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DØ experiment

The DØ experiment (sometimes written D0 experiment, or DZero experiment) was a worldwide collaboration of scientists conducting research on the fundamental nature of matter. DØ was one of two major experiments (the other was the CDF experiment) located at the Tevatron Collider at Fermilab in Batavia, Illinois. The Tevatron was the world's highest-energy accelerator from 1983 until 2009, when its energy was surpassed by the Large Hadron Collider.[1] The DØ experiment stopped taking data in 2011, when the Tevatron shut down,[2] but data analysis is still ongoing. The DØ detector is preserved in Fermilab's DØ Assembly Building as part of a historical exhibit for public tours.[3]

DØ Central Calorimeter under construction at Fermilab
The DØ Collaboration in February 1992.
DØ under construction, the installation of the central tracking system

DØ research is focused on precise studies of interactions of protons and antiprotons at the highest available energies. These collisions result in "events" containing many new particles created through the transformation of energy into mass according to the relation E=mc2. The research involves an intense search for subatomic clues that reveal the character of the building blocks of the universe.[4]

Overview edit

In 1981, Fermilab director Leon M. Lederman asked for preliminary proposals for a "modest detector built by a modestly sized group" that would be located at the 'DØ' interaction region in the Tevatron ring and complement the planned Collider Detector at Fermilab.[5] More than fifteen groups submitted proposals. Three of these proposals were merged into one effort under the leadership of Paul Grannis, which officially began on July 1, 1983. The group produced a design report in November 1984. The detector was completed in 1991, it was placed in the Tevatron in February 1992, and observed its first collision in May 1992.[6][7] It recorded data from 1992 until 1996, when it was shut down for major upgrades. Its second run began in 2001 and lasted until September 2011. As of 2019, data analysis is still going on.[8]

The DØ experiment is an international collaboration that, at its peak, included about 650 physicists from 88 universities and national laboratories from 21 countries.[9][10] It studied the collisions between the protons and antiprotons circulating in the Tevatron to test many aspects of the Standard Model of particle physics.

The DØ detector consisted of several nested subdetector groups surrounding the region where the beam protons and antiprotons collided. The subdetectors provided over a million channels of electronics[11] that were collected, digitized and logged for off-line analyses. About 10 million collisions[12] of the proton and antiproton beams were inspected every second, and up to 500 collisions per second were recorded for further studies.[13]

Physics research edit

DØ conducted its scientific studies within six physics groups: Higgs, Top, Electroweak, New Phenomena, QCD, and B Physics. Significant advances were made in each of them.[14]

 
DØ's control room
 
DØ Detector with large liquid argon calorimeter

Top quark edit

One of the early goals of the DØ experiment was to discover the top quark,[15] the last of the six constituents of matter predicted by the Standard Model of particle physics. The DØ and CDF experiments both collected data for the search, but they used different observation and analysis techniques that allowed independent confirmation of one another's findings.

On February 24, 1995, DØ and CDF submitted research papers to Physical Review Letters describing the observation of top and antitop quark pairs produced via the strong interaction.[16] On March 2, 1995, the two collaborations jointly reported the discovery of the top quark at a mass of about 175 GeV/c2 (nearly that of a gold nucleus).[17][18] [19]

On March 4, 2009, the DØ and CDF collaborations both announced the discovery of the production of single top quarks via the weak interaction. This process occurs at about half the rate as the production of top quark pairs but is much more difficult to observe since it is more difficult to distinguish from background processes that can create false signals. The single top quark studies were used to measure the top quark lifetime of about 5 × 10−25 seconds, measure the last unknown element of the CKM matrix of quark inter-generational mixing, and to search for new physics beyond the Standard Model.[20]

Precision measurements of top quark properties such as mass, charge, decay modes, production characteristics, and polarization were reported in over one hundred publications.

The European Physical Society awarded the 2019 European Physical Society High Energy and Particle Physics Prize to the DØ and CDF collaborations "for the discovery of the top quark and the detailed measurement of its properties."[21]

  • DØ's top-quark physics group's home page

Higgs boson edit

In later years, one of the main physics goals of the DØ experiment was the search for the Higgs boson, which was predicted to exist by the Standard Model, but with an unknown mass.[22] Before they concluded in 2000, the LEP experiments at CERN had ruled out the existence of such a Higgs boson with a mass smaller than 114.4 GeV/c2.[23] In 2010 DØ and CDF extended the forbidden region to include a window around 160 GeV/c2.[24]

On July 2, 2012, anticipating an announcement from CERN of the discovery of the Higgs boson, the DØ and CDF collaborations announced their evidence (at about three standard deviations) for Higgs bosons decaying into the dominant b quark final states, which indicated that the particle had a mass between 115 and 135 GeV/c2.[25] On July 4, 2012, CERN's ATLAS and CMS experiments announced their discovery of the Higgs boson with a mass of 125 GeV/c2.[26]

