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Ingen lysbildetittel

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Title: Ingen lysbildetittel


1
Large Hadron Collider og ATLAS _at_ CERN
2
Part 1 LHC and LHC startup
Accelerator was proposed during the
eighties Project approved in 1994.
3
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4
Some parameters
  • 9600 magnets, out of which 1232 are large dipole
    magnets
  • Dipole current 11850 A
  • Magnetic field 8,33T
  • Proton energy 7 TeV
  • 120 Tonnes of Helium used to cool a mass of
    30000 tonnes.

5
more parameters
  • Vacuum tube pressure10-13 atm
  • Vacuum also serves as heat insulation, so in
    total there is 9000 cubic meters of vacuum.

Price 4.6 GCHF 25GNOK (Only the construction)
(how much per physicist per year?)
6
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7
What happened on Sept 10th?
It took an hour for the beam to make a full
turn
Thats just 27 km/h????.
8
tertiary collimators 140 m
BPTX 175 m
ATLAS was ready for first beam
Two LHC start-up scenarios
  • Muon system (MDT, RPC, TGC) on at reduced HV
  • LAr (-FCAL HV), Tile on
  • TRT on, SCT reduced HV, Pixel off
  • BCM, LUCID, MinBias Scint. (MBTS), Beam pickups
    (BPTX)
  • L1 trigger processor, DAQ up and running, HLT
    available (but used for streaming only)
  • Open all collimators, go around as far as beam
    goes, correct as needed
  • Little activity expected except for accidents
  • Go step-by-step, stopping beam on collimators,
    re-align with centre, open collimator, keep going
  • Splash event from collimators for each beam shot

9
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10
Black holes in LHC?
  • Black holes could, in principle, be arbitrarily
    small. However, according to standard General
    Relativity, there is no chance to prodce black
    holes at the LHC, since conventional
    gravitational forces between fundamental
    particles are too weak.
  • There is no established quantum theory for
    gravitation (certainly needed for small ones).
  • Some quantum gravity proposals (involving more
    than 3 spacial dimensions) make speculative
    predictions on production of black holes in
    proton.proton collisions at LHC
  • But in these models they are always unstable,
    both because of Hawking radiation, and because
    they always can decay back into the particles
    that produced them.
  • (Im of course brainwashed by the Cern/LHC Safety
    Assesment Group, Ellis,Guidice,Mangano,Tkachev,Wie
    demann, CERN-PH-TH/2008-136)

11
Cosmic rays
  • have produced high energy proton-proton
    collisions for billions of years.
  • We are still here.

12
LHC ENERGY
From Ellis et al Review of the Safety of LHC
Collisions CERN-PH-TH/2008-136
13
LHC
Preparing for this talk last Friday I looked at
some plots monitoring the magnet temperatures. I
found
This
..and this
14
Geneva, 20 September 2008. During commissioning
(without beam) of the final LHC sector (sector
34) at high current for operation at 5 TeV, an
incident occurred at mid-day on Friday 19
September resulting in a large helium leak into
the tunnel. Preliminary investigations indicate
that the most likely cause of the problem was a
faulty electrical connection between two magnets,
which probably melted at high current leading to
mechanical failure. CERN s strict safety
regulations ensured that at no time was there any
risk to people. A full investigation is underway,
but it is already clear that the sector will have
to be warmed up for repairs to take place. This
implies a minimum of two months down time for LHC
operation. For the same fault, not uncommon in a
normally conducting machine, the repair time
would be a matter of days. Further details will
be made available as soon as they are known.
15
ATLAS in Bergen
  • Silicon detectors and detector modules for the
    track reconstruction system.
  • Simulation studies of the physics potential.
  • Development work for the detector control systems
    and online monitoring.
  • The daily running of the experiment
  • Study the data

16
ATLAS
SCT
17
The SemiConductor Tracker (SCT)
18
Some numbers(Atlas in Bergen)
  • 10 master students already completed
    ATLAS-related theses
  • 3 completed PhDs
  • 4 active doctoral students
  • 5 active master students
  • 2 postdocs (Burgess, Sandaker)
  • 3 professors (Eigen,Lipniacka,Stugu)
  • ATLAS was about 50 of the experimental groups
    activities Now it is about 80 (Theory research
    of Per Osland not included in above figures)

19
Detector control system (DCS) and online
monitoring
The development of monitoring tools represents a
large amount of work!
20
The running of ATLAS

One shift pr. day (on average) must be taken by a
Bergen person.
Data quality shifts Good for students!
21
SCT, ROS and ID global monitoring shifters
Heidi supervises Katarina and Ole (from Oslo)
22
Many Bergen people are involved in the
development of monotoring tasks. Everybody will
take shifts during ATLAS operation
  • Developers Heidi Sandaker, Arshak Tonyan, Alex
    Kastanas...
  • Bergen shifts are organised by Therese Sjursen.
    She and two new master students are currently at
    Cern for shifts ( Keep detector alive and study
    cosmic rays)

23
What do the ATLAS events look like?
Quark jets in reality
24
H ?ZZ?µµee
25
Event with Supersymmetric Particles Six jets of
particles, Two muons with momenta in the
transverse direction of 74 and 84 GeV. They are
visible in the side view going to the left, but
not in the end view (because the exited the
detector in the forward direction). They have
opposite signs. Missing energy in the direction
transverse to the beam of 283 GeV. (Dark
matter???)
26
Except for a few scenarios, the identification of
Higgses and/or Supersymmetry or other new physics
will be a painstaking process.
  • Events from new physics are likely to be rare.
  • Missing energy signals requires careful
    calibration and proper accounting for escaping
    standard particles like neutrinos.
  • Must focus on abundant and known processes in the
    beginning.
  • B-mesons (quark-antiquark pairs where one of the
    quarks is a b-quark)
  • Z,W bosons
  • top quarks
  • Results from such studies will also give new
    insights that can be published. (In particular
    about strange B-mesons and the top quark)

27
Physics activities (present and planned for the
near future)
  • B-physics with muons.
  • In particular Bs mesons
  • adds to the wealth of data collected by BaBaR on
    ordinary B-mesons, vital to understand
    CP-violation.
  • Physics involving the tau lepton
  • Identification procedures (more difficult than
    muons and electrons, but a number of interesting
    signatures involve the tau lepton.
  • Z?t t ( Light Higgses also decay to two taus)
  • W?t? (SUSY also often have taus and missing
    energy)
  • Top quark decays (these always involve W mesons
    and b-quarks (i.e. B-mesons). top quark decays
    also will produce the Standard Model physics
    signals with the highest energies

28
Verification of track fitting procedures by
reconstructing mass of the J/psi
t
Maren Ugland, Master thesis, (main study was to
reconstruct Bs mesons)
29
SUSY signals with taus(Simulation study by
Therese Sjursen)
30
Conclusion
  • After a very promising start of the LHC, we are
    now set back a few months due to a quench.
  • Winter shutdown Beams back in 2009.
  • Bergen takes an active part in the running of
    ATLAS, and will do so also in the future.
  • Aim is to contribute very actively to studies
    related to muon and tau identification, with
    physics goals within B-physics and searches for
    supersymmetric events and higgs particles
    decaying to these particles.
  • first thing find and understand standard
    processes such as
  • J/psi -gt µ µ
  • B-decays
  • Z -gt µ µ , t t
  • top quak decays
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