Title: Andr
1Large liquid Argon detectors
Giant
- André Rubbia, ETH Zürich
- (ICARUS Collaboration)
- Paris meeting, November 2003
- Simulations performed by Paola Sala (ETHZINFN)
2Introduction
- The liquid Argon TPC technology is a new kind of
detector, effectively an electronic
bubble-chamber, originally proposed at CERN by
Carlo Rubbia (CERN-EP/77-08 (1977)) and supported
by Italian INFN over many years of RD - It has recently regained a strong interest in the
community, after the - The successful assembly and operation of the
ICARUS T600 that demonstrated that the technology
is mature - The realization of the enormous physics potential
offered by high granularity imaging and extremely
high resolution, in the context of - Underground physics (proton decay, solar,
supernova, ) - Short-baseline (now called near detectors)
low/medium cross-sections or high-energy
precision neutrino physics - Long-baseline neutrino physics (superbeams and/or
NF) - As a consequence, preprints, proceedings, LOIs,
etc have recently appeared concerning liquid
argon detectors, from the smallest (10-100 tons)
to the biggest (gt100 ktons) sizes, with varying
level of credibility. - Currently, we can state safely
- ICARUS T3000 at the Gran Sasso Laboratory is so
far the most important milestone for this
technology and acts as a full-scale test-bed with
a total of 3 kton of liquid Argon to be located
in a difficult underground environment. - The possible extrapolation to giant liquid argon
detector (100kton) must be investigated. This is
the subject of this talk.
3The ICARUS collaboration (25 institutes, 150
physicists)
M. Aguilar-Benitez, S. Amoruso, Yu. Andreew, P.
Aprili, F. Arneodo, B. Babussinov, B. Badelek, A.
Badertscher, M. Baldo-Ceolin, G. Battistoni, B.
Bekman, P. Benetti, E. Bernardini, A. Borio di
Tigliole, M. Bischofberger, R. Brunetti, R.
Bruzzese, A. Bueno, C. Burgos, E. Calligarich, D.
Cavalli, F. Cavanna, F. Carbonara, P. Cennini, S.
Centro, M. Cerrada, A. Cesana, R.
Chandrasekharan, C. Chen, D. B. Chen, Y. Chen, R.
Cid, D. Cline, P. Crivelli, A.G. Cocco, A.
Dabrowska, Z. Dai, M. Daniel, M. Daszkiewicz, C.
De Vecchi, A. Di Cicco, R. Dolfini, A. Ereditato,
M. Felcini, A. Ferrari, F. Ferri, G. Fiorillo,
M.C. Fouz, S. Galli, D. Garcia, Y. Ge, D. Gibin,
A. Gigli Berzolari, I. Gil-Botella, S.N.
Gninenko, N. Goloubev, A. Guglielmi, K. Graczyk,
L. Grandi, K. He, J. Holeczek, X. Huang, C.
Juszczak, D. Kielczewska, M. Kirsanov, J. Kisiel,
L. Knecht, T. Kozlowski, H. Kuna-Ciskal, N.
Krasnikov, P. Ladron de Guevara, M. Laffranchi,
J. Lagoda, Z. Li, B. Lisowski, F. Lu, J. Ma, N.
Makrouchina, G. Mangano, G. Mannocchi, M.
Markiewicz, A. Martinez de la Osa, V. Matveev, C.
Matthey, F. Mauri, D. Mazza, A. Melgarejo, G.
Meng, A. Meregaglia, M. Messina, C. Montanari, S.
Muraro, G. Natterer, S. Navas-Concha, M.
Nicoletto, G. Nurzia, C. Osuna, S. Otwinowski, Q.
Ouyang, O. Palamara, D. Pascoli, L. Periale,
G. Piano Mortari, A. Piazzoli, P. Picchi, F.
Pietropaolo, W. Polchlopek, T. Rancati, A.
Rappoldi, G.L. Raselli, J. Rico, L. Romero, E.
Rondio, M. Rossella, A. Rubbia, C. Rubbia, P.