The techniques developed at the Tevatron for the Higgs boson searches served as a springboard for subsequent LHC analyses.[27]

W and Z bosons edit

The properties of the W and Z bosons that transmit the weak nuclear force are sensitive indicators of the internal consistency of the Standard Model. In 2012, DØ measured the W boson mass to a relative precision of better than 0.03%, ruling out many potential models of new physics.[28]

The DØ and CDF experiments combined to measure the forward-backward asymmetry in the decays of Z bosons (the tendency of positive decay leptons to emerge closer to the incoming proton direction more often than negative decay leptons). From these asymmetry measurements, the weak mixing angle governing the breaking of the electroweak symmetry into distinct electromagnetic and weak forces was measured to a precision of better than 0.15%. This result has comparable precision to electron positron collider experiments at CERN and SLAC and helps to resolve a long-standing tension between those measurements.[29]

Bottom and charm quarks edit

Although the B-factory experiments at KEK, SLAC and IHEP in Beijing and the LHCb experiment at CERN have dominated many aspects of the study of hadrons containing b- or c-quarks, DØ has made notable contributions using large samples containing all heavy flavor hadrons that can be seen through their decays to muons.

In July 2006, the DØ collaboration published the first evidence for the transformation of the Bs meson (containing an anti-b quark and a strange quark) into its antiparticle. The transition occurs about 20 trillion times per second. If there were new particles beyond those in the Standard Model, this rate would have been modified.[30]

On May 14, 2010, the DØ collaboration announced a tendency for b and anti-b quarks produced in proton-antiproton collisions to lead to a pair of positively charged muons more frequently than a negatively charged pair.[31] This tendency, together with measurements of single muon asymmetries, could help explain the matter-antimatter asymmetry responsible for the dominance of matter in the universe.[32] Experimental results from physicists at the Large Hadron Collider, however, have suggested that "the difference from the Standard Model is insignificant."[33]

On June 12, 2007, the DØ collaboration submitted a paper to Physical Review Letters announcing the discovery of a new particle called the Ξb (pronounced "zigh sub b") with a mass of 5.774±0.019 GeV/c2, approximately six times the mass of a proton. The Ξb baryon is made of a down, a strange and a bottom quark, making it the first observed baryon formed of quarks from all three generations of matter.[34]

The original quark hypotheses by Murray Gell-Mann and George Zweig noted that exotic mesons containing two quarks and two antiquarks (instead of just a quark and antiquark) are possible. Examples were finally observed 40 years later in cases where the exotic meson contains the more distinctive heavy b- and c-quarks. DØ has contributed new understanding of these heavy flavor exotic states.[35]

Strong force edit

Quantum chromodynamics (QCD) is the theory of the strong interaction, in which quarks and gluons interact through a quantum property, analogous to electric charge for electromagnetism, called "color." QCD makes quantitative predictions for the production of jets (collimated sprays of particles evolved from scattered quarks or gluons), photons and W or Z bosons. D0 published a seminal series of papers investigating jet production as a function of beam energy, jet energy, and jet production angle consistent with theoretical predictions. A noteworthy result in 2012 from DØ was the measurement of very high energy jets produced at large scattering angles. This occurs when single quarks carry more than half of the energy of their parent proton or antiproton, despite the fact that the proton and antiproton are typically built from dozens of quarks and gluons. The measurement was in excellent agreement with predictions. In a series of publications in which two pairs of jets or photons stemming from two independent scatterings of quarks and gluons within a single proton-antiproton encounter were observed, the pattern of these rates indicated that the spatial extent of gluons within the proton is smaller than that for quarks.[36]

Detector edit

The DØ detector consisted of several "sub-detectors," which were grouped into three shells surrounding the collision point. The innermost shell was the Central Tracking System consisting of tracking detectors enclosed in a superconducting magnet. These were surrounded by a second shell consisting of calorimeters that measured the energy of electrons, photons, and hadrons and identified "jets" of particles arising from scattered quarks and gluons. The third shell, the muon system, had tracking chambers and scintillator panels before and after magnetized solid iron magnets to identify muons. The whole detector was enclosed behind a concrete block wall which acted as radiation shields. The detector measured about 10m × 10m × 20m and weighed about 5,500 tons. It is preserved in Fermilab's DØ Assembly Building as part of a public historical exhibit.[37]

Central Tracking System edit

The central tracking system had two subdetectors for measuring charged particle track positions and a magnetic field to cause tracks to bend, thereby allowing a measurement of their momenta.

