The SeaQuest spectrometer at Fermilab
Abstract
The SeaQuest spectrometer at Fermilab was designed to detect oppositely-charged pairs of muons (dimuons) produced by interactions between a 120 GeV proton beam and liquid hydrogen, liquid deuterium and solid nuclear targets. The primary physics program uses the Drell-Yan process to probe antiquark distributions in the target nucleon. The spectrometer consists of a target system, two dipole magnets and four detector stations. The upstream magnet is a closed-aperture solid iron magnet which also serves as the beam dump, while the second magnet is an open aperture magnet. Each of the detector stations consists of scintillator hodoscopes and a high-resolution tracking device. The FPGA-based trigger compares the hodoscope signals to a set of pre-programmed roads to determine if the event contains oppositely-signed, high-mass muon pairs.
- Publication:
-
Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research A
- Pub Date:
- June 2019
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 2019NIMPA.930...49A
- Keywords:
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- SeaQuest;
- E906;
- Drell-Yan;
- Spectrometer;
- J / ψ;
- Muon