S. Heppelmann
University of Minnesota
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Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 1996
W. W. M. Allison; G. J. Alner; I. Ambats; D. S. Ayres; L. J. Balka; G. Barr; W. L. Barrett; Douglas Benjamin; C. Bode; P. M. Border; C.B. Brooks; J. H. Cobb; D. J. A. Cockerill; K. Coover; R. Cotton; H. Courant; B. Dahlin; U. DasGupta; J. Dawson; D. M. Demuth; V.W. Edwards; B. Ewen; T. Fields; C. Garcia-Garcia; H.M. Gallagher; R.H. Giles; G.L. Giller; M. C. Goodman; R.N. Gray; S. Heppelmann
SOUDAN 2 is a 960-ton tracking calorimeter which has been constructed to search for nucleon decay and other phenomena. The full detector consists of 224 calorimeter modules each weighing 4.3 tons. The design and construction of the modules are described. The modules consist of finely segmented iron instrumented with 1 m long drift tubes of 15 mm internal diameter. The tubes enable three spatial coordinates and dE/dx to be recorded for charged particles traversing the tubes.
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 1985
F. Lobkowicz; G. Ballocchi; G. Chandlee; W. DeSoi; G. Fanourakis; T. Ferbel; P. Gutierrez; J. Huston; A. Lanaro; J. Mansour; N. Mathur; D. Skow; P. Slattery; C. Gupt; A. N. Mitra; R. K. Shivpuri; W. Baker; D. Berg; D. Carey; T. Droege; D. Eartly; H. Johnstad; A. Lennox; C. Nelson; C. Bromberg; D. Brown; R. Miller; K. Heller; S. Heppelmann; T. Joyce
Abstract This paper describes a new liguid argon photon/hadron detector currently under construction for Experiment E706 at the Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory.
Physics Letters B | 1982
S. Cihangir; D. Berg; J. Biel; C. Chandlee; B. Collick; T. Droege; T. Ferbel; S. Heppelmann; J. Huston; T. Jensen; A. Jonckheere; T. Joyce; P. Koehler; F. Lobkowicz; Y. Makdisi; M. L. Marshak; M. McLaughlin; C. Nelson; T. Ohshima; E. A. Peterson; K. Ruddick; M. Shupe; P. Slattery; P. Thompson; M. Zielinski
Abstract Using the Primakoff formalism, we have extracted the radiative decay width of the A + 2 (1310) produced in coherent interactions of 200 GeV/ c π + mesons in nuclear targets. The width obtained is 295 ± 60 keV, a value consistent with quark-model predictions.
European Physical Journal C | 1983
M. Zielinski; D. Berg; C. Chandlee; S. Cihangir; T. Ferbel; J. Huston; T. Jensen; F. Lobkowicz; T. Ohshima; P. Slattery; P. Thompson; B. Collick; S. Heppelmann; M. L. Marshak; E. A. Peterson; K. Ruddick; A. Jonckheere; C. Nelson
We have carried out a systematic study of the coherent dissociation of pions into 3 pions using nuclear targets. The experiment was performed at Fermilab using a high resolution forward spectrometer. Data were taken with carbon, copper and lead targets at an incident momentum of 202.5 GeV/c. Results are presented on momentum transfers, 3-pion masses, and on the nuclearA-dependence of the production cross section.
Physics Letters B | 1991
M. Thomson; J. H. Cobb; W. W. M. Allison; G. J. Alner; I. Ambats; D. S. Ayres; L. J. Balka; G. Barr; W. L. Barrett; Douglas Benjamin; P. M. Border; C.B. Brooks; D. J. A. Cockerill; H. Courant; J. Dawson; V.W. Edwards; B. Ewen; T. Fields; C. Garcia-Garcia; R.H. Giles; G.L. Giller; M. C. Goodman; R.N. Gray; S. Heppelmann; N. Hill; J.H. Hoftiezer; D.J. Jankowski; K. Johns; T. Joyce; T. Kafka
Abstract Muons recorded in the Soudan 2 underground nucleon decay detector from January 1989 to February 1991 have been examined for any correlation with the radio flares of Cygnus X-3 observed during this period. On two nearby days during the radio flare of January 1991 a total of 32 muons within 2.0° of the Cygnus X-3 direction were observed when 11.4 were expected.
