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Subject: sPHENIX HCal discussion
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- From: eric mannel <mannel AT bnl.gov>
- To: sphenix-hcal-l AT lists.bnl.gov
- Subject: Re: [Sphenix-hcal-l] One more thing
- Date: Mon, 24 Oct 2016 16:31:26 -0400
John- We have seen the "light" now to figure out the response on the
electronics end. Just to add to the rhetoric, thanks for a great time in Ames this past weekend; looking forward to the next one, just not during the Winter, Tornado season, humid period. Conditions this time were as close to perfect as one might expect. Eric
On 10/24/16 2:48 PM, John Lajoie wrote:
Hi John, Wow, I wouldn't have thought that would be a significant effect! We have a number of things that are all pointing towards
more light - new tiles, magnetic field effect. It's a good
situation to be in, I suppose, but this is all going to
complicate getting the gains right to avoid saturation. John On 10/24/2016 12:30 PM, John Haggerty
wrote:
Thanks again to John Lajoie for organizing the weekend get-away to Ames. There was one other thing I meant to move from my notebook to the record, which has to do with the effect of magnetic field on scintillator. There are other references out there, but this is a good starting point: Maurizio Bertoldi, Daniel R. Green, Vasken Hagopian, John Marraffino, Anatoly Ronzhin, James Thomaston, Scintillators in magnetic fields up to 20 T, Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A: Accelerators, Spectrometers, Detectors and Associated Equipment, Volume 386, Issue 2, 1997, Pages 301-306, ISSN 0168-9002, http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/S0168-9002(96)01178-3. (http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0168900296011783) Abstract: Plastic scintillators and wavelength shifting fibers have been placed in magnetic fields of up to 20 T and the change in light yield measured. The light yield in scintillators increases at very low magnetic fields and continues to increase with increasing field until saturation at about 2 T. The maximum increase is between 6% and 8%, depending on the plastic composition. This increase is due to the polymer and not due to the dyes (fluors) used in the scintillators. No change of light yield due to magnetic fields has been observed in wavelength shifting fibers. There's a magnet in Instrumentation that I think we could use to see what the effect on our tiles is so we know what to expect. --
John Lajoie Professor of Physics Iowa State University
(515) 294-6952 lajoie AT iastate.edu Contact me: john.lajoie _______________________________________________ Sphenix-hcal-l mailing list Sphenix-hcal-l AT lists.bnl.gov https://lists.bnl.gov/mailman/listinfo/sphenix-hcal-l -- Eric J. Mannel, Ph.D. PHENIX Group Physics Dept. Brookhaven National Laboratory 631/344-7626 (Office) 914/659-3235 (Cell) |
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[Sphenix-hcal-l] One more thing,
John Haggerty, 10/24/2016
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Re: [Sphenix-hcal-l] One more thing,
John Lajoie, 10/24/2016
- Re: [Sphenix-hcal-l] One more thing, eric mannel, 10/24/2016
- Re: [Sphenix-hcal-l] One more thing, woody, 10/24/2016
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Re: [Sphenix-hcal-l] One more thing,
John Lajoie, 10/24/2016
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