10–14 Feb 2020
Rome
Europe/Rome timezone
We are waiting to see you in Rome!

Studies of gas gaps current density in the ATLAS RPC detector during 2018 data taking at Large Hadron Collider

10 Feb 2020, 14:40
20m
Aula Magna "P.Gismondi" (Rome)

Aula Magna "P.Gismondi"

Rome

Via Della Ricerca Scientifica 1, 00133, Roma
Oral Contribution Large systems and Upgrades

Speaker

Dimitrii Krasnopevtsev (ATLAS Collaboration)

Description

The ATLAS Resistive Plate Chamber (RPC) detector is a tracking trigger, used to primarily select high momentum muons in the ATLAS barrel region (|\eta|<1.05) at the 40 MHz collision rate, and to provide muons azimuthal coordinates. The RPC system consists of about 3700 gas volumes covering a sensitive surface of about 4000 m^2. It is arranged in three concentric double layers distributed on a radial distance of about 5m and operating at approximately 0.5 Tesla toroidal magnetic field. RPCs provide 6 points along the muon track with a space-time resolution of about 1cm^2 x 1ns. This work studies systematically gas gaps current as a function of the electric field applied on the gas, and environmental parameters both without/with the LHC beam induced background and up to an instantaneous luminosity L_inst =2x10^34 cm^-2 s^-1 (twice larger the design LHC luminosity). These measurements have been used to study the RPC working condition and to extrapolate the detector response to High Luminosity LHC regime with L_inst=7.5x10^34 cm^-2 s^-1.

Primary author

Dimitrii Krasnopevtsev (ATLAS Collaboration)

Presentation materials