Studies of the response of the SiD silicon-tungsten ECal

Amanda Steinhebel, James Brau

Research output: Contribution to conferencePaperpeer-review

Abstract

Studies of the response of the SiD silicon-tungsten electromagnetic calorimeter (ECal) are pre-sented. Layers of highly granular (13 mm2 pixels) silicon detectors embedded in thin gaps ( ∼1 mm) between tungsten alloy plates give the SiD ECal the ability to separate electromagnetic showers in a crowded environment. A nine-layer prototype has been built and tested in a 12.1 GeV electron beam at the SLAC National Accelerator Laboratory. This data was simulated with a Geant4 model. Particular attention was given to the separation of nearby incident electrons, which demonstrated a high (98.5%) separation efficiency for two electrons at least 1 cm from each other. The beam test study will be compared to a full SiD detector simulation with a realistic geometry, where the ECal calibration constants must first be established. This work is continuing, as the geometry requires that the calibration constants depend upon energy, angle, and absorber depth. The derivation of these constants is being developed from first principles.

Original languageEnglish
StatePublished - 2016
Event2016 International Workshop on Future Linear Colliders, LCWS 2016 - Morioka, Japan
Duration: Dec 5 2016Dec 9 2016

Conference

Conference2016 International Workshop on Future Linear Colliders, LCWS 2016
Country/TerritoryJapan
CityMorioka
Period12/5/1612/9/16

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