Sala, N. Santorelli, D. Scannicchio, E. Segreto,
Y. Seo, F. Sergiampietri, J. Sobczyk, N.
Spinelli, J. Stepaniak, M. Stodulski, M. Szarska,
M. Szeptycka, M. Szeleper, M. Terrani,
R. Velotta, S. Ventura, C. Vignoli, H. Wang, X.
Wang, C. Willmott, M. Wojcik, J. Woo, G. Xu, Z.
Xu, X. Yang, A. Zalewska, J. Zalipska, C. Zhang,
Q. Zhang, S. Zhen, W. Zipper.
ITALY L'Aquila, LNF, LNGS, Milano, Napoli,
Padova, Pavia, Pisa, CNR Torino, Torino Univ.,
Politec. Milano. SWITZERLAND ETH/Zürich.
CHINA Academia Sinica Beijing. POLAND Univ.
of Silesia Katowice, Univ. of Mining and
Metallurgy Krakow, Inst. of Nucl. Phys. Krakow,
Jagellonian Univ. Krakow, Univ. of Technology
Krakow, A.Soltan Inst. for Nucl. Studies
Warszawa, Warsaw Univ., Wroclaw Univ. USA UCLA
Los Angeles. SPAIN Univ. of Granada,
CIEMAT RUSSIA INR (Moscow)
4ICARUS T3000 A Second-Generation Proton Decay
Experiment and Neutrino Observatory at the Gran
Sasso Laboratory
100 m
nK
5ICARUS RD - 50 liter prototype in CERN West
Area neutrino beam
6ICARUS T600 cosmic rays on surface
Shower
25 cm
85 cm
265 cm
142 cm
Muon decay
Hadronic interaction
Run 960, Event 4 Collection Left
Run 308, Event 160 Collection Left
7ICARUS T300 cryostat (1 out of 2)
300000 kg LAr T300
8ICARUS T300 prototype
Cryostat (half-module)
View of the inner detector
4 m
20 m
4 m
Readout electronics
9Liquefied rare gases TPC basic ideas
- Ideal materials for detection of ionizing tracks
- Dense (g/cm3 103 x rgas), homogeneous, target
and detector - Do not attach electrons (? long drift paths
possible in liquid phase) - High electron mobility (quasi-free drift
electrons, not neon) - Commercially easy to obtain (in particular,
liquid Argon) - Can be made very pure and many impurities freeze
out at low temperature - Inert, not flammable
Type Density (r/cm3) Energy loss dE/dx (MeV/cm) Radiation length X0 (cm) Collision length l (cm) Boiling point _at_ 1 bar (K) Electron mobility (cm2/Vs)
Neon 1.2 1.4 24 80 27.1 highlow
Argon 1.4 2.1 14 80 87.3 500
Krypton 2.4 3.0 4.9 29 120 1200
Xenon 3.0 3.8 2.8 34 165 2200
10Processes induced by charged particles in dense
rare gases
When a charged particle traverses medium
- Ionization process
- Scintillation (luminescence)
- UV spectrum
- Not energetic enough to further ionize, hence,
medium is transparent - Rayleigh-scattering
- Cerenkov light (if fast particle)
UV light
Charge
Cerenkov light (if bgt1/n)
M. Suzuki et al., NIM 192 (1982) 565
11Comparison rare gases
LAr LKr LXe
Density g/cm3 1.39 2.45 3.06
dE/dx MeV/cm 2.11 3.45 3.89
I eV 15.76 14.00 12.13
We-ion eV 23.60.3 20.51.5 16.41.4
Wg eV 19.5 52 38
Scintillation photons/MeV photons 50000 19000 26000
Decay const ns 6(23), 1600(77) 2(1),85(99) 2(77),30(33)
Scintillation peak nm 128 147 174
Rayleigh scattering length for scintillation cm 90 60 30
12Comparison water - liquid Argon
Water Liquid Argon
Density (g/cm3) 1 1.4
Radiation length (cm) 36.1 14.0
Interaction length (cm) 83.6 83.6
dE/dx (MeV/cm) 1.9 2.1
Refractive index (visible) 1.33 1.24
Cerenkov angle 42 36
Cerenkov d2N/dEdx (b1) 160 eV-1 cm-1 130 eV-1 cm-1
Muon Cerenkov threshold (p in MeV/c) 120 140
Scintillation No Yes (50000 g/MeV _at_ l128nm)
Cost 1 CHF/liter (Evian) 1 CHF/liter
13Comparison Water - liquid Argon
A new way to look at rare events
14Electron drift properties in liquid Argon
3 m
15The Liquid Argon TPC (I)
UV Scintillation Light L
Readout planes Q
Time
Edrift
Drift direction
- High density
- Non-destructive readout
