Abstract
The Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors (MAPS) have been promisingly demonstrated as a core part of tracking detectors used in many experiments. In order to obtain decent particle tracks generated after high-energy particle collision, it is especially important that the detector must consist of high-performance MAPS. A pixel sensor telescope is a tool employed to investigate the properties of MAPS using high-energy particle test beams. At the Synchrotron Light Research Institute (SLRI), the pixel sensor telescope assembled with five layers of 50-µm thick pixel sensors has been commissioned and tested both in the laboratory with a radioactive source and by a high-energy electron test beam produced at the SLRI Beam Test Facility. With sensor signal threshold ranging from 9.73 to 10.15 DAC and noises between 0.62 and 0.87 DAC, each plane of the pixel sensor telescope can detect particles decaying from the radioactive source. Moreover, the test beam profiles have been measured to be 4.00 - 4.56 mm and 1.15 - 2.29 mm in horizontal and vertical axes, respectively. Correlations between each plane have been observed and confirm the proper operation of the pixel sensor telescope. Consequently, the pixel sensor telescope can be used to characterize the pixel sensor prototype.
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