This thesis is about the work done during my PhD at the Univerità degli studi di Milano-Bicocca. During these three years I was involved in the RICH group of the LHCb experiment. LHCb is one of the four main experiments at CERN. It uses proton-proton collisions to study CP violation and to search for new physics beyond the Standard Model in the b decays. One of the main feature of the experiment is the particle identification, performed with the Ring Imaging Cherenkov (RICH) technology. The RICH detects Cherenkov rings via photons emitted by charged particles traversing radiator materials. The photon detection system used consists of pixel Hybrid Photon Detectors (HPDs). They convert photons into photoelectrons which are then accelerated by means of a field generated by three electrodes, biased with high voltages onto the silicon pixel anode. My work can be divided in two main parts: the hardware and the data analysis. The hardware activity is focused on the High Voltage (HV) supply and distribution systems. I optimized the voltage measurement system reducing the systematics determining improvement in the voltage resolution. The strong requirement of a good stability implies a continuous monitoring and analysis of the commissioning data. The HV supply system is placed about 40 m from the experiment and voltages must remain stable until they reach the HPDs. The study of the noise evolution and the discovery of its cause determined the substitution of a component inside the supply modules. The company after this evaluation decided to replace a component with a new material in all the new HV modules produced. All the analysis contributed largely to the stability of the RICH system for all the operations of data taking. For future operations, LHCb aims at collecting data at a LHC luminosity of 10^33 cm^(-2)s^(-1), to improve the statistics of the main rare channels studied. For the RICH, this implies a new readout system. The Milano group decided to design a new front-end electronics system and is studying the performance of commercial Multi anode Photo Multiplier (MaPMT) produced by Hamamatsu. I participated to the test of the H9500 tube. We obtained a complete characterization of this tube with respect to the single photon electron response. The main issues were to study noise and cross-talk effects. The tests done in Milano confirmed the cross-talk percentage at the level of 10% with an amplitude of the order of 30% due to the loss of photoelectrons in the first stages of the multiplication chain. All these tests concluded that this MaPMT can be a good candidate for the upgrade, but other photodetectors are under test. In the second part of my work I analyzed the first data taken by LHCb with proton-proton collisions at sqrt(s)=7 TeV. I used the minimum bias sample collected with a very loose trigger in the very first part of 2010. Minimum bias events are important for understanding the detector and its response. The analysis concerned a first study of the track distributions in the detector, followed by the study of a possible detector charge asymmetry. Data were compared with Monte-Carlo simulations, which describe data satisfactory. This study was done to obtain the most reliable detector description in view of measuring CP asymmetry in the b sector, where charge asymmetry of the detector response could be a dangerous contribution to the systematic error.

(2011). The high voltage system of the rich and the multiplicity study with LHCb data. (Tesi di dottorato, Università degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca, 2011).

The high voltage system of the rich and the multiplicity study with LHCb data

FANCHINI, ERICA
2011

Abstract

This thesis is about the work done during my PhD at the Univerità degli studi di Milano-Bicocca. During these three years I was involved in the RICH group of the LHCb experiment. LHCb is one of the four main experiments at CERN. It uses proton-proton collisions to study CP violation and to search for new physics beyond the Standard Model in the b decays. One of the main feature of the experiment is the particle identification, performed with the Ring Imaging Cherenkov (RICH) technology. The RICH detects Cherenkov rings via photons emitted by charged particles traversing radiator materials. The photon detection system used consists of pixel Hybrid Photon Detectors (HPDs). They convert photons into photoelectrons which are then accelerated by means of a field generated by three electrodes, biased with high voltages onto the silicon pixel anode. My work can be divided in two main parts: the hardware and the data analysis. The hardware activity is focused on the High Voltage (HV) supply and distribution systems. I optimized the voltage measurement system reducing the systematics determining improvement in the voltage resolution. The strong requirement of a good stability implies a continuous monitoring and analysis of the commissioning data. The HV supply system is placed about 40 m from the experiment and voltages must remain stable until they reach the HPDs. The study of the noise evolution and the discovery of its cause determined the substitution of a component inside the supply modules. The company after this evaluation decided to replace a component with a new material in all the new HV modules produced. All the analysis contributed largely to the stability of the RICH system for all the operations of data taking. For future operations, LHCb aims at collecting data at a LHC luminosity of 10^33 cm^(-2)s^(-1), to improve the statistics of the main rare channels studied. For the RICH, this implies a new readout system. The Milano group decided to design a new front-end electronics system and is studying the performance of commercial Multi anode Photo Multiplier (MaPMT) produced by Hamamatsu. I participated to the test of the H9500 tube. We obtained a complete characterization of this tube with respect to the single photon electron response. The main issues were to study noise and cross-talk effects. The tests done in Milano confirmed the cross-talk percentage at the level of 10% with an amplitude of the order of 30% due to the loss of photoelectrons in the first stages of the multiplication chain. All these tests concluded that this MaPMT can be a good candidate for the upgrade, but other photodetectors are under test. In the second part of my work I analyzed the first data taken by LHCb with proton-proton collisions at sqrt(s)=7 TeV. I used the minimum bias sample collected with a very loose trigger in the very first part of 2010. Minimum bias events are important for understanding the detector and its response. The analysis concerned a first study of the track distributions in the detector, followed by the study of a possible detector charge asymmetry. Data were compared with Monte-Carlo simulations, which describe data satisfactory. This study was done to obtain the most reliable detector description in view of measuring CP asymmetry in the b sector, where charge asymmetry of the detector response could be a dangerous contribution to the systematic error.
MATTEUZZI, CLARA
PESSINA, GIANLUIGI; GYS, THIERRY
LHCb, RICH, HPD, High Voltage, Multiplicity, Charge Asymmetry
FIS/04 - FISICA NUCLEARE E SUBNUCLEARE
English
4-mar-2011
Scuola di dottorato di Scienze
FISICA E ASTRONOMIA - 30R
23
2009/2010
Esperimento di appartenenza: LHCb, Centro di ricerca: CERN
open
(2011). The high voltage system of the rich and the multiplicity study with LHCb data. (Tesi di dottorato, Università degli Studi di Milano-Bicocca, 2011).
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/20107
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