27 February 2017 to 3 March 2017
Budker Institute of Nuclear Physics
Asia/Novosibirsk timezone

The PANDA barrel-TOF detector at FAIR

2 Mar 2017, 17:40
20m
Contributed Oral Particle identification Particle identification

Speaker

Mr Sebastian Zimmermann (Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen)

Description

The triggerless detector system $\bar{\text{P}}$ANDA which is being built at the FAIR facility. The versatile detector system will enable us to study open questions in hadron physics, by doing charmonium spectroscopy with precision measurements of mass, width and decay branches, investigating possible exotic states, search for modifications of charmed hadrons in nuclear matter and gamma-ray spectroscopy of hypernuclei by using antiprotons on a cluster jet or a pellet target in the momentum range of 1.5 to 15 GeV/c. The barrel-TOF subdetector is one of the outer layers of the multi-layer design of the PANDA barrel. It is designed with a minimal material budget in mind mainly consisting of 90x30x5 mm$^3$ thin plastic scintillator tiles read out on each end by a serial connection of 4 SiPMs. 120 such tiles are placed on 16 2460 x 180 mm$^2$ PCB boards forming a barrel covering an azimuthal angle from 22.5° to 150°. The detector is designed to achieve a time resolution below 100 ps (sigma) which allows for good event separation as well as particle identification below the Cherenkov threshold via the time-of-flight, simultaniously providing the interaction times of events. The current prototype achieved ~60 ps, well below the design goal. The R&D is in a matured stage and a technical design report is currently being reviewed by the collaboration. In this contribution the whole project from the design concept to the latest result of test beamtime as well as the future outlook will be presented.

Primary author

Mr Sebastian Zimmermann (Justus-Liebig-Universität Gießen)

Co-authors

Prof. Albert Lehmann (Friedrich-Alexander Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg) Dr Carsten Schwarz (GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung Darmstadt) Mr Dominik Steinschaden (Stefan Meyer Institut for Subatomic Physics Vienna) Dr Gamal Ahmed (Al-Azhar University Cairo) Prof. Herbert Orth (GSI Helmholtzzentrum für Schwerionenforschung Darmstadt) Mr Kamal Dutta (Gauhati University) Dr Ken Suzuki (Stefan Meyer Institut for Subatomic Physics Vienna) Prof. Kushal Kalita (Gauhati University) Mr Marius Chirita (Stefan Meyer Institut for Subatomic Physics Vienna) Mr Merlin Böhm (Friedrich-Alexander Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg)

Presentation Materials