The silicon microstrip tracker was located just outside the Tevatron beam pipes. Five barrels concentric with the beams and 16 disks with strips perpendicular to the beams provided precision measurements of charged track coordinates. These helped to determine particle momenta and to distinguish those particles that emerged from the primary collision point from those that traveled a finite distance before decaying, like tau leptons and hadrons containing bottom quarks. It consisted of about 800,000 silicon strips of 50 micron width, capable of measuring track location to about 10 microns. The outer radius of the silicon detectors was limited to 10 cm due to their high cost.[38] The silicon microstrip tracker was installed in the detector for the Tevatron Run II collider program, which began in 2001.[39] It was fully functional by April 2002.[40][41]

Outside the silicon tracker, the cylindrical scintillating fiber tracker occupied the radial region between 20 and 52 cm and 2.5 m along the beam line. Particles traversed eight layers of 835 micron diameter scintillating fibers. These fibers produced photons when a particle passed through them.[42] Light from each of the more than 75,000 fibers was transmitted to solid state sensors that created electronic signals that were digitized and logged. The fiber tracker spatial precision was about 100 microns.[43]

A superconducting solenoid magnet was located just outside the fiber tracker created a 2 T magnetic field in the silicon and fiber tracker volume.[44]

Calorimeter edit

The calorimeter system consisted of three sampling calorimeters (a cylindrical Central Calorimeter and two End Calorimeters), an intercryostat detector, and a preshower detector.[45] The job of the calorimeters and associated subdetectors was the measurement of energies of electrons, photons, and charged and neutral hadrons. This was achieved when incident particles traversed multiple layers of dense inert material in which they interacted and created secondary particles. All such secondary particles are called a shower. The energy of the progenitor particle was shared among many shower particles of much lower energy that ultimately stopped, at which point the shower ended. Between the layers of the inert material there were detectors in which the ionization of the particles was measured. The total ionization signal summed over the shower is proportional to the energy of the progenitor particle.[46]

A cylindrical layer of scintillator-based preshower strips was placed immediately outside the solenoid and read out with fiber tracker sensors. Similar preshower detectors capped the ends of the tracking region. The material in the solenoid augmented with lead sheets caused primary electrons and photons to begin a shower of secondary particles. The preshower detector was thus the first stage of the calorimetry and gave a precise location of the particle impact point.

A central calorimeter outside and two end calorimeters capping the solenoid contained separate sections for measuring electromagnetic particles and hadrons. Uranium was chosen for the inert absorber plates owing to its very high density. The active gaps contained liquid argon with a strong electric field applied to collect the ionization of traversing particles on finely segmented planes of copper electrodes. These signals were ganged into 50,000 signals that measured the particle energies and the transverse and longitudinal shower shapes which helped identify the particle type. Each calorimeter contained about sixty uranium-liquid argon modules with a total weight of 240 to 300 metric tons. The total thickness of a calorimeter was about 175 cm so as to fully absorb the showers of the most energetic particles from a collision. The stainless steel vessels needed to contain the modules at liquid argon temperature (-190 C) were relatively thick, so scintillation detectors were inserted between central and end calorimeters to correct for energy lost in the cryostat walls.

A primary task for the calorimetry is identification of jets, the sprays of particles created as quarks and gluons escape from their collision point. Jet identification and measurement of their directions and energies allow analyses to recreate the momenta of the underlying quarks and gluons in the primary collision.[47]

Muon Detector edit

The outermost shell of the detector was for muon detection. High energy muons are quite rare and are thus a telltale sign of interesting collisions. Unlike most particles, they did not get absorbed in the calorimeters, so tracks observed beyond the calorimeters were most likely muons. Scintillator planes provided a fast signature used to flag interesting events. One station of tracking chambers before and two stations after solid iron magnets record the muon tracks. The iron of the large central magnet was reclaimed from a NASA cyclotron built to simulate radiation damage in space.[48][49]

Trigger and DAQ edit

Approximately 10 million proton-antiproton collisions happened every second in the detector. Because this far exceeded computing capabilities, only a fraction of these events could be stored on tape per second. Therefore, an intricate Data Acquisition (DAQ) system was implemented that determined which events were "interesting" enough to be written to tape and which could be thrown out.[50][51] The trigger system used the electronic signals to identify events of interest, such as those containing electrons, muons, photons, high energy jets, or particles that traveled some distance before decaying. The first trigger level used the fast electronic signals from each subdetector to decide within a few microseconds whether to pause data-taking and digitize the signals. About 10,000 such Level 1 triggers were accepted. A second trigger level refined the selection using the digitized signals from several subdetectors in combination to form a more nuanced event profile, reducing the candidate event pool to 1000 events per second. In the third level, a farm of computers analyzed the digital information in a stripped-down version of the full offline computer code to yield up to 100 events per second to be permanently recorded and subsequently analyzed on large offline computer farms. The operation of the trigger system was a delicate balance between maximizing the number of events saved and minimizing the dead time incurred while collecting them. It had to be robust and reliable, as the millions of events not selected by the trigger were lost forever.[52]

