4–10 Apr 2022
Auditorium Maximum UJ
Europe/Warsaw timezone
Proceedings submission deadline extended to September 11, 2022

Performance of the mSTS detector in O+Ni collisions at 2 AGeV with the mCBM setup at SIS18

8 Apr 2022, 14:12
4m
Poster Future facilities and new instrumentation Poster Session 3 T15_2

Speaker

Dario Alberto Ramirez Zaldivar

Description

The Compressed Baryonic Matter (CBM) is one of the experimental pillars at the FAIR facility. CBM focuses on the search for signal of the phase transition between hadronic and quark-gluon matter, the QCD critical endpoint, new forms of strange-matter, in-medium modifications of hadrons, and the onset of chiral symmetry restoration.

The Silicon Tracking System is the central detector for momentum measurement and charged-particle identification. It is designed to measure Au+Au collisions at interaction rates up to 10 MHz. It consists of approximately 900 double-sided silicon strip sensors with 1024 strips per side, arranged in 8 tracking stations. This results in 1.8 million channels, having the most demanding requirements in terms of bandwidth and density of all CBM detectors.

In the context of FAIR phase 0, the mini-CBM (mCBM) project is a small-scale precursor of the full CBM detector, consisting of sub-units of all major CBM systems which aims to verify CBM's concepts of free-streaming readout electronics, data transport, and online reconstruction.

In the 2021 beam campaign at SIS18 (GSI) O+Ni collisions at 2 AGeV were measured with a beam intensity up to $10^{10}$ ions per spill. The mini-STS (mSTS) setup used for the 2021 campaign consists of 2 stations with 11 sensors.

First results obtained from data taken in the 2021 beam campaign will be presented with a focus on the hit reconstruction and mSTS performance studies.

Author

Presentation materials