Abstract

ECAL0 is a new electromagnetic calorimeter designed for studying generalized parton distributions at the COMPASS II experiment at CERN. It will be located next to the target and will cover larger photon angles (up to 30 degrees). It is a modular high-granularity Shashlyk device with total number of individual channels of approx. 1700 and readout based on wavelength shifting fibers and micropixel avalanche photodiodes. Characterization of the calorimeter includes tests of particular sub-components, tests of complete modules and module arrays, as well as a pilot run of a fully-functional, quarter-size prototype in the COMPASS experiment. The main goals of the tests on low-intensity electron beam at the ELSA accelerator in Bonn were: to provide energy calibration using electrons, to measure angular response of the calorimeter and to perform an energy scan to cross-check previously collected data. A dedicated measurement setup was prepared for the tests, including a 3x3 array of the ECAL0 modules, a scintillating-fibre hodoscope and a remotely-controlled motorized movable platform. The measurements were performed using three electron energies: 3.2 GeV, 1.6 GeV and 0.8 GeV. They include a calibration of the whole detector array with a straight beam and multiple angular scans.

Highlights

  • ECAL0 is a new electromagnetic calorimeter designed for studying generalized parton distributions at the COMPASS II experiment at CERN

  • ECAL0 at COMPASS II ECAL0 is a new electromagnetic calorimeter to be built for COMPASS II experiment at CERN for Generalized Parton Distribution (GPD) study

  • It was confirmed that a low-intensity electron beam for detector testing can be smoothly provided by ELSA

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Summary

Introduction

ECAL0 is a new electromagnetic calorimeter designed for studying generalized parton distributions at the COMPASS II experiment at CERN. The measurements were performed using three electron energies: 3.2 GeV, 1.6 GeV and 0.8 GeV They include a calibration of the whole detector array with a straight beam and multiple angular scans. It’s going to be mounted as one of the most upstream detectors, right next to the fixed target and before SM1 magnet (see figure 1) It will cover particle angles from 5 to 30 degrees and energy range from 0.2 up to 30 GeV. Colorimeter module A single detector module consists of two main parts: calorimeter part and readout assembly (figures 3, 4, 5) They are detachable for service and for transportation

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