Title: Status of the MEG m?eg Experiment at PSI
1Status of the MEG m?eg Experiment at PSI
W. MolzonUniversity of California, Irvine August
28, 2006 NuFact 2006
- Goals of the experiment
- Overview of technique
- Status of detector and software
- Schedule
2The MEG Collaboration
University of Tokyo Y. Hisamatsu, T. Iwamoto,
T. Mashimo, S. Mihara, T. Mori, Y. Morita, H.
Natori, H. Nishiguchi, Y. Nishimura, W. Ootani,
K. Ozone, R. Sawada, Y. Uchiyama, S.
Yamashita KEK T. Haruyama, K. Kasami, A. Maki,
Y. Makida, A. Yamamoto, K. Yoshimura Waseda
University K. Deguchi, T. Doke, J. Kikuchi, S.
Suzuki, K. Terasawa INFN, Pisa A. Baldini, C.
Bemporad, F. Cei, L.del Frate, L. Galli, G.
Gallucci, M. Grassi, F. Morsani, D. Nicolò, A.
Papa, R. Pazzi, F. Raffaelli, F. Sergiampietri,
G. Signorelli INFN and University of Genova S.
Cuneo, D. Bondi, S. Dussoni, F. Gatti, S.
Minutoli, P. Musico, P. Ottonello, R. Valle INFN
and University of Pavia O.Barnaba, G. Boca, P.
W. Cattaneo, G. Cecchet, A. De Bari, P. Liguori,
G. Musitelli, R. Nardò, M. Rossella,
A.Vicini INFN and University of Roma I A.
Barchiesi, D. Zanello INFN and University of
Lecce M. Panareo Paul Scherrer Institute J.
Egger, M. Hildebrandt, P.-R. Kettle, S. Ritt, M.
Schneebeli BINP, Novosibirsk L. M. Barkov, A.
A. Grebenuk, D. N. Grigoriev, B. I. Khazin, N.
M. Ryskulov JINR, Dubna A. Korenchenko, N.
Kravchuk, A. Moiseenko, D. Mzavia University of
California, Irvine P. Huwe, W. Molzon, H.
Topchyan, V. Tumakov, F. Xiao, S. Yamada
3Principal Features of m ? eg Experiment
- Stop m in thin target
- Measure energies of e (Ee) and g (Eg)
- Measure angle between e and g (??)
- Measure time between e and g (?t)
Kinematics
qeg 180
g
e
m
Ee 52.8 MeV
Eg 52.8 MeV
4Experimental Requirements
- Muon beam with stopping rate times acceptance of
order 106-7 - Acceptance limited by photon coverage (cost for
calorimetric detectors, conversion probability
for measuring photons by converting to ee-) - Rate limited by accidental backgrounds or
instrumental effects at high rates - Thin stopping target needed for limiting
annihilation in flight, scattering in target - Typically surface muon beam used pm peaked near
29 MeV - Detectors capable of measuring Eg, Ee, Dt, Dq to
sufficient precision without long tails in
resolution function - Photon energy, time, position with single large
liquid xenon calorimeter - High, uniform light yield energy resolution
1.5 sRMS at 53 MeV - Good timing tdecay 45 ns
- Good position resolution 4 mm
- Large contiguous volume care needed in pileup
- Positron momentum, angle from magnetic
spectrometer - Resolution dominated by multiple scattering
premium on low mass 0.4 sRMS - Geometry optimized for resolution, rate, trigger
considerations - Positron time from scintillation counters
- High light yield, fast, thick scintillators 45
ps sRMS - Correction of time to that at vertex requires
care (energy loss, scattering)
m
5The MEG Experiment
6Complete GEANT3 Description of Detector
7(No Transcript)
8MEG at the Paul Scherrer Institut
- Approved at Paul Scherrer Institut, Switzerland
in 1999 - Start physics run in 2007
- Initial goal of 10-13, eventually 10-14
9PSI Proton Cyclotron
590 MeV gt 1.8mA gt 150days/year CW Beam
10Beamline Status
- All elements installed
- Commissioning begun
- Some minor problems with alignment
- Yield slightly low with non-standard
targetexpected stop rate 108, required 4x107 - Beam profile as expected
11COBRA Magnet
- COBRA magnet is built and run to full field
- Mapping completed small asymmetries being
studied - Initial problems with quench detection system
fixed
Signal radius independent of angle
Sweep out Michel positrons
12Stopping Target
- Optimized to stop m beam with high efficiency,
minimize backgrounds - Low Z material to reduce positron scattering
exiting target - Thin target with well-measured position to enable
decay position to be measured to high precision
from positron trajectory intercept at target - Photon direction from position in LXe
calorimeter, vertex position - Positron direction from measured trajectory
extrapolated to target position - Target position known to 0.5 mm
- Required to remotely move target to allow
insertion of auxiliary targets for calibration
schemes. - Implementation with 150-175 mm polyethylene film
on Rohacell frame - In situ alignment from data by imaging small
holes in target with Michel decays
13The MEG Detector
COBRA Magnet
Timing Counter
Compensation Coil
Drift Chamber
Liquid Xenon Calorimeter
Surface Muon Beam
14Drift Chamber
- Conventional drift chamber (wires,cathode foils,
field wires) - Resolution dominated by scattering with 300 mm
