22–26 May 2017
Temple University - Philadelphia
US/Eastern timezone

Development of GEM Detectors at Hampton University

23 May 2017, 13:20
20m
Morgan Hall D301 (Temple University - Philadelphia)

Morgan Hall D301

Temple University - Philadelphia

Morgan Hall, 1398 Cecil B. Moore Ave., Philadelphia, PA 19122, USA

Speaker

Anusha Liyanage (Hampton University)

Description

Two GEM telescopes, each consisting of three 10x10 cm$^2$ triple-GEM
chambers were built, tested and operated by the Hampton University group.
The GEMs are read out with APV25 frontend chips and FPGA based digitizing
electronics developed by INFN Rome.

The telescopes were used for the luminosity monitoring system at the OLYMPUS
experiment at DESY in Hamburg, Germany, with positron and electron beams at
2 GeV. The GEM elements have been recycled to serve in another two
applications: Three GEM elements are used to track beam particles in the
MUSE experiment at Paul Scherrer Institute in Switzerland. A set of four
elements has been configured as a prototype tracker for
phase 1a of the DarkLight experiment at the Low-Energy Recirculator
Facility (LERF) Jefferson Lab in Newport News, USA, in a first test run in
summer 2016.

The Hampton group is responsible for beam particle tracking in the MUSE@PSI and for the DarkLight phase-I lepton tracker in preparation. Further efforts are ongoing to optimize the data acquisition speed for GEM operations in MUSE and DarkLight. An overview of the group's GEM detector related activities will be given.

This work is presently supported by NSF PHY-1436680 and HRD-1649909.

Primary author

Anusha Liyanage (Hampton University)

Co-authors

Ms Jesmin Nazeer (Hampton University) Dr Michael Kohl (Hampton University)

Presentation materials