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External links edit

  • The DØ Experiment
  • The DØ Exhibit
  • Record for DØ Experiment Run I on INSPIRE-HEP
  • Record for DØ Experiment Run II on INSPIRE-HEP

experiment, sometimes, written, experiment, dzero, experiment, worldwide, collaboration, scientists, conducting, research, fundamental, nature, matter, major, experiments, other, experiment, located, tevatron, collider, fermilab, batavia, illinois, tevatron, w. The DO experiment sometimes written D0 experiment or DZero experiment was a worldwide collaboration of scientists conducting research on the fundamental nature of matter DO was one of two major experiments the other was the CDF experiment located at the Tevatron Collider at Fermilab in Batavia Illinois The Tevatron was the world s highest energy accelerator from 1983 until 2009 when its energy was surpassed by the Large Hadron Collider 1 The DO experiment stopped taking data in 2011 when the Tevatron shut down 2 but data analysis is still ongoing The DO detector is preserved in Fermilab s DO Assembly Building as part of a historical exhibit for public tours 3 DO Central Calorimeter under construction at FermilabThe DO Collaboration in February 1992 DO under construction the installation of the central tracking systemDO research is focused on precise studies of interactions of protons and antiprotons at the highest available energies These collisions result in events containing many new particles created through the transformation of energy into mass according to the relation E mc2 The research involves an intense search for subatomic clues that reveal the character of the building blocks of the universe 4 Contents 1 Overview 2 Physics research 2 1 Top quark 2 2 Higgs boson 2 3 W and Z bosons 2 4 Bottom and charm quarks 2 5 Strong force 3 Detector 3 1 Central Tracking System 3 2 Calorimeter 3 3 Muon Detector 4 Trigger and DAQ 5 References 6 External linksOverview editIn 1981 Fermilab director Leon M Lederman asked for preliminary proposals for a modest detector built by a modestly sized group that would be located at the DO interaction region in the Tevatron ring and complement the planned Collider Detector at Fermilab 5 More than fifteen groups submitted proposals Three of these proposals were merged into one effort under the leadership of Paul Grannis which officially began on July 1 1983 The group produced a design report in November 1984 The detector was completed in 1991 it was placed in the Tevatron in February 1992 and observed its first collision in May 1992 6 7 It recorded data from 1992 until 1996 when it was shut down for major upgrades Its second run began in 2001 and lasted until September 2011 As of 2019 data analysis is still going on 8 The DO experiment is an international collaboration that at its peak included about 650 physicists from 88 universities and national laboratories from 21 countries 9 10 It studied the collisions between the protons and antiprotons circulating in the Tevatron to test many aspects of the Standard Model of particle physics The DO detector consisted of several nested subdetector groups surrounding the region where the beam protons and antiprotons collided The subdetectors provided over a million channels of electronics 11 that were collected digitized and logged for off line analyses About 10 million collisions 12 of the proton and antiproton beams were inspected every second and up to 500 collisions per second were recorded for further studies 13 Physics research editDO conducted its scientific studies within six physics groups Higgs Top Electroweak New Phenomena QCD and B Physics Significant advances were made in each of them 14 nbsp DO s control room nbsp DO Detector with large liquid argon calorimeterTop quark edit One of the early goals of the DO experiment was to discover the top quark 15 the last of the six constituents of matter predicted by the Standard Model of particle physics The DO and CDF experiments both collected data for the search but they used different observation and analysis techniques that allowed independent confirmation of one another s findings On February 24 1995 DO and CDF submitted research papers to Physical Review Letters describing the observation of top and antitop quark pairs produced via the strong interaction 16 On March 2 1995 the two collaborations jointly reported the discovery of the top quark at a mass of about 175 GeV c2 nearly that of a gold nucleus 17 18 19 On March 4 2009 the DO and CDF collaborations both announced the discovery of the production of single top quarks via the weak interaction This process occurs at about half the rate as the production of top quark pairs but is much more difficult to observe since it is more difficult to distinguish from background processes that can create false signals The single top quark studies were used to measure the top quark lifetime of about 5 10 25 seconds measure the last unknown element of the CKM matrix of quark inter generational mixing and to search for new physics beyond the Standard Model 20 Precision measurements of top quark properties such as mass charge decay modes production characteristics and polarization were reported in over one hundred publications The European Physical Society awarded the 2019 European Physical Society High Energy and Particle Physics Prize to the DO and CDF