The ATLAS collaboration at LHC has endorsed the resistive Micromegas technology (MM), along with the small-strip Thin Gap Chambers (sTGC), for the high luminosity upgrade of the first muon station in the high-rapidity region, the so called New Small Wheel (NSW) project. The NSW requires fully efficient MM chambers, up to a particle rate of - 15 kHz/cm2, with spatial resolution better than 100 m independent of the track incidence angle and the magnetic field (B < 0.3 T). Along with the precise tracking the MM should be able to provide a trigger signal, complementary to the sTGC. thus a decent timing resolution is required. Several tests have been performed on small (10 x 10cm2) MM chambers using medium (lOGeV/c) and high (150GeV/c) momentum hadron beams at CHRN. Results on the efficiency and position resolution measured during these tests are presented demonstrating the excellent characteristics of the MM that fulfil the NSW requirements. Exploiting the ability of the MM to work as a Time Projection Chamber a novel method, called the [.iTPC. has been developed for the case of inclined tracks, allowing for a precise segment reconstruction using a single detection plane. A detailed description of the method along with thorough studies towards refining the method's performance are shown. Finally, during 2014 the first MM quadruplet (MMSW) following the NSW design scheme, comprising four detection planes in a stereo readout configuration, has been realised at CHRN. Test-beam results of this prototype are discussed and compared to theoretical expectations.
CITATION STYLE
Ntekas, K. (2018). Performance studies of resistive Micromegas chambers for the upgrade of the ATLAS Muon Spectrometer. In EPJ Web of Conferences (Vol. 174). EDP Sciences. https://doi.org/10.1051/epjconf/201817401014
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