- Continuously sensitive
- Self-triggering
- Huge scintillation T0
Low noise Q-amplifier
Continuous waveform recording
16The Liquid Argon TPC (II)
- Cryogenics Detector must be maintained at
cryogenic temperatures, safety issues must be
addressed for large detectors, in particular
underground - LAr Purity Ionization tracks can be transported
practically undistorted, by a uniform electric
field, for distances of the order of several
meters in a highly purified (electronegative
impurities lt 0.1 ppb O2 equiv.) liquid argon
(LAr). - Charge Readout A set of electrodes (wires)
placed at the end of the drift path senses the
ionization charges and provides a two-dimensional
view of the event (wire co-ordinate vs drift
co-ordinate) - No charge multiplication occurs in LAr ?? several
wire planes can be installed with the wires
having different orientations ?? non-destructive
charge readout ?? multiple views ?? 3D
reconstruction - UV light Readout LAr is also a very good
scintillator ?? scintillation light (l 128 nm)
provides a prompt signal to be used for
triggering purposes and for absolute event time
measurement ?? immersed pmt coated with WLS
17The need for 100 kton non-magnetized liquid Argon
detectors
- Short-baseline (now called near detectors)
low/medium cross-sections or high-energy
precision neutrino physics - 10-150 ton MAYBE magnetized B0.5-1T
- Long-baseline neutrino physics
- Superbeams
- 10 kton not necessarily magnetized (Phase I)
- 100 kton not necessarily magnetized (Phase II)
- b-beams
- 100 kton not magnetized
- NF
- 10-20 kton magnetized B1 T
- Underground physics (proton decay, supernova,
atm, solar, ) - 100 kton non magnetized
Different optimizations for different kinds of
physics (Mini, medium, large, XL)
18Extrapolation to underground kton liquid Argon
TPCs general considerations
- The ICARUS collaboration has proposed an
underground modular T3000 detector for LNGS based
on the cloning of the T600 - T3000 T600 T1200 T1200
- Design fully proven by t600 technical run
- Ready to be built by industry
- The cost can be precisely estimated on the basis
of the T600 prototype already built and is
supported by actual offers - 20M per kton
- A 10 kton modular liquid argon detector could be
ordered today and would cost 200 M
(conservative) - This would be ok for superbeams (e.g. offaxis)
- Following a successful scaling up strategy, one
could optimize costs and envision building bigger
supermodules by increasing the dimensions of the
current T1200 by a factor two in each directions
19The ICARUS T1200 Unit
- Based on cloning the present T600 containers
- A cost-effective solution given tunnel access
conditions - Preassembled modules outside tunnel are arranged
in supermodules of about 1200 ton each (4
containers) - Time effective solution (parallelizable)
- Drift doubled 1.5 m ? 3 m
- sensible solution given past experience
- Built with large industrial support (AirLiquide,
Breme-Tecnica, Galli-Morelli, CAEN, ) - order as many as you need solution
Detailed engineering project was produced by Air
Liquide (June 2003) T1200 cryostat ready for
tendering
20Extrapolation to underground kton liquid Argon
TPCs a different approach
- There seem to be counter-indications to a
non-modular design (the facts of life!) - Underground installation (access)
- Independent operation of each module
- Technique (drift, purity, readout, HV,) already
proven at the kton scale - Safety requirements (?)
