Abstract
The next-generation nuclear physics facility in the United States will be the Electron-Ion Collider (EIC), scheduled to be built at Brookhaven National Laboratory (BNL). Excellent particle identification (PID) is one of the key requirements for the EIC central detector called ePIC. Identification of the hadrons in the final state is critical to study how different quark flavors contribute to nucleon properties. A detector using the Detection of Internally Reflected Cherenkov light (DIRC) principle, with a radial size of only 7-8 cm, was chosen as the PID system for the ePIC barrel region. Within the framework of the EIC R&D programs, the development of a high-performance DIRC (hpDIRC) detector was undertaken with the aim of significantly advancing state-of-the-art performance. Key components of the hpDIRC detector are a 3-layer compound lens and small pixel-size photo sensors. Currently, the hpDIRC R&D program is focused on developing and validating the radiation hard 3-layer lens, quality assurance of the BaBar DIRC radiation bars, and the early stage of the hpDIRC prototype program with Cosmic Ray Telescope at Stony Brook University, in preparation for beam tests at Fermilab in 2024.
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