17–21 Apr 2023
DESY
Europe/Zurich timezone

Session

Experiments - LHC

17 Apr 2023, 17:00
DESY

DESY

Hamburg, Germany

Conveners

Experiments - LHC

  • Tamar Zakareishvili (Ivane Javakhishvili Tbilisi State University (GE))

Presentation materials

There are no materials yet.

  1. Jorge Andres Sabater Iglesias (Universite de Geneve (CH))
    17/04/2023, 17:00
    Talk

    The FASER experiment at the LHC will be instrumented with a high precision W-Si preshower to identify and reconstruct electromagnetic showers produced by two O(TeV) photons at distances down to 200µm.
    The new detector features a monolithic silicon ASIC with hexagonal pixels of 100 µm pitch, extended dynamic range for the charge measurement and capability to store the charge information for...

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  2. Christopher Krause (Technische Universitaet Dortmund (DE))
    17/04/2023, 17:20
    Talk

    The High Luminosity program of the Large Hadron Collider (HL-LHC) will
    increase the beam's instantaneous luminosity up to $7.5\cdot 10^{34} cm^{-2} s^{-1}$.
    An upgrade of the ATLAS tracking detector, the Inner Tracker (ITk), is
    needed to cope with the resulting harsher radiation levels and number of
    tracks.
    The outermost layers of the ITk pixel detector are designed to operate
    for the...

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  3. Geetika Jain (TRIUMF (CA))
    17/04/2023, 17:40
    Talk

    In order to cope with the occupancy and radiation doses expected at the High-Luminosity LHC, the ATLAS experiment will replace its Inner Detector with an all-silicon Inner Tracker (ITk), containing pixel and strip subsystems. The strip subsystem will be built from modules, consisting of one or two n+-in-p silicon sensors, one or two PCB hybrids containing the front-end electronics, and one...

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  4. Younes Otarid (DESY)
    17/04/2023, 18:00
    Talk

    The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) will undergo a major “High Luminosity” upgrade with the goal of delivering a peak instantaneous luminosity of about $\mathrm{5-7.5 \times 10^{34}cm^{-2}s^{-1}}$ by 2029. In order for the CMS experiment to cope with the higher radiation levels and data rates, the current CMS Silicon Tracker will be replaced. The upgraded Outer Tracker will introduce a new module...

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  5. Ryunosuke O'Neil (The University of Edinburgh (GB))
    17/04/2023, 18:20
    Talk

    LHCb is expected to see an increase in integrated luminosity from 50 fb$^{-1}$ to as much as 300 fb$^{−1}$ by the end of Run 5-6. Such an increase prompts an upgrade to the LHCb tracking system: to deal with higher occupancy, more interactions per bunch-crossing, and harsher radiation conditions - to name a few key challenges.
    For Upgrade-II of the LHCb detector (expected $\geq$ 2030), the...

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  6. Valentina Sarkisovi (Rheinisch Westfaelische Tech. Hoch. (DE))
    17/04/2023, 18:40
    Talk

    The various CMS detector parts will face significant challenges as a result of the High Luminosity LHC (HL-LHC) program. While some of them will be replaced by more sophisticated systems, others, like the Drift Tube chambers, will need to function at 5 times the instantaneous luminosity that they were designed for and maintain roughly 10 times the anticipated LHC integrated luminosity. To meet...

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