학술논문

Aging effects in the COMPASS hybrid GEM-Micromegas pixelized detectors
Document Type
Working Paper
Source
Nucl.Instrum.Meth.A 1065 (2024) 169511
Subject
Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors
Language
Abstract
Large-size hybrid and pixelized GEM-Micromegas gaseous detectors (40x40 cm$^2$ active area) were developed and installed in 2014 and 2015 for the COMPASS2 physics program which started at the same time. That program involved in particular two full years of Drell-Yan studies using a high-intensity pion beam on a thick polarized target. Although the detectors were placed behind a thick absorber, they were exposed to an important flux of low energy neutrons and photons. The detectors were designed to drastically reduce the discharge rate, a major issue for non-resistive Micromegas in high hadron flux, by a factor of more than 100 compared to the former ones. A hybrid solution was chosen where a pre-amplifying GEM foil is placed 2 mm above the micromesh electrode. A pixelized readout was also added in the center of the detector, where the beam is going through, in order to track particles scattered at very low angles. The combination of the hybrid structure and the pixelized central readout allowed the detector to be operated in an environment with particle flux above 10 MHz/cm$^2$ with very good detection efficiencies and spatial resolution. The performance has remained stable since 2015 in terms of gain and resolution, showing the interest of hybrid structures associating a GEM foil to a Micromegas board to protect gaseous detectors against discharges and aging effects
Comment: 9 pages, 9 figures, proceedings to the 3rd International Conference on Detector Stability and Aging Phenomena in Gaseous Detectors, CERN, November 6-10 2023, will be published in the NIMA journal Proceedings Section