collaborations for the discovery of the top quark and the detailed measurement of its properties 21 DO s top quark physics group s home pageHiggs boson edit In later years one of the main physics goals of the DO experiment was the search for the Higgs boson which was predicted to exist by the Standard Model but with an unknown mass 22 Before they concluded in 2000 the LEP experiments at CERN had ruled out the existence of such a Higgs boson with a mass smaller than 114 4 GeV c2 23 In 2010 DO and CDF extended the forbidden region to include a window around 160 GeV c2 24 On July 2 2012 anticipating an announcement from CERN of the discovery of the Higgs boson the DO and CDF collaborations announced their evidence at about three standard deviations for Higgs bosons decaying into the dominant b quark final states which indicated that the particle had a mass between 115 and 135 GeV c2 25 On July 4 2012 CERN s ATLAS and CMS experiments announced their discovery of the Higgs boson with a mass of 125 GeV c2 26 The techniques developed at the Tevatron for the Higgs boson searches served as a springboard for subsequent LHC analyses 27 W and Z bosons edit The properties of the W and Z bosons that transmit the weak nuclear force are sensitive indicators of the internal consistency of the Standard Model In 2012 DO measured the W boson mass to a relative precision of better than 0 03 ruling out many potential models of new physics 28 The DO and CDF experiments combined to measure the forward backward asymmetry in the decays of Z bosons the tendency of positive decay leptons to emerge closer to the incoming proton direction more often than negative decay leptons From these asymmetry measurements the weak mixing angle governing the breaking of the electroweak symmetry into distinct electromagnetic and weak forces was measured to a precision of better than 0 15 This result has comparable precision to electron positron collider experiments at CERN and SLAC and helps to resolve a long standing tension between those measurements 29 Bottom and charm quarks edit Although the B factory experiments at KEK SLAC and IHEP in Beijing and the LHCb experiment at CERN have dominated many aspects of the study of hadrons containing b or c quarks DO has made notable contributions using large samples containing all heavy flavor hadrons that can be seen through their decays to muons In July 2006 the DO collaboration published the first evidence for the transformation of the Bs meson containing an anti b quark and a strange quark into its antiparticle The transition occurs about 20 trillion times per second If there were new particles beyond those in the Standard Model this rate would have been modified 30 On May 14 2010 the DO collaboration announced a tendency for b and anti b quarks produced in proton antiproton collisions to lead to a pair of positively charged muons more frequently than a negatively charged pair 31 This tendency together with measurements of single muon asymmetries could help explain the matter antimatter asymmetry responsible for the dominance of matter in the universe 32 Experimental results from physicists at the Large Hadron Collider however have suggested that the difference from the Standard Model is insignificant 33 On June 12 2007 the DO collaboration submitted a paper to Physical Review Letters announcing the discovery of a new particle called the 3b pronounced zigh sub b with a mass of 5 774 0 019 GeV c2 approximately six times the mass of a proton The 3b baryon is made of a down a strange and a bottom quark making it the first observed baryon formed of quarks from all three generations of matter 34 The original quark hypotheses by Murray Gell Mann and George Zweig noted that exotic mesons containing two quarks and two antiquarks instead of just a quark and antiquark are possible Examples were finally observed 40 years later in cases where the exotic meson contains the more distinctive heavy b and c quarks DO has contributed new understanding of these heavy flavor exotic states 35 Strong force edit Quantum chromodynamics QCD is the theory of the strong interaction in which quarks and gluons interact through a quantum property analogous to electric charge for electromagnetism called color QCD makes quantitative predictions for the production of jets collimated sprays of particles evolved from scattered quarks or gluons photons and W or Z bosons D0 published a seminal series of papers investigating jet production as a function of beam energy jet energy and jet production angle consistent with theoretical predictions A noteworthy result in 2012 from DO was the measurement of very high energy jets produced at large scattering angles This occurs when single quarks carry more than half of the energy of their parent proton or antiproton despite the fact that the proton and antiproton are typically built from dozens of quarks and gluons The measurement was in excellent agreement with predictions In a series of publications in which two pairs of jets or photons stemming from two independent scatterings of quarks and gluons within a single proton antiproton encounter were observed the pattern of these rates indicated that the spatial extent of gluons within the proton is smaller than that for quarks 36 Detector editThe DO detector consisted of several sub detectors which were grouped into three shells surrounding