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Posts Tagged ‘CMS’


Rice physicists prep for Large Hadron Collider upgrade

November 4th, 2015 by geurts

reproduced from Rice News

HOUSTON – (Oct. 30, 2015) – Rice University scientists are preparing to do their part to help dramatically increase the capabilities of the Large Hadron Collider (LHC), the world’s most powerful particle collider. The European Organization for Nuclear Research (CERN), has announced it will move forward on a plan to dramatically increase the LHC’s luminosity, which will boost its ability to discover new elemental particles.

The Rice team led by physicist Karl Ecklund is already thinking hard about what the LHC will require as it ramps up to explore nature by studying its most basic structures. The LHC smashes together protons at near light speed, and the exotic particles that fly from these collisions help physicists answer fundamental questions about matter and the universe. After upgrades are completed in 2025, the LHC will produce 10 times more collisions than it did in 2012. This will allow for more accurate measurements and increase the odds of answering questions about the likes of dark matter and supersymmetry.

“‘Luminosity’ is a word we use in particle physics to characterize how many collisions we have per second,” Ecklund said. Currently, the LHC at full power produces about 1 billion collisions per second. The upgrade, he said, will feed more protons into the energy stream that races around the collider and will use more powerful superconducting magnets to achieve a tighter focus of the stream.

Rice’s part includes the development and construction of improved tracking detectors for the Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS), one of two major experiments attached to the LHC, a 17-mile ring buried beneath land that borders France and Switzerland. The 13,000-ton CMS finds and characterizes the particles produced by collisions.

For many years, Rice physicists and their students have designed and built components for the CMS. Among the debris that spreads from the collisions, they find evidence of particles that may live for only minute fractions of a second, but whose properties, they suspect, allow our universe to appear as we perceive it. The speed, paths and lifespans of these particles provide clues to their identities.

The CMS website describes its detector as “a cylindrical onion” whose various layers can detect different particles. Because the upgraded LHC will produce much more data, the detectors will need to be smarter, said Ecklund, who is co-leading institutional collaborators in the United States working on the tracker upgrade.

He described CMS tracker elements as “fancy versions of a camera detector,” but much larger. Many of these trackers wrap the chamber where collisions happen. “Part of what we need to do is improve the trackers’ ability to select which events (particle detections) we want to keep. The tracker will have some capability of deciding in real time if an event was interesting enough to keep the data.”

The most sought-after particle found so far is the Higgs boson, predicted by the Standard Model of physics but undetected until 2012. The LHC, restarted at greater power for a second “season” this summer, is expected to refine knowledge about the Higgs in the next year or two. Much of that data will come from the CMS.

Ecklund said the latest announcement is the result of the international parties reaching an agreement on how to move forward with the collider’s development, even though many details have yet to be determined. Much of what Ecklund and his colleagues do now will depend on what the LHC finds in the next couple of years.

“The basic idea is to continue searching for particles we don’t know about yet, but also to study the newest stuff, like the Higgs boson, and try to understand what makes it tick,” he said.

He said the LHC was originally geared toward discovering the Higgs. “But it was also designed as a more general-purpose instrument, like the Hubble Space Telescope: ‘Let’s point it out there and see what we find,’” Ecklund said. “We might also have the chance of discovering something new in the next few years, before we get to the upgrade. Whatever that might be, we’d also like to study it.

“We’re hoping we see a host of new and interesting things,” he said. “Every time we’ve probed the Standard Model or other theories, we usually end up answering one question that immediately poses several more. So there’s not ever really an end, usually just a beginning of another chapter of inquiry.”

