You are viewing an old version of this page. View the current version.

Compare with Current View Page History

« Previous Version 6 Next »

The Heavy Photon Search Group at SLAC is collaborating with physicists at Jefferson Lab and their collaborators, Fermilab, and UCSC in two experiments aimed at discovering a hidden sector, or heavy, photon. Such a particle would have mass in the range 0.1 to 1.0 GeV, couple weakly to electrons, and decay to e+e-. It would be produced by electron bremstrahlung on a heavy target, and be identified as a narrow e+e- resonance. Its weak couplings to electrons account for its not yet being discovered, and can give rise to separated vertices in its decay, providing a spectacular signature. Heavy photons have become a hot topic recently because they may explain high energy electrons and positrons in the cosmic rays, and be intimately linked to dark matter annihilation.

The first experiment is the APEX experiment, which has been conditionally approved at Jlab, and which has already completed a test run this past summer. The experiment makes use of two large spectrometers in Jlab's experimental Hall B to search for the heavy photon. If successful, several more data taking runs will be scheduled in 2010-2012. The experiment provides many opportunities for rotation students, and could provide data for a very topical particle physics thesis. SLAC has responsibilities for constructing and testing the target for the experiment, taking shifts, and helping to develop the data analysis.
Contact Person: John Jaros

The second experiment is the Heavy Photon Search experiment (HPS). Our SLAC group, in collaboration with others, has just submitted a proposal to Jefferson Laboratory and hopes for approval this fall. The experiment will use LHC style readout of silicon microstrip detectors and a PbWO4 crystal calorimeter to deal with the extremely high trigger rates expected. There are many opportunities for rotation students. Experiment design and simulation studies will continue, tracking pattern recognition and vertexing code is being developed, the data acquisition system for the experiment will be designed and tested, and a silicon tracker/vertexer will be built, and the physics analysis and Monte Carlo will be developed. This experiment is very small by modern standards, but exploits the latest high tech detection and readout technologies to address a very fascinating piece of physics. It provides a perfect opportunity for a thesis student, offering all aspects of experimental work, from design to hardware implementation to data analysis. Specific proposals for HPS rotation projects are listed below.

Project Title

Contact Person

Silicon Tracker DAQ Development

Tim Nelson

High-precision Hit-time Reconstruction in Silicon Detectors

Tim Nelson

Test-beam Occupancy Studies

Tim Nelson

  • No labels