- However, a single volume appears to be the most
attractive solution - Since to reach the wanted mass of 100 kton
requires nonetheless a large number of
supermodules (10x10kton 100 kton) - Is a strong RD program required to extrapolate
the liquid argon TPC to the 100 kton scale (in a
single step?) - In the following, I will try to address the
feasibility of a single volume 100 kton liquid
argon detector - The gains might be worth the RD efforts
21100 kton liquid Argon TPC
Basic features
- Charge imaging scintillation Cerenkov light
readout for complete event information - Charge amplification to allow for extremely long
drifts - Single 100 kton boiling cryogenic tanker with
Argon refrigeration
22100 kton liquid Argon detector
Electronic crates
f70 m
h 20 m
Perlite insulation
23Front view
h 20 m
f70 m
24Access and highway tunnel
highway
Access
25Access tunnel and highway tunnel
Access
Highway tunnel
26Detector and highway tunnel
Highway tunnel
Detector
27Open detector
Gas Argon
Liquid Argon
Drift
28Summary parameters
Dewar 70 m, height 20 m, passive perlite insulated, heat input 5W/m2
Argon storage Boiling argon, low pressure (lt100 mbar overpressure)
Argon total volume 73118 m3 (height 19 m), ratio area/volume15
Argon total mass 102365 tons
Hydrostatic pressure at bottom 3 atm
Inner detector dimensions Disc f 70 m located in gas phase above liquid phase
Electron drift in liquid 20 m maximum drift, HV2 MV for E1KV/cm, vd2 mm/µs, max drift time 10 ms
Charge readout view 2 independent perpendicular views, 3mm pitch, in gas phase (electron extraction) with charge amplification (typ. x100)
Charge readout channels 100000
Readout electronics 100 ICARUS-like racks on top of dewar (1000 channels per crate)
Scintillation light readout Yes (also for triggering), 1000 immersed 8 PMT with WLS (TPB)
Visible light readout Yes (Cerenkov light), 27000 immersed 8 PMTs or 20 coverage, single photon counting capability
29Charge readout
30Charge readout
- Detector is running in bi-phase mode
- In order to allow for long drift (20 m), we
consider charge attenuation along drift and
compensate this effect with charge amplification
near anodes located in gas phase - Amplification operates in proportional mode
- After max drift of 20 m _at_ 1 KV/cm, diffusion
readout pitch 3 mm
Electron drift in liquid 20 m maximum drift, HV2 MV for E1KV/cm, vd2 mm/µs, max drift time 10 ms
Charge readout view 2 independent perpendicular views, 3mm pitch
Maximum charge diffusion s2.8 mm (v2Dtmax for D4 cm2/s)
Maximum charge attenuation e-(t/ tmax) 1/150 for t2 ms electron lifetime
Needed charge amplification 102 to 103
Methods for amplification Extraction to and amplification in gas phase
Possible solutions Thin wires (f30mm)pad readout, GEM, LEM,
31Electron extraction in Ar-biphase (ICARUS RD)
Particle produces excitation (Ar) and ionisation
(Ar, e)
Scintillation SC is a result of 1.Direct
excitation 2.Recombination
Electroluminescence EL (proportional
scintillation) is a result of electron
acceleration in the gas
Electric Field
GAr
EL UV light
LAr
e- Ar
SC UV light
Both SC and EL can be detected by the same
photodetector
32Amplification near wires à la MWPC
- Amplification in Ar 100 gas up to factor G100
is possible - GARFIELD calculations in pure Ar 100, T87 K,
p1 atm - Amplification near wires, signal dominated by
ions - Readout views induced signal on (1) wires and
(2) strips provide two perpendicular views
Gain vs wire f _at_ 3.5kV
e-
Wire f30mm
102
PCB with strips
33Gas Electron Multiplier GEM (F. Sauli et al.)
100x100 mm2
A gas electron multiplier (GEM) consists of a
thin, metal-clad polymer foil, chemically pierced
by a high density of holes. On application of a
difference of potential between the two
electrodes, electrons released by radiation in
the gas on one side of the structure drift into
the holes, multiply and transfer to a collection
region.
34GEM in dense rare gases (Buzulutskov et al.)
Buzulutskov et al, IEEE transaction on NS,
e-print physics/0308010 Buzulutskov et al,
NIMA513256-259 (2003)
GEM
Gas phase
GEM
GEM
Liquid phase
35Large Electron Multiplier (LEM)
- A large scale GEM (x10) made with ultra-low
radioactivity materials (OFHC copper plated on
virgin Teflon) - In-house fabrication using automatic
micromachining - Modest increase in V yields gain similar to GEM
- Self-supporting, easy to mount in multi-layers
- Extremely resistant to discharges (lower
Capacitance) - Cu on PEEK under construction (zero out-gassing)
Chicago-Purdue P.S. Barbeau J.I. Collar J.
