Title: Particle Detection and Identification
1Particle Detection and Identification
- Roger Barlow
- Particle Physics Masterclass
- Manchester, March 20th 2008
2Studying Particles
- Detection Where are they?
- Very small
- Too small to see
- Identification What are they?
- The particle-spotters guide
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3Detecting particles
- Rule 1 You cant detect neutral particles, only
charged particles. - Rule 2 You can only detect charged particles if
theyre moving quite fast. - Rule 3 Even then the signals are small and need
amplifying - Rule 4 You can only detect charged particles
with long lifetimes, i.e. gt1 ns. - That basically means e, ?, ?, K, p
4Small but with a big kick
Charged Particle
Excited electron
Electric Field
What next? Two options
ATOM
5Option 1 Excited to a higher level
Photon
Drops back
6Many atoms many photons
particle
Light
- Good for measuring
- Timing
- Energy loss
- Bad for measuring
- position
Collected and amplified by photomultiplier
7Option 2 Excited all the way out
Free electron
Positive ion
8Tracking detectors Electronschargecurrent
Wire in a gas
Big field near wire Amplification through
avalanche process Good for position
Wire At 1 kV
Geiger counter Multiwire chambers Drift chambers
9Tracking Chambers
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10Summary so far
- We can detect a fast charged particle in all
sorts of ways, based on - Scintillation
- Ionisation
- What next?
11Identification What are they?
- Birds
- Size
- Shape
- Colour
- Sound
- Behaviour
- Particles
- Size
- Shape
- Colour
- Sound
- Behaviour
electron
Hadron (pi, K)
muon
proton
positron
12What Charge is it? or - ?
- Apply a magnetic field
- Particle curves to right or left depending on its
charge - Bonus faster particles curve less
- Bend depends on momentum
- This measures momentum and direction
13Tracking
14Spotting electrons/positrons
- Intersperse
- Sensitive material scintillators or tracking
chambers - Dense material sheets of iron or lead (or )
- Electrons and positrons shower rapidly
- e-? e- ? ? ? e e-
- Hadrons shower more slowly
- Collide with protons/neutrons and produce more
hadrons - Muons dont shower
- No strong interaction
- Bonus photons convert to electrons and then
shower - Bonus size of shower gives the energy
15Calorimeters
Incoming electron, positron or photon
Shower of secondary particles
- Count number of secondary particles in
shower?energy of incoming particle
16Spotting muons
- Do not interact much
- No shower in calorimeter
- Penetrate through shielding
- Muon detector charged particle detector put
where other charged particles would be screened
out
Muon in
Muon out
Absorber
17Spotting hadrons
- Anything that is not a muon or an electron is a
hadron (pion, kaon, proton) - Telling the difference is possible but more
complicated and less reliable -
18Parts of a Detector
19DELPHI Detector
20Another detector BaBar
21Yet another detector ATLAS
22What about quarks?
- u,d,s,c,b,t
- Never been seen directly
- Manifest as jets of hadrons
- Bonus gluons look almost just like quarks
23Quarks are jets
e e- ? q q
Many tracks Mostly hadrons Hadrons collimated
into jets Jets back to backs
24Conclusion
- Elementary particles are very small BUT we can
detect them - Lots of different techniques no single best
method - New ideas evolving all the time
- Yesterdays detectors look primitive compared to
todays sophisticated and ingenious devices - Tomorrows will be even better.