Abstract

Large size resistive micromegas detectors (MM) will be employed for the first time in high-energy physics experiments for the Muon Spectrometer upgrade of the ATLAS experiment at CERN. The current innermost stations of the muon endcap system, the Small Wheel, will be upgraded in 2019 to retain the good precision tracking and trigger capabilities in the high background environment expected with the upcoming luminosity increase of the LHC. Along with the small-strip Thin Gap Chambers (sTGC) the ``New Small Wheel'' will be equipped with eight layers of MM detectors arranged in multilayers of two quadruplets, for a total of about 1200 m$^2$ detection planes. All quadruplets have trapezoidal shapes with surface areas between 2 and 3 m$^2$. The MM system will provide both trigger and tracking capabilities. In order to achieve a 15\% transverse momentum resolution for 1 TeV muons, a challenging mechanical precision is required in the construction for each plane of the assembled modules, with an alignment of the readout elements (the strips) at the level of 30 $\mu$m along the precision coordinate and 80 $\mu$m perpendicular to the plane. Each MM plane must achieve a spatial resolution better than 100 $\mu$m independent of the track incidence angle and operate in an inhomogeneous magnetic field (B < 0.3 T), with a rate capability up to ~15 kHz/cm$^2$. In May 2016 the first full size prototype (module-0) has been completed and tested at CERN with high momentum pion beam. The Module-0 construction elements and procedures, and the preliminary results obtained at the test-beam will be presented.

Highlights

  • The New Small Wheel (NSW) [1] is one of the the main upgrades of the ATLAS experiment [2] that will be installed during the Long Shutdown in the years 2019/20 (LS2)

  • The NSW upgrade is designed to cope with the high background rate that is expected at luminosities between 2 and 7×1034cm−2s−1, during LHC Run-3 and for operation at High–Luminosity–LHC, where background rates as high as ∼ 15 kHz/cm2 can be reached in the most forward region

  • In order to achieve the ultimate momentum resolution, a challenging mechanical precision is required in the construction for each plane of the assembled modules, with an alignment of the readout elements at the level of 30 μm along the precision coordinate and 80 μm perpendicular to the plane

Read more

Summary

The ATLAS Muon New Small Wheel Upgrade

The New Small Wheel (NSW) [1] is one of the the main upgrades of the ATLAS experiment [2] that will be installed during the Long Shutdown in the years 2019/20 (LS2). It will replace the present Small Wheel in the endcap region of the Muon Spectrometer, presently equipped with detectors that were not designed to exceed LHC original design luminosity. In order to achieve the ultimate momentum resolution, a challenging mechanical precision is required in the construction for each plane of the assembled modules, with an alignment of the readout elements (the strips) at the level of 30 μm along the precision coordinate and 80 μm perpendicular to the plane

Detector Technologies and the New Small Wheel Layout
Micromegas Components and Construction of the SM1 Modules-0 Prototypes
Test-Beam Results
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call