Miyamoto I.P.J. Shipsey
LEM bottom (anode) signal
LEM top (cathode) signal
36LEM with Argon (ICARUS RD)
PRELIMINARY
Detection of charge signal and scintillation
light produced during amplification
400x400 mm2
Holes f 1 mm
37Light readout
38UV light readout (ICARUS RD)
- Commercial PMT with large area
- Glass-window
- For scintillation VUV l 128 nm
- Wavelength-shifter
- Immersed T(LAr) 87 K
With TPB as WLS
Electron Tubes 9357FLA 8 PMT (bialkali with Pt
deposit) G 1 x 107 _at_ 1400 V peak Q.E. (400-420
nm) 18 (10 cold) Trise 5 ns, FWHM 8 ns
Lally et al., NIMB 117 (1996) 421
39Cerenkov light readout (ICARUS)
- M. Antonello et al., ICARUS Collab., "Detection
of Cerenkov light emission in liquid Argon NIMA,
Article in Press - Immersed PMT 2 EMI-9814 BQ (sensitivity up to
160 nm)
Refractive index
Rayleigh scattering
Data consistent with Cerenkov emission
dN/dx(160-600nm) 700 g/cm (b1)
40Boiling cryogenic tanker
We consider Phase 1 tanker filling Phase 2
running (refrigeration)
41A dedicated cryogenic liquid plant for initial
filling phase
- Because of the large amount liquid argon needed
to fill up the experiment (e.g. 300 ton/day to
fill in 300 days), liquid argon must be produced
locally - One must envision a dedicated cryogenic plant
located outside the tunnel and connected to the
detector via km-long vacuum-insulated pipes - Argon is extracted from the standard process of
liquefaction from air - Air mixture is cooled down and cold gas-mixtures
are separated - Oxygen, Nitrogen, Argon,
- The Liquid Argon is used to fill the experiment.
Liquid Oxygen and Liquid Nitrogen can be sold
42Cryogenic parameters initial filling phase
Liquid Argon 1st filling time 2 years (assumed)
Liquid Argon 1st filling rate 1,2 liters/second or 150 tons/day
Argon gas equivalent 85000 m3/day
Air volume equivalent (Ar 1) 8500000 m3/day (205 m)3 /day
Ideal power of separation of Argon mixture 600kW (assuming for Argon 354 kJ/kg)
Assumed efficiency 5
Estimated power for Argon separation 12 MW
Ideal Argon liquefaction power 817kW (assuming for Argon 478 kJ/kg)
Assumed efficiency 5
Estimated Argon Liquefaction power 16 MW
Estimated total plant power 30 MW
Note initial cooling of tanker not included
43Ideal works for liquefaction and separation
Basic thermodynamics
R.F. Barron, Cryogenic Systems, 2nd edition 1985
(Oxford)
44Running phase (refrigeration)
- Filling the detector in two year has put a
stringent constraint on the amount of LAr
production rate needed - During running phase, the detector will have to
be refrigerated - This can be done in different ways, in
particular, one could use LN2 since it is a
priori cheaper than LAr - However, taking advantage of the requirement of a
local liquid argon factory, we think that it
would be much more advantageous to use Argon
itself to refrigerate the detector (aka keep
filling liquid Argon to replace what
evaporates) - It turns out that given the favorable area/volume
ratio of the tanker/detector, the constraints
from refrigeration are less than those from
filling even assuming realistic non-vacuum
insulated passive insulation ! - The local cryogenic plant will therefore
- Continue to produce liquid Argon, a fraction will
be needed for refrigeration, the surplus can be
sold - Sell other products of liquefaction of air (LN2,
)
45The dedicated cryogenic complex
Electricity
Air
Hot GAr
W
Underground complex
GAr
LAr
Q
External complex
Joule-Thompson expansion valve
Heat exchanger
Argon purification
LN2,
46Cryogenic parameters boiling
Dewar f 70 m, height 20 m, passive 3 m thick perlite insulated, assumed equivalent heat input 5 W/m2
Total area 12100 m2
Total heat input 60500 W
Liquid Argon evaporation rate 0.27 liters/second or 23000 liters/day
Fraction of total evaporation rate 0.03 of total argon volume per day
Time to totally empty tanker by evaporation 9 years (!)