the collision point The innermost shell was the Central Tracking System consisting of tracking detectors enclosed in a superconducting magnet These were surrounded by a second shell consisting of calorimeters that measured the energy of electrons photons and hadrons and identified jets of particles arising from scattered quarks and gluons The third shell the muon system had tracking chambers and scintillator panels before and after magnetized solid iron magnets to identify muons The whole detector was enclosed behind a concrete block wall which acted as radiation shields The detector measured about 10m 10m 20m and weighed about 5 500 tons It is preserved in Fermilab s DO Assembly Building as part of a public historical exhibit 37 Central Tracking System edit The central tracking system had two subdetectors for measuring charged particle track positions and a magnetic field to cause tracks to bend thereby allowing a measurement of their momenta The silicon microstrip tracker was located just outside the Tevatron beam pipes Five barrels concentric with the beams and 16 disks with strips perpendicular to the beams provided precision measurements of charged track coordinates These helped to determine particle momenta and to distinguish those particles that emerged from the primary collision point from those that traveled a finite distance before decaying like tau leptons and hadrons containing bottom quarks It consisted of about 800 000 silicon strips of 50 micron width capable of measuring track location to about 10 microns The outer radius of the silicon detectors was limited to 10 cm due to their high cost 38 The silicon microstrip tracker was installed in the detector for the Tevatron Run II collider program which began in 2001 39 It was fully functional by April 2002 40 41 Outside the silicon tracker the cylindrical scintillating fiber tracker occupied the radial region between 20 and 52 cm and 2 5 m along the beam line Particles traversed eight layers of 835 micron diameter scintillating fibers These fibers produced photons when a particle passed through them 42 Light from each of the more than 75 000 fibers was transmitted to solid state sensors that created electronic signals that were digitized and logged The fiber tracker spatial precision was about 100 microns 43 A superconducting solenoid magnet was located just outside the fiber tracker created a 2 T magnetic field in the silicon and fiber tracker volume 44 Calorimeter edit The calorimeter system consisted of three sampling calorimeters a cylindrical Central Calorimeter and two End Calorimeters an intercryostat detector and a preshower detector 45 The job of the calorimeters and associated subdetectors was the measurement of energies of electrons photons and charged and neutral hadrons This was achieved when incident particles traversed multiple layers of dense inert material in which they interacted and created secondary particles All such secondary particles are called a shower The energy of the progenitor particle was shared among many shower particles of much lower energy that ultimately stopped at which point the shower ended Between the layers of the inert material there were detectors in which the ionization of the particles was measured The total ionization signal summed over the shower is proportional to the energy of the progenitor particle 46 A cylindrical layer of scintillator based preshower strips was placed immediately outside the solenoid and read out with fiber tracker sensors Similar preshower detectors capped the ends of the tracking region The material in the solenoid augmented with lead sheets caused primary electrons and photons to begin a shower of secondary particles The preshower detector was thus the first stage of the calorimetry and gave a precise location of the particle impact point A central calorimeter outside and two end calorimeters capping the solenoid contained separate sections for measuring electromagnetic particles and hadrons Uranium was chosen for the inert absorber plates owing to its very high density The active gaps contained liquid argon with a strong electric field applied to collect the ionization of traversing particles on finely segmented planes of copper electrodes These signals were ganged into 50 000 signals that measured the particle energies and the transverse and longitudinal shower shapes which helped identify the particle type Each calorimeter contained about sixty uranium liquid argon modules with a total weight of 240 to 300 metric tons The total thickness of a calorimeter was about 175 cm so as to fully absorb the showers of the most energetic particles from a collision The stainless steel vessels needed to contain the modules at liquid argon temperature 190 C were relatively thick so scintillation detectors were inserted between central and end calorimeters to correct for energy lost in the cryostat walls A primary task for the calorimetry is identification of jets the sprays of particles created as quarks and gluons escape from their collision point Jet identification and measurement of their directions and energies allow analyses to recreate the momenta of the underlying quarks and gluons in the primary collision 47 Muon Detector edit The outermost shell of the detector was for muon detection High energy muons are quite rare and are thus a telltale sign of interesting collisions