The NA62 experiment at the CERN SPS is a fixed target experiment designed to measure the branching ratio of the ultra-rare Kaon decay [Formula presented]. The experiment uses an high-momentum [Formula presented] decay in-flight technique to increase the rejection power of the main background: [Formula presented]. The Gigatracker is a hybrid silicon pixel detector, exposed to a 750 MHz high-energy charged hadron beam, built to give an accurate measurement of [Formula presented] momentum and direction together with an high precision measurement of the beam particle arrival time (115 ps RMS resolution per plane). It comprises three stations placed right before the [Formula presented] decay region and inserted around two achromats. The detector works in vacuum ([Formula presented]) at about [Formula presented]. Each station is made of a [Formula presented] thick silicon sensor readout by 10 TDCPix, custom [Formula presented] thick ASICs, and cooled by an innovative double circuit silicon micro-channel cooling system. All these parts are designed to minimize the total material budget which, in the final detector, amounts to less than 1.5% [Formula presented] for the three stations. In order to sustain the high rate of incoming particles, each TDCPix, operating in a self triggered mode, is equipped with four 3.2 Gb/s serializers sending data to the detector DAQ system based on a read-out card per TDCPix chip sending trigger-matched hits to 6 PC servers. I will describe the whole detector and present some of the results from data collected during the 2016 NA62 runs.
The Gigatracker detector of the NA62 experiment at CERN SPS
Fiorini, M.;Petrucci, F.;
2019
Abstract
The NA62 experiment at the CERN SPS is a fixed target experiment designed to measure the branching ratio of the ultra-rare Kaon decay [Formula presented]. The experiment uses an high-momentum [Formula presented] decay in-flight technique to increase the rejection power of the main background: [Formula presented]. The Gigatracker is a hybrid silicon pixel detector, exposed to a 750 MHz high-energy charged hadron beam, built to give an accurate measurement of [Formula presented] momentum and direction together with an high precision measurement of the beam particle arrival time (115 ps RMS resolution per plane). It comprises three stations placed right before the [Formula presented] decay region and inserted around two achromats. The detector works in vacuum ([Formula presented]) at about [Formula presented]. Each station is made of a [Formula presented] thick silicon sensor readout by 10 TDCPix, custom [Formula presented] thick ASICs, and cooled by an innovative double circuit silicon micro-channel cooling system. All these parts are designed to minimize the total material budget which, in the final detector, amounts to less than 1.5% [Formula presented] for the three stations. In order to sustain the high rate of incoming particles, each TDCPix, operating in a self triggered mode, is equipped with four 3.2 Gb/s serializers sending data to the detector DAQ system based on a read-out card per TDCPix chip sending trigger-matched hits to 6 PC servers. I will describe the whole detector and present some of the results from data collected during the 2016 NA62 runs.I documenti in SFERA sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.