Material for speakers: Difference between revisions
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Vincenzo Cirigliano, Ryuichiro Kitano, Yasuhiro Okada, and Paula Tuzon, Phys. Rev. D 80, 013002 (2009)
PIP-II public web site
E. Pozdeyev, Rare Processes and Precision Frontier Town Hall (2020)
[3] "Pion-production target design for Mu2e-II: status update" 1st Muon Community Meeting (2021)
[4] "Early considerations for muon collider targetry at CERN"
"Design and studies for the Mu2e-II tracker", DPF 2021 [5]
COMET tracker (2020 NIM) [6]
COMET tracker (2016 slides) [7]
[8] "A Novel Scintillator Detector for the Mu2e-II Experiment and a Muon Tomography Probe of the Interior of the Great Pyramid"
[9] Muon-ion collider for BNL (2021)
[10] Mu2e-II Snowmass 22 Letter of Interest (2020)
[11] 1st muon community meeting (CERN), 20-21 May 2020
[12] Mu2e-II theory Snowmass 22 Letter of Interest (2020)
[13] COMET Phase-I TDR (2020)
[14] Muon colliders (2019)
[15] Mu2e-II Expression of Interest (2018)
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electron spectrum from muon decays in orbit (DIOs). The red curves show the conversion electron spectrum for the | electron spectrum from muon decays in orbit (DIOs). The red curves show the conversion electron spectrum for the | ||
values of <math>R_{\mu e}</math> indicated in the legends. | values of <math>R_{\mu e}</math> indicated in the legends. | ||
In more detail: (left) Simulation of the energy distributions of electrons from conversion and the high energy tail of DIO's, for Mu2e. The assumption is 6. | In more detail: (left) Simulation of the energy distributions of electrons from conversion and the high energy tail of DIO's, for Mu2e. The assumption is <math>6.7\times10^{17)</math> stopped muons and a conversion electron (CE) rate of 1e-16. The electron energies are broadened by energy straggling in the stopping target and the Inner Proton Absorber, and by energy straggling and multiple scattering in the Tracker; | ||
(center) Simulation of the energy distributions of electrons from conversion and the high energy tail of DIO's, for Mu2e-II. The assumption is 1e19 stopped muons and a CE rate of 1e-17. The energy resolution is assumed to be the same as that expected for Mu2e. There is now a substantial overlap between the DIO background and the CE signal; | (center) Simulation of the energy distributions of electrons from conversion and the high energy tail of DIO's, for Mu2e-II. The assumption is 1e19 stopped muons and a CE rate of 1e-17. The energy resolution is assumed to be the same as that expected for Mu2e. There is now a substantial overlap between the DIO background and the CE signal; | ||
(right) Simulation of the energy distributions of electrons from conversion and the high energy tail of DIO's, for Mu2e-II. The assumption is 1e19 stopped muons and a CE rate of 1e-17. The energy resolution is assumed to be the x2 better than Mu2e (a goal of Mu2e-II). | (right) Simulation of the energy distributions of electrons from conversion and the high energy tail of DIO's, for Mu2e-II. The assumption is 1e19 stopped muons and a CE rate of 1e-17. The energy resolution is assumed to be the x2 better than Mu2e (a goal of Mu2e-II). |
Revision as of 15:46, 28 July 2021
Mu2e
Mu2e public results and material for speakers
Theory
References
PIP-II accelerator
Beamline
Production target
Production solenoid
Tracking
References
Calorimeter
Cosmic Ray Veto
The Mu2e-II Cosmic Ray Veto will need to cope with roughly a factor 3 higher instantaneous rates from accelerator compared with Mu2e as well as a factor of three higher live time (i.e., cosmic rays), because of the higher duty factor for Mu2e-II compared with Mu2e.