Radiation Detectors In particular, Silicon Microstrip Detectors by Dr. Darrel Smith.

17
Radiation Detectors In particular, Silicon Microstrip Detectors by Dr. Darrel Smith

Transcript of Radiation Detectors In particular, Silicon Microstrip Detectors by Dr. Darrel Smith.

Page 1: Radiation Detectors In particular, Silicon Microstrip Detectors by Dr. Darrel Smith.

Radiation Detectors

In particular,Silicon Microstrip

Detectorsby

Dr. Darrel Smith

Page 2: Radiation Detectors In particular, Silicon Microstrip Detectors by Dr. Darrel Smith.

Silicon Microstrip Detectors

• Introduction• Charged Particle Detectors• Silicon Microstrip Detectors• Their use in remote sensing

Page 3: Radiation Detectors In particular, Silicon Microstrip Detectors by Dr. Darrel Smith.

Introduction• Since the discovery of radioactivity (1890’s), scientists have designed detectors to record and measure the appearance of new particles.

, , and radiation ( +, -)• n radiation (neutrons)• p radiation (protons)

Page 4: Radiation Detectors In particular, Silicon Microstrip Detectors by Dr. Darrel Smith.

Detectors• Photographic Film• Emulsions• Bubble Chambers• Wire Chambers• Scintillators• Cerenkov Detectors• Solid-State Detectors

Page 5: Radiation Detectors In particular, Silicon Microstrip Detectors by Dr. Darrel Smith.

Ionization Radiation

• In the case of searching for charged particles, most of these detectors work on the principle of energy loss, namely dE/dx.

• The Bethe-Bloch equation:

• The slower a particle moves, the more ionization that occurs.

Page 6: Radiation Detectors In particular, Silicon Microstrip Detectors by Dr. Darrel Smith.

Ionization Radiation

• β = v / c• v velocity of the particle• E energy of the particle• x distance travelled by the particle• c speed of light• z particle charge• e charge of the electron• me rest mass of the electron• n electron density of the target• I mean excitation potential of the target o permittivity of free space

Page 7: Radiation Detectors In particular, Silicon Microstrip Detectors by Dr. Darrel Smith.

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Bragg Curve

• Stopping Power– Type of particle– Energy of the particle– Properties of the material

Page 8: Radiation Detectors In particular, Silicon Microstrip Detectors by Dr. Darrel Smith.

Ions Slowing Down

• A typical ion slowing down in material due to the dE/dx energy loss.

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 9: Radiation Detectors In particular, Silicon Microstrip Detectors by Dr. Darrel Smith.

Two Basic Interactions• Electromagnetic Interactions

– electrons, and photons lose most of their energy through these processes.

• Hadronic Interactions– particles containing quarks, tend to lose a greater fraction of their energy through nuclear interactions.

Page 10: Radiation Detectors In particular, Silicon Microstrip Detectors by Dr. Darrel Smith.

Electromagnetic Interactions

• Electrons and Photons• A “figure of merit” describing the interaction of electrons in materials is called the radiation length, Xo.

• Energy loss is primarily through bremsstrahlung, and pair production down to 10’s of MeV.

• Below a few 10’s of MeV, the energy loss I primarily through ionization.

QuickTime™ and a decompressor

are needed to see this picture.

Page 11: Radiation Detectors In particular, Silicon Microstrip Detectors by Dr. Darrel Smith.

Hadronic Interactions

• The figure of merit is called the “nuclear interaction length.”

Page 12: Radiation Detectors In particular, Silicon Microstrip Detectors by Dr. Darrel Smith.

Detector Resolutions• Bubble Chamber 10-150 m• Streamer chamber 300 m• Drift Chamber Scintillator50-300

m• Emulsion 1 m• Silicon Strip pitch/(3-7)• Silicon Pixel 2 m

Page 13: Radiation Detectors In particular, Silicon Microstrip Detectors by Dr. Darrel Smith.

Early Tests (CERN)

Page 14: Radiation Detectors In particular, Silicon Microstrip Detectors by Dr. Darrel Smith.

Early Tests (CERN)

Vertex Reconstruction

Simulation of a topquark decay into a B meson.

Page 15: Radiation Detectors In particular, Silicon Microstrip Detectors by Dr. Darrel Smith.

Vertex Reconstruction

• Short-lived particles (b-decays)

• Lifetime = 1.54 x 10-12 seconds

• c o = 462 m

• Lo = co

Page 16: Radiation Detectors In particular, Silicon Microstrip Detectors by Dr. Darrel Smith.

Vertex Reconstruction

Page 17: Radiation Detectors In particular, Silicon Microstrip Detectors by Dr. Darrel Smith.

Next Generation Detectors

• CCDs in layers• Pixel readout• 3 dimensional reconstruction