12–15 Nov 2024
Palazzo Hercolani
Europe/Rome timezone

Time resolution studies for the future LHCb Electromagnetic Calorimeter

13 Nov 2024, 17:00
13m
Aula Poeti (Palazzo Hercolani)

Aula Poeti

Palazzo Hercolani

Strada Maggiore 45

Speaker

Alberto Bellavista (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare)

Description

During Runs 5 and 6, the LHCb experiment at CERN will operate at a luminosity up to $1.5 \times 10^{34}$ cm$^{-2}$s$^{-1}$, requiring substantial upgrades to its Electromagnetic Calorimeter (ECAL) to handle high radiation doses and achieve time resolutions of few tens of picoseconds mitigating pile-up effects.

The detector under development is a Spaghetti Calorimeter (SpaCal) composed of scintillating fibres (polystyrene or garnet crystals) in a dense absorber (lead or tungsten). Ongoing investigations are focused on the photodetectors (PMTs) selection and their impact on the overall timing performance.

Simulation studies of a lead-polystyrene module show that fast PMTs result in worse time resolutions due to the longitudinal showers' fluctuations, which introduce a bias in the time stamps defined by the Constant Fraction Discriminator (CFD) algorithm. A correction procedure has been developed to remove such bias, improving the time resolution by few tens of picoseconds. Additionally, a correlation between signal rise time and shower depth has been observed.

Data from a test beam campaign conducted at the CERN SPS in June 2024 have been analysed to measure the timing resolution of two tungsten-polystyrene SpaCal prototypes, comparing four PMT models and two fibre types. By exploiting a rise-time-based correction procedure, time resolutions below 20 ps at high energies have been reached, with the fastest PMTs undergoing larger corrections, as expected from simulations.

Primary author

Alberto Bellavista (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare)

Presentation materials