drift resolution - Axial coordinate from charge division, vernier
pads on foils - Thin foils enclose gas and make cathode ? precise
pressure control - Sophisticated, low mass carbon fiber frames to
reduce interactions - Helium based gas for reduced multiple scattering
- Precise pressure control to maintain
anode-cathode spacing - Readout with 500 MHz waveform digitizer
15Drift Chamber Analysis
- Momentum determination using Kalman filter
- Currently without front-end of analysis
(time-to-distance, pattern recognition)
Resolution for decay point photon direction sRMS
0.1 cm(other effects more important)
Momentum resolutionDepends on turn topolgy sRMS
0.25 for multi-turn
Angular resolution for dfegsRMS 9.4 mrad
16Timing Counters
- Provide time of electron with a precision below
100 ps - Need precise position information for propagation
delay correction (30ps 1 cm) - Requires large signal for good timing resolution
- Implementation
- Large (4x4 cm2) bars in axial direction to give
large signal - Read out with magnetic-field-insensitive
phototubes - Axial coordinate given by 5x5 mm2 scintillating
fibers with APD readout
17Timing Counter Status
Completed f-measuring module
Z-measuring optical fibers
Tracking contribution to timing error sRMS 35
ps, tails from scattering, E-loss
Intrinsic resolution from test beam sRMS 30 ps
18LXe Scintillation g-ray Detector
- 800 liter Liquid Xenon scintillator
- high light yield 75 NaI(Tl)
- fast response 45ns decay time
- good uniformity
- 850 f2 PMTs
- Facing inwards like Super-Kamiokande
- Directly immersed in LXe
- RD with prototype
- Performance
- LXe purification
- Operation _at_ 165K
g
- Prototype tested using laser back-scattered beam,
neutral pions from p- capture at rest - 70 l cubical volume, 228 phototubes
19CEX p0 Beam Test _at_ PSI
- Monochromatic g
- 55 83 MeVp- (at rest) p ? p0 np0 (28MeV)
? g g (back-to-back, 54.9 MeV lt Eg lt 82.9MeV) - 129 MeVp- p ? n g
- Neutron response
Energy (MeV)
sRMS 1.5
55
Opening angle (deg)
20Expected Calorimeter Performance
- Tied to large prototype performance tests
- Simulation of performance with GEANT and analysis
algorithms under development - Current status of one such algorithm energy
from weighted sum of photube signals corrected
for converstion depth sRMS1.2
21Calibration and Monitoring Techniques
- Variety of techniques planned for continuous
monitoring of calorimeter performance - Permanently installed alpha sources (few MeV) for
gain, quantum efficiency monitor - Photons from neutral pions from p- capture at
rest sets absolute energy scale - Liquid hydrogen target installed periodically but
infrequently - Beam retuned for negative pions
- Second photon detected with movable NaI detector
opposite LXe cryostat - Photons from pLi ? Be g
- Resonant at Ep 440 keV
- Narrow photon line at 17.6 MeV
- Use Cockroft-Walton accelerator operated in situ
- Allows daily monitor of resolution, gain
22DAQ / Waveform Analysis
- Data acquisition based on waveform digitizer no
ADC, TDC - 4 GHz maximum sampling rate (2 GHz for LXe,
timing counters) 0.5 GHz for drift chambers - 12 bit ADC
- 3000 channels
- 32 channels on VME board
23Pileup Rejection with Waveform Analysis
Peak finding
Differentiation
- Additional techniques for close overlaps
- Waveform fitting (chi-square)
- Combination of spatial and temporal fitting
24Expected Background Sensitivity
- Expected detector resolution
- DEe 0.8 (FWHM)
- DEg 4.5 (FWHM)
- Dqeg 18mrad (FWHM)
- Dteg 141ps (FWHM)
- Expected BKG rate _at_ initial phase
- Accidental background below 10-13
- Radiative m decay down to lt10-14
- Single event sensitivity
- B(m?eg) 10-13
- Eventually down to 10-14 with improved PMTs, etc.
25Schedule
26Summary
- MEG experiment is well into construction phase
- Beam line installed, commissioning going well, to
be completed in autumn - Detector systems construction advancing well
- half drift chamber and full timing counters
ready for autumn engineering run - Liquid xenon calorimeter delayed by cryostat
production in industry, scheduled for
installation and commissioning by end of year - Engineering run during autumn, further tests and
commissioning during beam-off period
January-March - Anticipate fast startup with data taking in April
2007 - Increasing effort now going into developing
analysis software - Algorithms for low-level analysis each of
detector systems being developed - High level analysis (e.g. pileup rejection,
timing corrections, etc.) begun - Goal is to be able to analyze data soon after
collection - Anticipate single event sensitivity around 10-13
with two year run, a significant result (e.g.
with respect to MEGA limit of 1.2x10-11) on
shorter timescale
27