Performance of the ATLAS forward proton Time-of-Flight detector in Run 2
Metadatos
Mostrar el registro completo del ítemAutor
Abed Abud, A.; García Gámez, Diego; Nicolás Arnaldos, Francisco Javier; Sánchez Lucas, Patricia; Zamorano García, Bruno; DUNE CollaborationEditorial
IOPScience
Materia
Neutrino detectors Noble liquid detectors (scintillation, ionization, double-phase) Photon detectors for UV, visible and IR photons (solid-state) (PIN diodes, APDs, Si-PMTs, G-APDs, CCDs, EBCCDs, EMCCDs, CMOS imagers, etc)
Fecha
2024-04-21Referencia bibliográfica
A. Abed Abud, DUNE Collaboration et al. 2024. JINST 19 P08005. DOI: 10.1088/1748-0221/19/08/P08005
Patrocinador
CERN; CERN EP, BE, TE, EN; IT Departments for NP04/ProtoDUNE-SP; LLC (FRA) DE-AC02-07CH11359; CNPq, FAPERJ, FAPEG and FAPESP, Brazil; CFI, IPP and NSERC, Canada; MŠMT, Czech Republic; ERDF; H2020-EU; MSCA, European Union; CNRS/IN2P3 and CEA, France; INFN, Italy; FCT, Portugal; NRF, South Korea; CAM, Fundación “La Caixa”; Junta de Andalucía-FEDER; MICINN; Xunta de Galicia, Spain; SERI and SNSF, Switzerland; TÜBİTAK, Turkey; The Royal Society and UKRI/STFC, United Kingdom; DOE and NSF, United States of AmericaResumen
Doping of liquid argon TPCs (LArTPCs) with a small concentration of xenon is a technique for light-shifting and facilitates the detection of the liquid argon scintillation light. In this paper, we present the results of the first doping test ever performed in a kiloton-scale LArTPC. From February to May 2020, we carried out this special run in the single-phase DUNE Far Detector prototype (ProtoDUNE-SP) at CERN, featuring 720 t of total liquid argon mass with 410 t of fiducial mass. A 5.4 ppm nitrogen contamination was present during the xenon doping campaign. The goal of the run was to measure the light and charge response of the detector to the addition of xenon, up to a concentration of 18.8 ppm. The main purpose was to test the possibility for reduction of non-uniformities in light collection, caused by deployment of photon detectors only within the anode planes. Light collection was analysed as a function of the xenon concentration, by using the pre-existing photon detection system (PDS) of ProtoDUNE-SP and an additional smaller set-up installed specifically for this run. In this paper we first summarize our current understanding of the argon-xenon energy transfer process and the impact of the presence of nitrogen in argon with and without xenon dopant. We then describe the key elements of ProtoDUNE-SP and the injection method deployed. Two dedicated photon detectors were able to collect the light produced by xenon and the total light. The ratio of these components was measured to be about 0.65 as 18.8 ppm of xenon were injected. We performed studies of the collection efficiency as a function of the distance between tracks and light detectors, demonstrating enhanced uniformity of response for the anode-mounted PDS. We also show that xenon doping can substantially recover light losses due to contamination of the liquid argon by nitrogen.