Unlike most particles they did not get absorbed in the calorimeters so tracks observed beyond the calorimeters were most likely muons Scintillator planes provided a fast signature used to flag interesting events One station of tracking chambers before and two stations after solid iron magnets record the muon tracks The iron of the large central magnet was reclaimed from a NASA cyclotron built to simulate radiation damage in space 48 49 Trigger and DAQ editApproximately 10 million proton antiproton collisions happened every second in the detector Because this far exceeded computing capabilities only a fraction of these events could be stored on tape per second Therefore an intricate Data Acquisition DAQ system was implemented that determined which events were interesting enough to be written to tape and which could be thrown out 50 51 The trigger system used the electronic signals to identify events of interest such as those containing electrons muons photons high energy jets or particles that traveled some distance before decaying The first trigger level used the fast electronic signals from each subdetector to decide within a few microseconds whether to pause data taking and digitize the signals About 10 000 such Level 1 triggers were accepted A second trigger level refined the selection using the digitized signals from several subdetectors in combination to form a more nuanced event profile reducing the candidate event pool to 1000 events per second In the third level a farm of computers analyzed the digital information in a stripped down version of the full offline computer code to yield up to 100 events per second to be permanently recorded and subsequently analyzed on large offline computer farms The operation of the trigger system was a delicate balance between maximizing the number of events saved and minimizing the dead time incurred while collecting them It had to be robust and reliable as the millions of events not selected by the trigger were lost forever 52 References edit LHC sets new world record Press release Geneva Switzerland CERN November 30 2009 Retrieved 2019 05 22 The Shutdown Process Fermilab May 6 2014 Retrieved 2019 05 22 The DZero Exhibit Introduction Fermilab 2014 Retrieved 2019 05 24 The DO Experiment The DO Experiment Fermilab Retrieved 2019 05 22 Lederman Leon March 12 1981 Second Colliding Area PDF FermiNews Vol 4 no 11 Batavia IL Fermilab p 3 Retrieved 2019 05 22 Hoddeson Lillian Kolb Adrienne Westfall Catherine 2008 Fermilab Physics the Frontier amp Megascience Chicago IL University of Chicago Press pp 301 308 ISBN 978 0 226 34624 3 The DZero Exhibit Introduction Fermilab October 2014 Retrieved 2019 06 18 DO Fact Sheet PDF Fermilab October 2014 Retrieved 2019 05 23 Clements Elizabeth April 27 2005 Fermilab s DZero Experiment Crunches Record Data with the Grid Batavia IL Fermilab Retrieved 2019 05 22 Fermilab s Tevatron PDF Fermilab June 2012 Retrieved August 6 2019 Bock Greg July 1 2009 Tevatron Detector Decommissioning Speech Science and Technology Review Fermilab Batavia IL Fermilab Retrieved 2019 06 18 Tevatron Media Fermilab May 6 2014 Retrieved August 6 2019 Snow Joel et al DO Collaboration 2010 Distributed Monte Carlo Production for D0 PDF Journal of Physics Conference Series 219 doi 10 1088 1742 6596 219 7 072018 Grannis Paul September 12 2011 The Physics Legacy of the Tevatron PDF Speech LNS MIT Colloquium Cambridge Massachusetts Retrieved 2019 06 18 Hoddeson Lillian Kolb Adrienne Westfall Catherine 2008 Fermilab Physics the Frontier amp Megascience Chicago IL University of Chicago Press p 343 ISBN 978 0 226 34624 3 Is it the Top Quark Yes PDF FermiNews Vol 18 no 4 Batavia IL Fermilab March 2 1995 Retrieved 2019 05 23 T M Liss P L Tipton 1997 The Discovery of the Top Quark PDF Scientific American 277 3 54 59 Bibcode 1997SciAm 277c 54L doi 10 1038 scientificamerican0997 54 F Abe et al CDF Collaboration 1995 Observation of Top Quark Production in p p Collisions with the Collider Detector at Fermilab Physical Review Letters 74 14 2626 2631 arXiv hep ex 9503002 Bibcode 1995PhRvL 74 2626A doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 74 2626 PMID 10057978 S2CID 119451328 S Abachi et al DO Collaboration 1995 Observation of the Top Quark Physical Review Letters 74 14 2632 2637 arXiv hep ex 9503003 Bibcode 1995PhRvL 74 2632A doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 74 2632 PMID 10057979 S2CID 42826202 V M Abazov et al DO Collaboration 2009 Observation of Single Top Quark Production Physical Review Letters 103 9 092001 arXiv 0903 0850 Bibcode 2009PhRvL 103i2001A doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 103 092001 PMID 19792787 S2CID 14919683 Hesla Leah May 21 2019 European Physical Society gives top prize to Fermilab s CDF DZero experiments for top quark discovery measurements Press release Batavia IL Fermilab Fermilab Retrieved 2019 05 24 Fermilab and the Higgs Boson Fermilab April 28 2014 Retrieved 2019 05 23 ALEPH Collaboration DELPHI Collaboration L3 Collaboration OPAL Collaboration The LEP Working Group for Higgs Boson Searches July 17 2003 Search for the Standard Model Higgs boson at LEP Physics Letters B 565 61 75 arXiv hep ex 0107029 doi 10 1016 S0370 2693 03 00614 2 S2CID 118929428 Aaltonen T et al CDF and DO Collaborations 12 February 2010 Combination of Tevatron searches for the standard model Higgs boson in the W