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Precision Drift Chambers for the ATLAS Muon Spectrometer Susanne Mohrdieck Max-Planck-Institut f. Physik, Munich for the ATLAS Muon Collaboration Abstracts: 344,350,646 International Europhysics Conference on High-Energy Physics 17.-23.7.2003 Outline: Introduction - ATLAS and the muon spectrometer Precision chamber production Monitoring and measurement of chamber quality/accuracy Performance test of precision chambers under LHC operating conditions
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The ATLAS Muon Spectrometer ATLAS at LHC: multi-purpose detector to search for Higgs and new physics Muon Spectrometer: toroidal magnetic field: = 0.4 T high p t -resolution independent of the polar angle size defined by large lever arm to allow high stand-alone precision air-core coils to minimise the multiple scattering 3 detector stations - cylindrical in barrel - wheels in end caps coverage: | | < 2.7 used technologies: fast trigger chambers: TGC, RPC high resolution tracking detectors: MDT, CSC
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Performance goal: high stand-alone µ-momentum resolution of 2-10% ! chamber resolution: 50 µm monitoring of high mechanical precision during production elaborate optical alignment system to monitor chamber deformations and displacements see talk by C.Amelung in this talk at 1TeV: = 10% sagitta = 500 µm
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Monitored Drift Tube Chambers (MDT) End Cap Barrel 6 / 8 drift tube layers, arranged in 2 multilayers glued to a spacer frame length: 1 – 6 m, width: 1 – 2 m optical system to monitor chamber deformations gas: Ar:CO 2 (93:7) to prevent aging, 3 bar chamber resolution: 50 µm single tube resolution: 100 µm required wire position accuracy: 20 µm
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Status of MDT Production production at 13 sites in 7 countries: assembly layer by layer using precision table with precise ‚combs‘ on-line monitoring of temperature and mechanical movements production within schedule: 58% of 1194 chambers assembled will be finished middle of 2005 Plan for Bare Chambers Bare Chambers Chambers with Services MPI Munich
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Drift Tube Production automated wiring machine elaborate quality checks total rejection of only 2.6% 73% of in total 370.000 tubes produced MDT chambers consist of up to 432 drift tubes: tube wall: 0.4 mm Al 30 mm diameter wire: 50 µm W-Re endplug production at NIKHEF precise wire positioning in the endplugs: rms of 7µm
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Wire Positions with a X-Ray Method accuracy of wire position measurement: 3 µm measurement of the intensity as function of the motor position average wire positioning accuracy: 15 µm selected chambers tested: 74 of 650 chambers produced at 13 sites scanned so far X-tomograph at CERN mechanical precision measured with X-ray method
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Monitoring of Chamber Quality monitoring of the chamber parameters by optical sensors during the production (e.g. MPI f. Physik, Munich) stable over time agreement with X-ray method X-rayed MPI chambers 20 µm 40 µm
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combination of all monitoring results: - chamber parameters - tube positions within a tube layer - wire positions within the tube Monitoring of Wire Positions good agreement between X-ray method and monitoring results y = y monitoring – y X-ray - average rms( y) = 19 µm comparison to nominal positions: - stable wire positioning accuracy - average rms y = 18 µm required accuracy achieved deviations of monitoring to X-ray method rms of deviations from nominal positions in the monitoring (MPI) MPI wire positions in all chambers = 18 µm
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Cosmic Ray Test goals: check functionality of all tubes and electronics channels measurement of wire positions e.g. Test Facility at the University of Munich deviations from nominal positions compared to X-ray results: rms y = 25 µm, rms z = 9 µm z y
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Cosmic Ray Test (cont) z displacement for the tube layers z-pitch for the tube layers good agreement with X-ray results extraction of layer positions with high precision: 2 µm in z 4 µm in y precision for z-pitch: 0.3 µm per layer University of Munich 10 µm 0.4 µm
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Performance under LHC Conditions degradation due to space charge fluctuations required resolution maintained even at high irradiation: 104 µm without irradiation degradation by 10 µm at highest ATLAS rates of 100 s -1 cm -2 single tube resolution vs. drift radius, Ar:CO 2 (93:7), 3 bar operation at unprecedentedly high n and background rates: 8 – 100 s -1 cm -2 performance test of a large 6-layer chamber: high energy µ beam (100 GeV) -ray irradiation (Cs-137 source with 740 GBq) external reference (silicon beam telescope) Single Tube Resolution
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Efficiencies even at highest expected irradiation no deterioration of track-reconstruction efficiency track-reconstruction efficiency extraction of tracking efficiency using the reference track in the Si telescope total track-reconstruction efficiency: ( 99.97 )% without irradiation ( 99.77 )% at highest ATLAS rate (for 4m long tubes) highest ATLAS rate for 4m long tubes +0.03 - 0.9 +0.23 - 0.8
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Conclusions Precision MDT chamber production within schedule (58% assembled) Wire positioning measured with several methods during production required accuracy of 20 µm achieved Performance under LHC conditions tested at highest background rates chamber resolution of 50 µm maintained no deterioration of track-reconstruction efficiency
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