- Notes
- Heat loss should be conservative for 3 meter
thick perlite and includes heat input from
supports, instrumentation (cables), etc.)
47Thermal conductivities gas-filled insulations
R.F. Barron, Cryogenic Systems, 2nd edition 1985
(Oxford)
Perlite 8.8 W/m for T80K
48Cryogenic parameters refilling (refrigeration)
- The dedicated cryogenic plant must hence produce
liquid argon to refill what has evaporated
Liquid Argon refilling rate 0.3 liters/second or 23000 liters/day
Argon gas equivalent 0.2 m3/s or 200 l/s
Ideal Argon liquefaction power 180kW (assuming for Argon 478 kJ/kg)
Assumed efficiency 5
Estimated Argon Liquefaction power 3.6 MW
Air volume equivalent (Ar 1) 20 m3/s or 20000 l/s
Ideal power of separation of Argon mixture 130kW (assuming for Argon 354 kJ/kg)
Assumed efficiency 5
Estimated power for Argon separation 2.6 MW
Estimated total power 6.2 MW
49LNG facts
- WHAT IS IT? When natural gas is cooled to a
temperature of approximately -160C at
atmospheric pressure it condenses to a liquid
called liquefied natural gas (LNG). One volume of
this liquid takes up about 1/600th the volume of
natural gas at a stove burner tip. When vaporized
it burns only in concentrations of 5 to 15 when
mixed with air. - COMPOSITION Natural gas is composed primarily of
methane (typically, at least 90), but may also
contain ethane, propane and heavier hydrocarbons.
- HOW IS IT STORED? LNG tanks are always of
double-wall construction with extremely efficient
insulation between the walls. Large tanks are low
aspect ratio (height to width) and cylindrical in
design with a domed roof. Storage pressures in
these tanks are very low, less than 5 psig. - HOW IS IT KEPT COLD? The insulation, as efficient
as it is, will not keep the temperature of LNG
cold by itself. LNG is stored as a "boiling
cryogen," that is, it is a very cold liquid at
its boiling point for the pressure it is being
stored. LNG will stay at near constant
temperature if kept at constant pressure. This
phenomenon is called "autorefrigeration". As long
as the steam (LNG vapor boil off) is allowed to
leave the tea kettle (tank), the temperature will
remain constant. - HAVE THERE BEEN ANY SERIOUS LNG ACCIDENTS? First,
one must remember that LNG is a form of energy
and must be respected as such. Today LNG is
transported and stored as safely as any other
liquid fuel. Before the storage of cryogenic
liquids was fully understood, however, there was
a serious incident involving LNG in Cleveland,
Ohio in 1944. This incident virtually stopped all
development of the LNG industry for 20years. The
race to the Moon led to a much better
understanding of cryogenics and cryogenic storage
with the expanded use of liquid hydrogen (-423F)
and liquid oxygen (-296F). LNG technology grew
from NASA's advancement.
50Cryogenic storage tanks for LNG
51Liquefaction of LNG and transport via ships
Liquefaction plant in Oman
e.g. Nigeria LNG (1010 m3/year)
Filled with LCH4
Up to 145,000m3
52(No Transcript)
53Technodyne International Limited Unit 16
Shakespeare Business Center Hathaway Close,
Eastleigh, Hampshire, SO50 4SR
54Contacts with Technodyne International Ltd
- Query for an Underground 70000 m3 Liquid Argon
tanker including design, safety and cost - Answer
- Dear Prof Rubbia, This is certainly an unusual
request. We have a great deal of experience in
cryogenic gases and their storage, including
gases around the same temperature as Argon. We
have not done an argon project but we can see
that our experience should transfer over without
too much difficulty (I am not sure that anyone
will have done anything like this on this
scale). To reply to your specific points, yes we
can offer expertise in large cryogenic storage
tanks, including the associated process issues
(which will be significant), safety matters, etc.
