Abstract

CERN@school brings technology from CERN into the classroom to aid with the teaching of particle physics. It also aims to inspire the next generation of physicists and engineers by giving participants the opportunity to be part of a national collaboration of students, teachers and academics, analysing data obtained from detectors based on the ground and in space to make new, curiosity-driven discoveries at school. CERN@school is based around the Timepix hybrid silicon pixel detector developed by the Medipix 2 Collaboration, which features a 300 μm thick silicon sensor bump-bonded to a Timepix readout ASIC. This defines a 256-by-256 grid of pixels with a pitch of 55 μm, the data from which can be used to visualise ionising radiation in a very accessible way. Broadly speaking, CERN@school consists of a web portal that allows access to data collected by the Langton Ultimate Cosmic ray Intensity Detector (LUCID) experiment in space and the student-operated Timepix detectors on the ground; a number of Timepix detector kits for ground-based experiments, to be made available to schools for both teaching and research purposes; and educational resources for teachers to use with LUCID data and detector kits in the classroom. By providing access to cutting-edge research equipment, raw data from ground and space-based experiments, CERN@school hopes to provide the foundation for a programme that meets the many of the aims and objectives of CERN and the project's supporting academic and industrial partners. The work presented here provides an update on the status of the programme as supported by the UK Science and Technology Facilities Council (STFC) and the Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851. This includes recent results from work with the GridPP Collaboration on using grid resources with schools to run GEANT4 simulations of CERN@school experiments.

Highlights

  • IntroductionCERN@school was conceived when students from the Simon Langton Grammar School for Boys visited the Medipix laboratories at CERN in 2007

  • Submitted a proposal for the Langton Ultimate Cosmic ray Intensity Detector (LUCID) experiment to a satellite competition for schools run by the British National Space Centre1 and Surrey Satellite Technology Limited (SSTL)

  • Research programme, based on data obtained from Timepix detectors in schools and in space; the educational resources and activities associated with CERN@school, and; the role played by the GridPP Collaboration with respect to computing and data storage on the grid

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Summary

Introduction

CERN@school was conceived when students from the Simon Langton Grammar School for Boys visited the Medipix laboratories at CERN in 2007. Students from the Langton Star Centre, the research facility attached to the school and directed by B. Submitted a proposal for the Langton Ultimate Cosmic ray Intensity Detector (LUCID) experiment to a satellite competition for schools run by the British National Space Centre and Surrey Satellite Technology Limited (SSTL). In 2013, the Royal Commission for the Exhibition of 1851 Special Award was made to support the role of Schools Research Champion for the national network of detectors and LUCID. The philosophy that drives CERN@school is based on that of the Langton Star Centre, which consists of a group of laboratories, offices and meeting spaces at the Simon Langton Grammar School for Boys in Canterbury, Kent. Allowing participating students and teachers to join a wider community of scientific and industrial partners as part of the CERN@school Collaboration;. Providing dedicated technical, project management and evaluation support for the CERN@school programme (as opposed to relying on the free time and goodwill of academic partners)

Overview of the proceedings
The detector network
The LUCID experiment
Demonstration experiments
Data management with the DAQMAP
Research in schools
The role of GridPP
Simulating the LUCID experiment
Summary and conclusions
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