Beam tests of a large-scale TORCH time-of-flight demonstrator
/ Authors
T. Hancock, S. Bhasin, T. Blake, N. Brook, T. Conneely, D. Cussans, R. Forty, C. Frei, E. Gabriel, R. Gao
and 9 more authors
T. Gershon, T. Gys, T. Hadavizadeh, N. Harnew, M. Kreps, J. Milnes, D. Piedigrossi, J. Rademacker, M. Dijk
/ Abstract
Abstract The TORCH time-of-flight detector is designed to provide particle identification in the momentum range 2 − 10 GeV∕c over large areas. The detector exploits prompt Cherenkov light produced by charged particles traversing a 10 mm thick quartz plate. The photons propagate via total internal reflection and are focused onto a detector plane comprising position-sensitive Micro-Channel Plate Photo-Multiplier Tubes (MCP-PMT) detectors. The goal is to achieve a single-photon timing resolution of 70 ps , giving a timing precision of 15 ps per charged particle by combining the information from around 30 detected photons. The MCP-PMT detectors have been developed with a commercial partner (Photek Ltd, UK), leading to the delivery of a square tube of active area 53 × 53 mm 2 with a granularity of 8 × 128 pixels equivalent. A large-scale demonstrator of TORCH, having a quartz plate of dimensions 660 × 1250 × 10 mm 3 and read out by a pair of MCP-PMTs with custom readout electronics, has been verified in a test beam campaign at the CERN PS. Preliminary results indicate that the required performance is close to being achieved. The anticipated performance of a full-scale TORCH detector at the LHCb experiment is presented.
Journal: Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A: Accelerators, Spectrometers, Detectors and Associated Equipment