Hermetic detector

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A currently-operating hermetic detector, the Collider Detector at Fermilab.
A currently-operating hermetic detector, the Collider Detector at Fermilab.

In particle physics, a hermetic detector (also called a 4π detector) is a particle detector designed to observe all possible decay products of an interaction between subatomic particles in a collider by covering as large an area around the interaction point as possible and incorporating multiple types of sub-detectors. They are typically roughly cyllindrical, with different types of detectors wrapped around each other; each detector type specializes in particular particles so that almost any particle will be detected and identified. Such detectors are called "hermetic" because they are designed to let as few particles as possible escape; the name "4π detector" comes from the fact that such detectors are designed to cover nearly all of the 4π steradians of solid angle around the interaction point.

The first such detector was the Mark I at the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center, and the basic design has been used for all subsequent collider detectors. Prior to the building of the Mark I, it was thought that most particle decay products would have relatively low transverse momentum (i.e. momentum perpendicular to the beamline), so that detectors could cover this area only. However, it was learned at the Mark I and subsequent experiments that most fundamental particle interactions at colliders involve very large exchanges of energy and therefore large transverse momenta are not uncommon; for this reason, large angular coverage is critical for modern particle physics.

Contents

[edit] Components

A schematic of the basic components of a hermetic detector; I.P. refers to the region containing the interaction point for the colliding particles.  This is a cross section of the typical cyllindrical design.
A schematic of the basic components of a hermetic detector; I.P. refers to the region containing the interaction point for the colliding particles. This is a cross section of the typical cyllindrical design.

There are three main components of a hermetic detector. From the inside out, the first is a tracker, which measures the momentum of charged particles as they curve in a magnetic field. Next there are one or more calorimeters, which measure the energy of most charged and neutral particles by absorbing them in dense material, and a muon system which measures the one type of particle that is not stopped through the calorimeters and can still be detected. Each component may have several different specialized sub-components.

[edit] Trackers

The tracking system plots the helix traced by a charged particle that curves in a magnetic field by localizing it in space in finely-segmented layers of detecting material, usually silicon. The degree to which the particle curves is inversely proportional to its momentum perpendicular to the beam, while the degree to which it drifts in the direction of the beam axis gives its momentum in that direction.

[edit] Calorimeters

Calorimeters slow particles down and absorb their energy into a material, allowing that energy to be measured. They are often divided into two types: the electromagnetic calorimeter that specializes in absorbing particles that interact electromagnetically, and the hadronic calorimeter that can detect hadrons, which interact via the strong nuclear force. A hadronic detector is required in particular to detect heavy neutral particles.

[edit] Muon system

Of all the known stable particles, only muons and neutrinos pass through the calorimeter without losing most or all of their energy. Neutrinos are undetectable, and their existence must be inferred, but muons (which are charged) can be measured by an additional tracking system outside the calorimeters.

[edit] Particle identification

Most particles have unique combinations of signals left in each detector sub-system, allowing different particles to be identified. For example, an electron is charged and interacts electromagnetically, so it is tracked by the tracker and then deposits all of its energy in the (electromagnetic) calorimeter. By contrast, a photon is neutral and interacts electromagnetically, so it deposits its energy in the calorimeter without leaving a track.

[edit] See also