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Real-time antiproton annihilation vertexing with sub-micron resolution

Authors :
Berghold, M.
Orsucci, D.
Guatieri, F.
Alfaro, S.
Auzins, M.
Bergmann, B.
Burian, P.
Brusa, R. S.
Camper, A.
Caravita, R.
Castelli, F.
Cerchiari, G.
Ciuryło, R.
Chehaimi, A.
Consolati, G.
Doser, M.
Eliaszuk, K.
Ferguson, R.
Germann, M.
Giszczak, A.
Glöggler, L. T.
Graczykowski, Ł.
Grosbart, M.
Gusakova, N.
Gustafsson, F.
Haider, S.
Huck, S.
Hugenschmidt, C.
Janik, M. A.
Januszek, T.
Kasprowicz, G.
Kempny, K.
Khatri, G.
Kłosowski, Ł.
Kornakov, G.
Krumins, V.
Lappo, L.
Linek, A.
Mariazzi, S.
Moskal, P.
Nowicka, D.
Pandey, P.
Pęcak, D.
Penasa, L.
Petracek, V.
Piwiński, M.
Pospisil, S.
Povolo, L.
Prelz, F.
Rangwala, S. A.
Rauschendorfer, T.
Rawat, B. S.
Rienäcker, B.
Rodin, V.
Røhne, O. M.
Sandaker, H.
Sharma, S.
Smolyanskiy, P.
Sowiński, T.
Tefelski, D.
Vafeiadis, T.
Volponi, M.
Welsch, C. P.
Zawada, M.
Zielinski, J.
Zurlo, N.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

The primary goal of the AEgIS experiment is to precisely measure the free fall of antihydrogen within Earth's gravitational field. To this end, a cold ~50K antihydrogen beam has to pass through two grids forming a moir\'e deflectometer before annihilating onto a position-sensitive detector, which shall determine the vertical position of the annihilation vertex relative to the grids with micrometric accuracy. Here we introduce a vertexing detector based on a modified mobile camera sensor and experimentally demonstrate that it can measure the position of antiproton annihilations with an accuracy of $0.62^{+0.40}_{-0.22}\mu m$, which represents a 35-fold improvement over the previous state-of-the-art for real-time antiproton vertexing. Importantly, these antiproton detection methods are directly applicable to antihydrogen. Moreover, the sensitivity to light of the sensor enables the in-situ calibration of the moir\'e deflectometer, significantly reducing systematic errors. This sensor emerges as a breakthrough technology for achieving the \aegis scientific goals and has been selected as the basis for the development of a large-area detector for conducting antihydrogen gravity measurements.<br />Comment: 21 pages, 4 figures, 2 tables

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2406.16044
Document Type :
Working Paper