Bulletin of the American Physical Society
6th Joint Meeting of the APS Division of Nuclear Physics and the Physical Society of Japan
Sunday–Friday, November 26–December 1 2023; Hawaii, the Big Island
Session DB03: CEU Poster Session & Physical Review Reception (2:00 P.M. - 4:00 P.M. HST)
2:00 PM,
Wednesday, November 29, 2023
Hilton Waikoloa Village
Room: Lagoon Lanai
Chair: Shelly Lesher, University of Wisconsin La Crosse
Abstract: DB03.00003 : Performance evaluation of Mini TPC in CAT-M
Presenter:
Hiroaki Shibakita
(Department of Physics, Osaka University)
Authors:
Hiroaki Shibakita
(Department of Physics, Osaka University)
Shinsuke Ota
(Research Center for Nuclear Physics, Osaka University)
Fumitaka ENDO
(Research Center for Nuclear Physics, Osaka University)
Reiko Kojima
(Center for Nuclear Study, the University of Tokyo)
Atsushi Tamii
(Research Center for Nuclear Physics)
A gaseous active target CAT-M is a TPC developed to realize such measurements by irradiating heavy-ion beams at an intensity up to 1 Mcps. Nuclei of interest enter and react with deuteron which is the nucleus of detector gas. The four momenta of recoil particles are simultaneously measured by CAT-M for missing mass spectroscopy. Our measurements have been done for Kr, Xe, and Sn isotopes at an incident energy of 100 MeV/u.
Such a heavy-ion injection produces a number of delta-rays which causes many noises in an active target. A static magnetic field is formed around the beam axis to remove such noises, so the beam trajectory can’t be detected directly. In addition, the beam itself is also deflected, so it’s necessary to estimate the beam trajectory near the reaction point with a resolution less than 1 mm.
For that purpose, the development of a small TPC called Mini TPC to be placed near the entrance and exit of the field cage is ongoing. Two layers of thick GEMs with a hole diameter of 200 μm and a hole pitch of 500 μm are used as the amplification part of Mini TPC.
In this talk, the structure of Mini TPC and its basic performance such as a bias dependence of gain and charge resolution will be presented.
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