– See more at: http://news.rice.edu/2015/10/30/rice-physicists-prep-for-large-hadron-collider-upgrade/#sthash.S15nMv9o.dpuf

NPP Seminar by Sandra Padula (Universidade Estadual Paulista, Sao Paolo, Brazil)

April 20th, 2015 by geurts

Date: Monday April 27, 2015  at noon
Location: 227 Herman Brown Hall, Rice University

Title: Bose-Einstein correlations: a means to probe stellar and femto scales
Speaker: Sandra Padula (Universidade Estadual Paulista, Sao Paolo, Brazil)
Abstract:
Bose-Einstein correlations were behind the phenomenon that allowed to estimate star dimensions in the mid-fifties. At the turn of that decade, on a strike of serendipity, a similar phenomenon was discovered in antiproton-proton collisions at the highest available energies at that time.  Ever since, this technique has been applied to very different systems and energies, allowing to study their dimensions. In this talk, an overview of the phenomenon and some examples of the results achieved along decades will be discussed, finalizing with recent results obtained at the LHC.

NPP Seminar by Bora Akgun (Rice)

February 12th, 2015 by geurts

Date: Thursday March 12, 2015  at 4pm
Location: 223 Herman Brown Hall, Rice University

Title: CMS pixel detector phase-1 upgrade
Speaker: Bora Akgun (Rice)
Abstract:
The CMS pixel detector is at the centre of the CMS experiment and is made of three barrel layers and four endcap disks. It is essential for the reconstruction of track seeds and secondary vertices.  The CMS experiment is going to upgrade its pixel detector during Run 2 of the Large Hadron Collider.
The new detector will provide an additional tracking layer and increased rate capability, suitable for the projected instantaneous luminosities of Run 2, well beyond the original design targets of the present pixel detector.

MS Thesis defense Zhenyu Chen

December 17th, 2014 by geurts

Date & Time: December  17, 2014 at 3pm

Location: 223 Herman Brown Hall

The Impact of the US on CMS

March 20th, 2014 by geurts

A couple of videos that advertise the role of the US in CMS  h/t Don Lincoln (FNAL)

 

NPP Seminar by Jay Hauser (UCLA)

March 11th, 2014 by geurts

Date: Tuesday  March 18 at 4:15pm
Location: 223 Herman Brown Hall, Rice University

Title: Physics of the High Luminosity LHC Upgrade
Speaker: Jay Hauser (UCLA)
Abstract: Following the discovery of the Higgs particle at CERN in 2012, a high luminosity upgrade program, HL-LHC, promises 6-10 times more proton-proton collisions than the current LHC accelerator by 2025.  With the increased number of collisions, as well as improvements to the main LHC detectors ATLAS and CMS, comes an improved physics measurement program.  For instance, it should be possible to make more precise measurements of the properties of Higgs and top quark particles, extend the reach of Supersymmetric particle searches, and improve searches in general for physics beyond the standard model. This talk addresses the question of whether the physics potential is worth the very large effort involved in the LHC accelerator and detector improvements.

NPP Seminar by Monika Grothe (CERN)

September 23rd, 2013 by geurts

Date: Friday September 27, 2013 at 1pm
Location: 223 Herman Brown Hall, Rice University

Speaker: Monika Grothe (CERN)
Title:  Luminosity determination for the 2012 pp data in CMS
Abstract:  In this talk, the Van-der-Meer (VdM) scan methodology for absolute luminosity calibration at the LHC will be described, as well as its application to the 2012 pp data taken with CMS. The talk will put some emphasis on systematic effects in the VdM method that became apparent during the 5 VdM scan campaigns carried out in 2012. The obtained luminosity calibration for the 2012 CMS pp data, recently published as CMS PAS LUM-13-001, will be presented as well.

NPP Seminar by Loukas Gouskos (Athens)

September 19th, 2013 by geurts

Date: Friday September 20, 2013 at 1pm
Location: 223 Herman Brown Hall, Rice University

Title:  Search for supersymmetry with the CMS detector in the single lepton + MET + (b-)jets channel
Speaker: Loukas Gouskos (Athens)
Abstract:  Present results from CMS on searches for Supersymmetry in the single lepton channel using 7 and 8 TeV data