W decay mode Physical Review Letters 104 6 061802 arXiv 1001 4162 Bibcode 2010PhRvL 104f1802A doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 104 061802 PMID 20366812 S2CID 7998819 Tevatron scientists announce their final results on the Higgs particle Press release Batavia IL Fermilab Fermilab July 2 2012 Retrieved 2019 05 23 CERN experiments observe particle consistent with long sought Higgs boson Press release Geneva Switzerland CERN CERN July 4 2012 Retrieved 2019 05 23 Grannis Paul September 16 2009 Tevatron Physics Results the Springboard to the LHC Speech Colloquium University of Michigan Ann Arbor MI Retrieved 2019 06 18 V M Abazov et al DO Collaboration 2012 Measurement of the W Boson Mass with the D0 Detector Physical Review Letters 108 15 151804 1 to 151804 8 arXiv 1203 0293 Bibcode 2012PhRvL 108o1804A doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 108 151804 PMID 22587244 S2CID 1043240 T A Aaltonen et al DO Collaboration and CDF Collaboration 2018 Tevatron Run II combination of the effective leptonic electroweak mixing angle Physical Review D 97 11 112007 arXiv 1801 06283 Bibcode 2018PhRvD 97k2007A doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 97 112007 S2CID 209414466 V M Abazov et al DO Collaboration 2006 Direct limits on the Bs oscillation frequency Physical Review Letters 97 2 021802 arXiv hep ex 0603029 Bibcode 2006PhRvL 97b1802A doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 97 021802 PMID 16907434 S2CID 11632404 V M Abazov et al DO Collaboration 2010 Evidence for an Anomalous Like Sign Dimuon Charge Asymmetry Physical Review Letters 105 8 081801 arXiv 1007 0395 Bibcode 2010PhRvL 105h1801A doi 10 1103 PhysRevLett 105 081801 PMID 20868090 S2CID 118616830 Overbye Dennis May 17 2010 A New Clue to Explain Existence The New York Times archived from the original on January 20 2018 Timmer John August 28 2011 LHCb detector causes trouble for supersymmetry theory Ars Technica archived from the original on February 27 2018 Fermilab physicists discover triple scoop baryon Press release Batavia IL Fermilab Fermilab June 13 2007 Retrieved 2019 05 24 Hesla Leah February 25 2016 Fermilab scientists discover new four flavor particle Symmetry Fermilab and SLAC Retrieved 2019 06 18 V M Abazov et al DO Collaboration 2012 Measurement of the inclusive jet cross section in p pbar collisions at sqrt s 1 96 TeV Physical Review D 85 052006 arXiv 1110 3771 doi 10 1103 PhysRevD 85 052006 S2CID 119265204 Introduction The DZero Experiment Fermilab 2015 Retrieved 2019 05 24 Paul Grannis and Dmitri Denisov June 11 2019 Paul Grannis and Dmitri Denisov on the DO Detector Fermilab History and Archives Fermilab Archived from the original on August 7 2019 Retrieved August 7 2019 Run II Luminosity Fermilab August 15 2006 Retrieved May 24 2019 Burdin Sergey 2005 D0 Silicon Microstrip Tracker PDF Technical report Fermilab FERMILAB CONF 05 515 E Retrieved May 24 2019 The Central Tracking System The DZero Exhibit Fermilab Retrieved May 24 2019 The Central Tracking System Fermilab Retrieved May 24 2019 Paul Grannis and Dmitri Denisov June 11 2019 Paul Grannis and Dmitri Denisov on the DO Detector Fermilab History and Archives Fermilab Archived from the original on August 7 2019 Retrieved August 7 2019 Paul Grannis and Dmitri Denisov June 11 2019 Paul Grannis and Dmitri Denisov on the DO Detector Fermilab History and Archives Fermilab Archived from the original on August 7 2019 Retrieved August 7 2019 The DZero Calorimeter Fermilab Retrieved 2019 05 24 Paul Grannis and Dmitri Denisov June 11 2019 Paul Grannis and Dmitri Denisov on the DO Detector Fermilab History and Archives Fermilab Archived from the original on August 7 2019 Retrieved August 14 2019 Paul Grannis and Dmitri Denisov June 11 2019 Paul Grannis and Dmitri Denisov on the DO Detector Fermilab History and Archives Fermilab Archived from the original on August 7 2019 Retrieved August 14 2019 The DZero Muon System Fermilab Retrieved 2019 05 24 Paul Grannis and Dmitri Denisov June 11 2019 Paul Grannis and Dmitri Denisov on the DO Detector Fermilab History and Archives Fermilab Archived from the original on August 7 2019 Retrieved August 14 2019 Gibbard Bruce October 1992 DO Triggering and Data Acquisition PDF In J R Sanford ed Proceedings 26th International Conference on High energy Physics ICHEP 92 Dallas Texas USA August 6 12 1992 XXVI International Conference on High Energy Physics Dallas Texas August 6 12 1992 Vol 172 AIP pp 1732 1737 Retrieved 2019 05 28 D Chapin et al July 14 2003 The DZERO Level 3 Data Acquistion sic System PDF Proceedings 13th International Conference on Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics CHEP 2003 La Jolla California March 24 28 2003 Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics La Jolla Ca March 24 28 2003 SLAC Retrieved 2019 05 28 Paul Grannis and Dmitri Denisov June 11 2019 Paul Grannis and Dmitri Denisov on the DO Detector Fermilab History and Archives Fermilab Archived from the original on August 7 2019 Retrieved August 14 2019 External links editThe DO Experiment The DO Exhibit Record for DO Experiment Run I on INSPIRE HEP Record for DO Experiment Run II on INSPIRE HEP Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title DO experiment amp oldid 1208669664, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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