertex Detector
Target
GlueX Detector
Central Field:2 Tesla
Detector Platform
Top View of the HALL
PLATFORM
• The Platform is 8 ft from the base
• Supports the extracted components
• Assists in assembling the parts
All Dimensions in Meters
Solenoid Assembly
Hall D
Barrel Calorimeter
Tracking Package
Rail System
Lead/scintillating fiber sandwich;1-mm diameter fibers; 0.5mm sheets
PMT Readout
PMT Readout
Scintillating fiber
Barrel Calorimeter Design Issues
• Length of device (> 4 m)• Shower containment/radiation lengths: ~16Xo• Azimuthal granularity vs. PMT geometry & light collection• Minimum energy deposition threshold: 20 MeV• Neutral energy resolution balance (vs. FCAL)
– Fiber diameter & Pb thickness: uniform throughout?
• Charged vs. Neutral energy resolution balance• Timing resolution vs. other subsystems• Mechanical issues: manufacturing, inner detector
mounting
R&D at Regina:•Monte Carlo•Hardware: Readout, fibers, Pb/SciFi Matrix
BCAL Readout Configuration
Longitudinal View
K. Wolbaum
Even with SciFi bundling,~540 HPMTs will be needed:
No of phi segments 54
Phi segment angle 0.116
HPD active area 5.07 cm2
HPD total area 20.3 cm2
Calorimeter thickness 20.27 cm
Outer calorimeter radius 89.71 cm
Calorimeter length 400 cm
No of HPMT’s 1080
o Length: 4.5 mo Outer Radius: 90 cmo Thickness: 20-25 cm
$$ cost issue $$
Computational Tools for Simulations
Energy resolution: Driving physics processes Detector subsystems
relation Timing resolution:
Detector subsystems relation
Longitudinal position requirement? Detector subsystems
relation
HDFast GEANT
Notes: use a2 decay or fake to look at particle distributions; use known smearing from FCAL and KLOE to do the first order resolution modeling. Is the missing mass resolution important?
Neutral and charged particle energy deposition profile
Readout granularity Lateral energy spread Verify back-of-the-envelope X0
Pb/SciFi/Glue detailed modeling Position resolution (vs. angle):
pos.res./N; shower algorithms
Notes: results of simulations have to be reconciled with mechanical constraints (HPMT outer and inner diameter; area reduction factor from Winston cones).
Tools are now in place at Regina
What’s a Hybrid?
• Proximity-focused vacuum tube• Fast rise- and fall-time (2, 12 ns)• High QE for UV, Gain is 105
• Insensitive to high magnetic fields
Fused silica window
HV: -8kV Bias: -80V Pre-amp Shaper
2 TeslaCentral Fieldmeans HPMTs
or20m fiber
light guides
Hybrid PMT
DEP PP0350G
DEP PP0100Z
UofR HV regulator
• Gain 1600• Discharging/RF solved• Pre-amp selection• Signals:
– NaI detector– Scintillator
• Parameters measured• Personnel assigned
– V. Kovaltchouk– K. Wolbaum– B. Ramadan
• Moscow Institute• Contact with DEP
• Light sources: – NaI crystal and 241Am,
137Cs and 60Co sources– LED (pulsed): neutral
density filter, fiber lightguide
• Measurements: • HPD PP0350G with Multi-
Channel Analyzer (Tektronix 5200) and DAQ System
• Bottom line: system works, needs a bit more R&D
HPMT Innards
CREMAT CR-101D
Optical Fiber Tests with 100MeV pions
• Properties:– Light collection
efficiency (cladding)– Scintillation light
production (doping)– Light attenuation
coefficient– Timing resolution
• Fibers Types (single-, double-clad)– Kuraray SCSF-81– Pol.Hi.Tech. 0046
– Bicron (too expensive) M11 Experimental Area at TRIUMFAugust 2001
Attenuation Length
~3m
Fiber Optical Properties
• Quality Control– Quick, reliable, reproducible– Optical source– Dedicated spectrometer & DAQ– Transmission, attenuation, timing– Cross-check w/ ionization source– Optical system: LED, optics, spectrometer, ADC
• Commercial system was used• Components: SD2000 (dual channel)
spectrometer, ADC1000USB, laptop, fibers, neutral density filters, connectors, lenses, , optical grease, light source.
• Operation in Summer 2002 by L. Snook (NSERC Student).
• OOIBase32 software readout.• Kuraray, PHT and Bicron 1mm-fibers have
been tested for transmission and attenuation.
”Cave” Optical System Setup
• Optical system
•Spectrometer•ADC•Laptop
Master (Gold)
Slave (tests)
Master Branch(Gold fibers)
Slave Branch(Test fibers)
L. Snook
Coupling Reproducibility
Kuraray Multi-Clad 2002 Batch4000
Wavelength (nm)300 1100
Inte
nsi
ty
(from Aug. 8-12, 2002)
4000
Inte
nsit
y
Wavelength (nm)1100
1m (#2)1m (#1)2m3m4m5m10m
Kuraray Multi-Clad 2002 Batch
Attenuation Determination
Prototype Pb/SciFi Modules
Build in May 2002with help from
KLOE Folks
Prototype Module Construction
96 x 13 x 10 cm3
70 kg
B. Klein, J. Kushniryk, T.Summers, G.
WilliamsLead Sheet Swaging
Matrix gluing & pressing
Inspection and cleaning
Conclusions
• An outstanding and fundamental question is the nature of confinement of quarks and gluons in QCD.• Lattice QCD and phenomenology strongly indicate that the gluonic field between quarks forms flux-tubes and that these are responsible for confinement. • The excitation of the gluonic field leads to an entirely new spectrum of mesons and their properties are predicted by lattice QCD.• But data are needed to validate these predictions.• Only now are the tools in place to carry out the definitive experiment and JLab – with the energy upgrade – is unique for this search.• If exotic hybrids are there, we will find them! • In Regina, we will continue the R&D on MC, HPMTs and Pb/SciFi
We are eagerly awaiting CD-0 from the DOE.
The right people are in place - ready to make this happen
gluonic Excitations
Workshop at JLab May 14-16, 2003.