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Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2014

The PHENIX forward silicon vertex detector

C. Aidala; L. Anaya; Eric Anderssen; A. Bambaugh; A. Barron; J. G. Boissevain; J. Bok; S. Boose; M. L. Brooks; S. Butsyk; Mario Cepeda; P. Chacon; S. Chacon; L. Chavez; T. Cote; C. D׳Agostino; A. Datta; K. DeBlasio; L. DelMonte; E. J. Desmond; J.M. Durham; D. E. Fields; M. Finger; C. Gingu; B. Gonzales; J. S. Haggerty; T. Hawke; H. W. van Hecke; M. Herron; J. Hoff

Abstract A new silicon detector has been developed to provide the PHENIX experiment with precise charged particle tracking at forward and backward rapidity. The Forward Silicon Vertex Tracker (FVTX) was installed in PHENIX prior to the 2012 run period of the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider (RHIC). The FVTX is composed of two annular endcaps, each with four stations of silicon mini-strip sensors, covering a rapidity range of 1.2 | η | 2.2 that closely matches the two existing PHENIX muon arms. Each station consists of 48 individual silicon sensors, each of which contains two columns of mini-strips with 75xa0μm pitch in the radial direction and lengths in the ϕ direction varying from 3.4xa0mm at the inner radius to 11.5xa0mm at the outer radius. The FVTX has approximately 0.54xa0million strips in each endcap. These are read out with FPHX chips, developed in collaboration with Fermilab, which are wire bonded directly to the mini-strips. The maximum strip occupancy reached in central Au–Au collisions is approximately 2.8%. The precision tracking provided by this device makes the identification of muons from secondary vertices away from the primary event vertex possible. The expected distance of closest approach (DCA) resolution of 200xa0μm or better for particles with a transverse momentum of 5xa0 GeV/ c will allow identification of muons from relatively long-lived particles, such as D and B mesons, through their broader DCA distributions.

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A. Barron

University of New Mexico

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A. Datta

University of New Mexico

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C. Aidala

Los Alamos National Laboratory

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C. D׳Agostino

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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D. E. Fields

University of New Mexico

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E. J. Desmond

Brookhaven National Laboratory

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Eric Anderssen

Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

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