Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8179682 | Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A: Accelerators, Spectrometers, Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2013 | 4 Pages |
Abstract
The Mu2e experiment at Fermilab aims to measure the charged lepton flavor violating neutrinoless conversion of a negative muon into an electron. The conversion results in a monochromatic electron with an energy slightly below the rest mass of the muon (104.97 MeV). We expect to set a limit of â¼ 6Ã10 â17 at 90% CL in three years of running, using an intense and clean pulsed μâ beam providing â¼ 10 18 stopped muons on target in three years of running. The experiment performs a strong suppression of potential background by gating off the prompts and performing precise momentum determination in conjunction with an highly efficient cosmic veto. The calorimeter should confirm that the candidates reconstructed by the tracker system are indeed conversion electrons and provide an independent trigger (or event reduction filter) for the experiment. It should also provide standalone muon to electron rejection. Moreover, it must be able to keep functionality in a high radiation dose environment inside a 10 â4torr vacuum enclosure and in a presence of 1 T axial magnetic field. In order to accomplish all these tasks, a LYSO crystals calorimeter has been chosen. We show the proposed design and the experimental results obtained by exposing a small size calorimeter prototype to a tagged photon beam from 40 to 300 MeV at the A2 photon facility of the Mainz Microton (MAMI), Germany.
Keywords
Related Topics
Physical Sciences and Engineering
Physics and Astronomy
Instrumentation
Authors
J. Budagov, R. Carosi, F. Cervelli, C. Cheng, M. Cordelli, Yu. Davydov, E.J. Downie, B. Echenard, S. Giovannella, V. Glagolev, F. Happacher, D. Hitlin, A. Lucà , S. Miscetti, P. Ongmonkolkul, G. Onorato, P. Otte, G. Pezzullo, A. Thomas,