Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published bySuzanna Shavonne Baldwin Modified over 8 years ago
1
CMS History Compact Muon Solinoid Compact Relative to ATLAS, which is ~1.5x the diameter of CMS and 2x as long (but ATLAS is half the weight of CMS!). Muon There is a BIG emphasis on muon detectors in CMS. Muons are excellent signatures of interesting physics (they can be easily identified, only come from the decay of a heavy (=possibly interesting) particle). if a muon chamber sees a signal, it is certainly due to the passage of a muon. The muon chambers contribute strongly to the CMS Trigger system – the system to identify interesting proton-proton interactions ! Solenoid The basis for most large collider experiments is the choice of the type of magnet (to allow momentum measurements ). CMS uses a solenoid essentially a big cylindrical coil of wire that generates a magnetic field down its axis when an electrical current is passed along the wire.
2
Beginnings Part of the SSC Beginnings before 1993 LHC Milstones
3
The design objectives of CMS are thus: A very good and redundant (=many layers, so that if one fails we can fall-back on the others) muon system The best possible electromagnetic calorimeter A high quality central tracking A hadron calorimeter with sufficient energy resolution and that capture almost all possible energy
4
Movies about CMS Particle Physics BBC CMS OutReach Visiting CMS
Similar presentations
© 2024 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.