Status and Performance of New Silicon Stripixel Detector for the PHENIX Experiment at RHIC: Beta Source, Cosmic-rays and Proton Beam at 120 GeV

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Abstract

We are constructing a Silicon Vertex Tracker detector (VTX) for the PHENIX experiment at RHIC. Our main motivation is to enable measurements of heavy flavor production (charm and beauty) in p+p, p+d and A+A collisions. Such data will illuminate the properties of the matter created in high-energy heavy-ion collisions. The measurements also will reveal the distribution of gluons in protons from p+p collisions. The VTX detector consists of four layers of barrel detectors and covers |η|<1.2, and almost a 2π in azimuth. The inner two silicon barrels consist of silicon pixel sensors; their technology accords with that of the ALICE1LHCB sensor-readout hybrid. The outer two barrels are silicon stripixel detectors with a new ''spiral'' design, and a single-sided sensor with 2-dimensional (X, U) readout. In this paper, we describe the silicon stripixel detector and discuss its performance, including its response to electrons from a beta source (90Sr), muons from cosmic-rays, and a 120 GeV proton beam. The results from the proton beam demonstrate that the principle of two-dimensional position sensitivity based on charge sharing works; the signal-to-noise value is 10.4, the position resolution is 33.6 μm for X-stripixel (35.2 μm for U-stripixel), and the tracking efficiencies in the X- and U-stripixels are, over 98.9±0.2%. The stripixel detector within the VTX project is in the pre-production phase. © 2009 IOP Publishing Ltd and SISSA.

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Nouicer, R., Akiba, Y., Bennett, R., Boyle, K., Cianciolo, V., Deshpande, A., … Togawa, M. (2009). Status and Performance of New Silicon Stripixel Detector for the PHENIX Experiment at RHIC: Beta Source, Cosmic-rays and Proton Beam at 120 GeV. Journal of Instrumentation, 4(4). https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-0221/4/04/P04011

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