As far as costs are concerned, this is a
difficult one to answer right now - to do so, we
think a small feasibility type study might be
needed. We could do that for you, approximate
timescale say 6 weeks, costs IRO UK 12,000. We
have worked with CERN before, so we are, I think,
already "in the database" but I know you need to
jump through hoops to get work done. But let me
know if this is of interest or, indeed, if there
is anything more at this stage we can do for
you. Best regards John Thompson
55Physics Overview
56What we get for 100 ktons
- Number of targets for nucleon stability
- 6 ? 1034 nucleons ? tp /Br gt 1034 years ?
T(yr) ? e _at_ 90 C.L. - Low energy superbeams or beta-beams
- 460 nm CC per 1021 2.2 GeV protons (real focus)
_at_ L 130 km - 15000 ne CC per 1019 18Ne decays g75
- Atmospheric
- 10000 atm events / year
- 100 nt CC /year from oscillations
- Solar
- 324000 solar neutrinos / year _at_ Ee gt 5 MeV
- Supernova type-II
- 20000 events _at_ D10 kpc
Of course, MASS is not the whole story! ? We want
the factor MASS ? EFFICIENCY high and BACKGROUNDS
low!!!
57Proton decay searches
- The baryon number violation could be mediated
through very heavy particles. This would make
this process possible, but rare at low energy.
- Large variety of decay modes accessible
- ? study branching ratios free of systematics
- Background free searches for even for 10 years
running!!! - ? linear gain in sensitivity with exposure
- In case of negative results
- ? tp gt O (10 34-35 years) in 10 years of data
taking
58Proton decay Sensitivity vs exposure
p?Kn
1035
p?ep0
65 cm
1034
p ? K ?e
p425 MeV
1 year exposure !
Nuclear effects in signal fully embedded in
FLUKA nuclear model
59Neutrino physics potentials highlights
- Atmospheric neutrinos
- Observation free of experimental biases!
- Detection down to production thresholds
- Complete event final state reconstruction
- Measurement of all neutrino flavors in all modes
(CC NC) - Excellent resolution on L/E reconstruction
- A MONOLITH every 3 months
- Direct t appearance search
- Supernova neutrinos (see JCAP
09(2003)005) - Detect all neutrino flavors and CCNC
- Study q13 and mass hierarchy
- Study supernova physics
- Solar neutrinos
- Huge statistics, high precision measurements,
excellent energy resolution - Neutrinos from accelerators (superbeams, b-beams
or NF) - Precise measurement of Dm223, q23, q13
- Matter effects, sign of Dm223
- First observation of ne ? nt (unitarity of
mixing matrix) - CP violation
60Parameters
- Unless otherwise noted we assume in the following
61CP-phase effect at L130 km
??? N(??/2) N(?0)
Compares oscillation probabilities as a function
of E? measured with wrong-sign muon event
spectra, to MonteCarlo predictions of the
spectrum in absence of CP violation
b-beam
conventional
A cross-check !
62The physics program at the Superbeam
- One can study a high intensity conventional
superbeams taking advantage of the - (1) excellent energy resolution,
- (2) particle identification capabilities and
- (3) excellent imaging in particular for low
energy events (particle detectable down to 0
momentum) - Beam
- nm or nm (sign of beam selectable)
- Given baseline should be low energy (typ. 1-4
GeV) - Signal
- nm?ne or nm?ne
- Backgrounds
- Intrinsic contamination of the beam (ne/ nm typ.
