Title: POLARIMETRY of MeV Photons and Positrons
1POLARIMETRYof MeV Photons and Positrons
- Overview
- Beam Characterization
- undulator photons
- positrons
- Basics of the Transmission Method
- for photon polarimetry
- for positron polarimetry
- Description of the Layouts and Hardware
- for the photon polarimeter
- for the positron polarimeter
- Expected Polarimeter Performance
2Undulator Photon Beam I
- Undulator basics (1st harmonic shown only)
E166 undulator parameters
3Undulator Photon Beam II
photon spectrum, angular distribution and
polarization
4Positron Beam Simulation
distributions behind the converter target (0.5
r.l. Ti) based on polarized EGS shower
simulations by K. Flöttmann
5Low-Energy Polarimetry
- Candidate Processes
- Photons Compton Scattering on polarized
electrons - forward scattering (e.g. Schopper et al.)
- backward scattering
- transmission method (e.g. Goldhaber et al.)
- Positrons all on ferromagnetic polarized e-
targets - Annihilation polarimetry (ee- ? ??)
(e.g. Corriveau et al.) - Bhabha scattering (ee- ? ee-)
(e.g. Ullmann et al.) - brems/annihilation (e ? ?) plus ?-transmission
(Compton) polarimetry
6Trade-offs
- Principal difficulties of e polarimetry
- huge multiple-scattering at low energies even in
thin targets - cannot employ double-arm coincidence techniques
- or single-event counting due to poor machine
duty cycle - low energies below 10 MeV, vulnerable to
backgrounds - All of the candidate processes have been explored
by us - ? the transmission method is the most
suitable ?
7Transmission Polarimetry of (monochromatic)
Photons
M. Goldhaber et al. Phys. Rev. 106 (1957) 826.
all unpolarized contributions cancel in the
transmission asymmetry ? (monochromatic case)
8Transmission Polarimetry of Photons
Monochromatic Case
Analyzing Power
But, undulator photons are not monochromatic ?
Must use number or energy weighted integrals ?
9Transmission Polarimetry of Positrons
- 2-step Process
- re-convert e ? ? via brems/annihilation
process - polarization transfer from e to ? proceeds
- in well-known manner
- measure polarization of re-converted photons
- with the photon transmission methods
- infer the polarization of the parent positrons
- from the measured photon polarization
- Experimental Challenges
- large angular distribution of the positrons
- at the production target
- e spectrometer collection transport
efficiency - background rejection issues
- angular distribution of the re-converted photons
- detected signal includes large fraction of
Compton scattered photons - requires simulations to determine the effective
Analyzing Power - Formal Procedure
Fronsdahl Ãœberall Olson Maximon Page
McMaster
10Spin-Dependent Compton Scattering
- Simulation with modified GEANT3
- (implemented by V. Gharibyan)
- standard GEANT is unpolarized
- ad-hoc solution
- - substitute the unpolarized Compton
subroutines - with two spin-dependent versions (1
and -1) and run these in sequence for the same
beam statistics - - then determine analyzing power
- from this data
- Gharibyan
Schüler, Ref. 66
11Polarimeter Layout Overview
12Analyzer Magnets
g 1.919 ? 0.002 for pure iron,
Scott (1962)
Error in e- polarization is dominated by
knowledge in effective magnetization M along the
photon trajectory
active volume Photon Analyzer Magnet 50 mm
dia. x 150 mm long Positron Analyzer Magnet
50 mm dia. x 75 mm long
13Photon Polarimeter Detectors
E-144 Designs
Si-W Calorimeter
Threshold Cerenkov (Aerogel)
14Positron Polarimeter Layout
15Positron Transport System
e transmission () through spectrometer
photon background fraction reaching CsI-detector
16CsI Calorimeter Detector
Crystals from
BaBar Experiment Number of crystals
4 x 4 16 Typical front face of one
crystal 4.7 cm x 4.7 cm Typical backface
of one crystal 6 cm x 6 cm Typical
length 30
cm Density
4.53 g/cm³ Rad. Length
8.39 g/cm² 1.85 cm Mean free path (5
MeV) 27.6 g/cm² 6.1 cm No.
of interaction lengths (5 MeV) 4.92 Long.
Leakage (5 MeV) 0.73
Photodiode Readout (2 per crystal)
Hamamatsu S2744-08 with preamps
17Expected Photon Polarimeter Performance
Si-W Calorimeter
Energy-weighted Mean
Expected measured energy asymmetry and
energy-weighted analyzing power determined
through analytic integration and. with good
agreement, through special polarized GEANT
simulation
Aerogel Cerenkov
See Table 12
all measurements very fast ? only syst. Error
of should matter
18Expected Positron Polarimeter Performance
Simulation based on modified GEANT code, which
correctly describes the spin-dependence of the
Compton process
Number Energy-weighted Analyzing Power vs.
Energy
Photon Spectrum Angular Distr.
10 Million simulated e per point polarity on
the re-conversion target
19Expected Positron Polarimeter Performance I
Analyzing Power vs. Energy Spread
Analyzing Power vs. Target Thickness
20Expected Positron Polarimeter Performance II
Table 13