European Physical Journal C | 1986
M. Zielinski; D. Berg; C. Chandlee; S. Cihangir; T. Ferbel; J. Huston; T. Jensen; F. Lobkowicz; T. Ohshima; P. Slattery; P. Thompson; B. Collick; S. Heppelmann; M. L. Marshak; E. A. Peterson; K. Ruddick; A. Jonckheere; C. Nelson
AbstractUsing data on coherent production of π+π+π- systems in π+ collisions with nuclei we exclude the existence ofJPC=1−+,I=1, exotic hybrid mesons with masses below 1.5 GeV and widths greater than 20 MeV, provided that their primary coupling is to πρ systems. Hybrid states with just such properties have recently been predicted from arguments based on QCD sum rules. Our experimental limit is based on Primakoff production of these states, and on an argument using vector dominance to relate their radiative widths to πρ channels. There has been increasing interest of late in the existence of hybrid states, which, in the case of mesons, contain a valence gluon in addition to aqn
Physics Letters B | 1981
D. Berg; C. Chandlee; S. Cihangir; T. Ferbel; J. Huston; T. Jensen; F. Lobkowicz; C. A. Nelson; T. Oshima; P. Slattery; P. Thompson; J. Biel; T. Droege; A. Jonckheere; P. F. Koehler; S. Heppelmann; T. Joyce; Y. Makdisi; M. L. Marshak; E. A. Peterson; K. Ruddick; T.F. Walsh
Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research | 1983
C. Nelson; J. Biel; T. Droege; A. Jonckheere; P. F. Koehler; D. Berg; C. Chandlee; S. Cihangir; T. Ferbel; J. Huston; T. Jensen; J. Lebritton; F. Lobkowicz; M. McLaughlin; T. Ohshima; P. Slattery; P. Thompson; C. Bromberg; S.R.W. Cooper; B. Collick; S. Heppelmann; Y. Makdisi; M. L. Marshak; E. A. Peterson; J. Povlis; K. Ruddick; B. Brown; D. Garelick; G. Glass; M. Glaubman
bar q
Physics Letters B | 1982
S. Cihangir; D. Berg; J. Biel; C. Chandlee; B. Collick; T. Droege; T. Ferbel; S. Heppelmann; J. Huston; T. Jensen; A. Jonckheere; T. Joyce; P. Koehler; F. Lobkowicz; Y. Makdisi; M. L. Marshak; M. McLaughlin; C. Nelson; T. Ohshima; E. A. Peterson; K. Ruddick; M. Shupe; P. Slattery; P. Thompson; M. Zielinski
Journal of Physics G | 1991
P. J. Litchfield; W. W. M. Allison; G. J. Alner; I. Ambats; D. S. Ayres; L. J. Balka; G. Barr; W. L. Barrett; Douglas Benjamin; P. M. Border; C.B. Brooks; J. H. Cobb; D. J. A. Cockerill; H. Courant; B. Dahlin; J. W. Dawson; V.W. Edwards; T. Fields; C. Garcia-Garcia; R.H. Giles; M. C. Goodman; R.N. Gray; S. Heppelmann; N. Hill; D.J. Jankowski; K. Johns; T. Kafka; S. M. S. Kasahara; J. Kochocki; N. P. Longley
n pair in a color-octet state [1–5]. The pursuit of spectroscopic gluon degrees of freedom has been strongly motivated by the general QCD picture of hadrons, as well as by many specific calculations based on QCD sum rules, lattice simulations, and more phenomenological approaches such as QCD-bag models. Although much effort, both thoretical and experimental, has been devoted to the spectroscopy of glueballs, for which several candidates exist [6], it has also been realized that hybrid states may be as amenable to discovery, and perhaps less ambiguous to interpretation.