0.5-1 ) - p0 misidentification
63Rejection p0 based on imaging
- Based on full simulation, digitization, noise and
automatic reconstruction of events - Algorithm cut for 90 eff. electrons
- Events with vertex conversion within 1cm (3
wires) of vertex R119 - Single/double mip R230 (preliminary)
Single photon rejection
Preliminary
cut
1 p0 (MC)
ltdE/dxgt MeV/cm
Imaging provides 2?10-3 efficiency for single p0
64Rejection p0 based on imaging
- p0 surviving dE/dx separation cut (total 31
events out of 1000 1GeV p0) - 21 events Compton scattering
- 5 events Asymmetric decays (partners have less
than 4 MeV) - 2 events positron annihilation immediately
- 1 event positron make immediate Bremsstrahlung
taking gt90 of energy - p0 rejection improves with energy 5 _at_ 0.25 GeV,
4 _at_ 0.5 GeV, 3 _at_ 1 GeV, 2 _at_ 2 GeV
Compton electron
Full simulationdigitizationnoise
- Further rejection by kinematical cuts (depends on
actual beam energy profile) - E.g. nn ? np0n precise mass reconstruction
? Reduce to negligible level
65Definitions for E L optimization
- In order to estimate sensitivity to CP-violation
phase, we define three quantities based on the
integrated number of events and
??? N(??/2) N(?0)
backgroundintrinsic ne
oscillated
3
66Energy integrated rates conventional beam
p focusing
p- focusing
L730 km
L130 km
intrinsic ne
intrinsic nm
oscillated
67Results conventional beam
Real focusing (see New J.Phys.488,2002) All
rates normalized to 100 kton
L730 km
L130 km
The rules Merit pot ? Eproton and optimal L
hold
682.2 GeV protons
20 GeV protons
L120 km
L730 km
69The physics program at the b-beam
- One can study beta-beams taking advantage of the
- (1) excellent energy resolution,
- (2) particle identification capabilities
- (3) excellent imaging in particular for low
energy events (particle detectable down to 0
momentum) - (4) separation pions from muons (Cerenkov light)
- Beam
- ne or ne (ion selectable)
- Acceleration ion gives a relatively low energy
(typ. g100-250) - Signal
- ne ?nm or ne ?nm
- Backgrounds
- Beam is pure!
- m misidentification (in particular, NC with pion
production is dangerous background) - Since we want the maximum of the oscillation to
lie above muon production threshold for
appearance, there is a minimum baseline !
70Beta beam charged pion background rejection
Signal
µ
Use combination of charge imaging (?(dE/dx)dx
Tkin) Cerenkov light readout (b)
Background
p
? Reduce to negligible level
W/o Cerenkov optimize neutrino energy to
suppress pion production at the cost of
oscillated event rate (proportional to g)
71Beta beam charged pion background rejection
- Momentum cut
- Range
- Many pions interact
- Particle stops
- Cerenkov based rejection
- Kinetic energy is measured from deposited charge
- Velocity is measured from Cerenkov photon
counting - The two can be combined to discriminate pions
from muons
72Definitions for E L optimization
- In order to estimate sensitivity to CP-violation
phase, we define three quantities based on the
integrated number of events and
??? N(??/2) N(?0)
oscillated
Backgroundpions from NC
1
73Energy integrated rates b-beam
L130 km
L400 km
W/o Cerenkov
With Cerenkov
74Baselineenergy optimization b-beam
Ion decays needed to achieve 3s of Dd
L130 km
L400 km
L130 km
W/o syst.
With 1 syst.
75Sensitivity to CP-violation example
18Ne g75 L130 km 10 years _at_ 2x1018 ions/yr
1 systematic
Complete coverage of CP space!
76Conclusion
- The liquid Argon TPC technology has recently
regained a strong interest in the community,
after the - Successful assembly and operation of the ICARUS
T600 that demonstrated that the LAr TPC
Technology is mature - The realization of the enormous physics potential
offered by high granularity imaging and extremely
high resolution - The physics potentials of a 100 kton LAr detector
competes favorably with that of a megaton water
Cerenkov detector - Neutrino physics (e.g. CP) ultimate
no-background proton decay - The design of a single-tanker 100 kton liquid
Argon detector will be pursued, taking advantages
of possible advances in the LAr TPC technology - Bi-phase operation with charge amplification for
long drift distances - ImagingScintillationCerenkov readout for
improved physics performance - Giant boiling cryostat (LNG technology)
- Giant LNG tankers known to exist on surface
- Underground LNG tankers??? Do not know if they
exist - First cost estimate should be known (Technodyne,
Q1 2004) - Including the digging of the cavern, it might
well be that the 100 kton liquid Argon detector
would be more cost advantageous than the 1MT H2O
77Soyons optimistes
- If you like it, we might have found a name for it
GLACIER Giant Liquid Argon Cerenkov charge
Imaging ExpeRiment