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Within this thesis, the mechanical integration of the Micro Vertex Detector (MVD) of the Compressed Baryonic Matter (CBM) experiment is developed. The CBM experiment, which is being set up at the future FAIR facility, aims to investigate the phase diagram of strongly interacting matter in the regime of high net-baryon densities and moderate temperatures. Heavy-ion collisions at beam energies in the range of 2 to 45 AGeV, complemented by results from elementary reactions, will allow access to these conditions. The experiments conducted at LHC (CERN, Switzerland) and at RHIC (BNL, USA = does not apply within the Beam Energy Scan program) so far focus on the investigation of the phase diagram in the regime of high temperatures and vanishing net-baryon densities. The high beam intensities provided by FAIR will enable CBM to focus its experimental program on systematical studies of rare particles. Among other particle species, open charm-carrying particles are one of the most promising observables to investigate the medium created in heavy-ion collisions since their charm quarks are exposed to the medium and traverse its whole evolution. The fact that the decay particles of these rare observables are also produced abundantly in direct processes in heavy-ion collisions results in a huge combinatorial background which attributes specific requirements to the detector systems. The call for a high interaction rate leads to a cutting-edge detector system which provides an excellent spatial resolution, thin detector stations and the capability to cope with the induced radiation as well as the high rate of traversing particles and the resulting track density. The required demands are to be implemented by the MVD which will be equipped with four planar stations positioned at 50, 100, 150 and 200 mm downstream the target. The geometrical acceptance, which has to be covered with charge-sensitive material, is defined according to the requirements of CBM in the polar angle range of [2.5°; 25°]. The MVD stations have to contribute as little as possible to the overall material budget. The expected beam intensity and the vicinity close to the target require silicon detectors that provide a hardness against non-ionizing radiation of more than 10^13 n_eq/cm² and against ionizing radiation of more than 1 Mrad. In addition, the read-out time of the sensors has to be as short as possible to avoid potential ambiguities in the particle tracking caused by the pile-up of hits having emerged from different collisions. For the time being, Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors (MAPS) offer the optimal choice of technology required to address the physics program of CBM with respect to the spectroscopy of open charm and di-electrons. The geometrical properties of these sensors define the layout of the detector. To limit the multiple scattering of the produced particles inside the geometrical acceptance, the sensors and the MVD have to operate in a moderate vacuum. The sensors are thinned down to a thickness of 50 µm and, to achieve a maximum polar angle coverage, they are glued onto both sides of dedicated thin carriers. These carriers, which are made of highly thermally conductive materials such as CVD diamond or encapsulated TPG, allow efficient extraction of the power produced in the sensors. This enables their operation at temperatures well below 0 °C as suggested by corresponding radiation hardness studies. Dedicated actively cooled aluminum-based heat sinks are positioned outside of the acceptance to dissipate the heat produced by the sensors and the front-end electronics. The design of the MVD, including the realistic thicknesses of the integrated materials, has been developed and refined in the context of this thesis. It has been transformed into a unique software model which is used to simulate and further optimize the mechanical and thermal properties of the MVD, as well as in sophisticated physics simulations. The model allowed evaluation of the material budget of each individual MVD station in its geometrical acceptance. The calculated averaged material budget values stay well below the material budget target values demanded by the physics cases. The thermal management of the MVD has been simulated on the level of a quadrant of each MVD station – four identically constructed quadrants are forming an MVD station – taking into account material properties of the sensors, the glue and the sensor carrier. The temperature gradients across the pixels of a given sensor area in the direction of the rows and columns were found to be in an acceptable range of below 5 K. A temperature difference between the thermal interface area and the maximum sensor temperature of dT = 5 K on the first and a value of dT = 40 K on the fourth MVD station has been thermally simulated assuming a sensor power dissipation of 0.35 W/cm², highlighting the need to optimize the thermal interface between the involved materials as well as the power dissipation of the sensors. The feasibility of several key aspects required for the construction phase of the MVD has been investigated within the MVD Prototype project. The construction of the MVD Prototype allowed evaluation, testing and validation of the handling and the double-sided integration of ultra-thin sensors – the required working steps for their integration have been specified, evaluated and successfully established – as well as their operation in the laboratory and during a concluding in-beam test using high-energetic pions provided by the CERN-SPS. The thermal characterization of the MVD Prototype during its operation – in a temperature range from [5 °C; 25 °C], not in vacuum – confirmed the corresponding thermal simulations conducted during its design phase and substantiated the results of the thermal simulations for the design of the MVD. The aim of a material budget value of only x/X_0 ~ 0.3% for the MVD Prototype has been accomplished. Analyzing the in-beam data, the nominal sensor performance parameters were successfully reproduced, demonstrating that the proposed integration process does not impair the sensors’ performance. Moreover, no evidence of potential impact on the sensors’ performance arising from mechanical weaknesses of the MVD Prototype mechanics has been found within the analyzed data. Based on the MVD Prototype and the simulations of the material budget as well as the thermal management, this thesis evaluated the work packages, procedures and quality assurance parameters needed to set up the starting version of the MVD and addressed open questions as well as critical procedures to be studied prior to the production phase of the detector, emphasizing the evaluation of the cooling concept in vacuum and the integration of sensors in ladder structures on both sides of the quadrants of the MVD stations.
In this thesis we have studied the physics of different ultracold Bose-Fermi mixtures in optical lattices, as well as spin 1=2 fermions in a harmonic trap. To study these systems we generalized dynamical mean-field theory for a mixture of fermions and bosons, as well as for an inhomogeneous environment. Generalized dynamical mean-field theory (GDMFT) is a method that describes a mixture of fermions and bosons. This method consists of Gutzwiller mean-field for the bosons, and dynamical mean-field theory for the fermions, which are coupled on-site by the Bose-Fermi density-density interaction and possibly a Feshbach term which converts a pair of up and down fermions into a molecule, i.e. a boson. We derived the self-consistency equations and showed that this method is well-controlled in the limit of high lattice coordination number z. We develop real-space dynamical mean-field theory for studying systems in an inhomogeneous environment, e.g. in a harmonic trap. The crucial difference compared to standard DMFT is that we are taking into account that different sites are not equivalent to each other and thus take into account the inhomogeneity of the system. Different sites are coupled by the real-space Dyson equation. ...
Im Rahmen dieser Arbeit wurden Protonen an im Raum ausgerichteten D2-Molekülen gestreut. Ziel war es nach möglichen Interferenzstrukturen in der Streuwinkelverteilung der Projektile zu suchen. Solche Interferenzstrukturen sind durch die Theorie vorhergesagt. Sie sind in Analogie zur Beugung am Doppelspalt ein Ergebnis der kohärenten Streuung des Projektils an den beiden Kernen des D2-Moleküls. Für den Reaktionskanal des Elektroneneinfangs mit gleichzeitiger Dissoziation des Moleküls mit einer Energie zwischen 4 und 7eV zeigen die experimentellen Daten tatsächlich ein Minimum an etwa der vorhergesagten Stelle. Dieses Minimum variiert mit der Orientierung der Molekülachse allerdings nicht ganz, wie aufgrund der Analogie zum Doppelspalt zu erwarten ist. Für den gleichzeitig im Experiment beobachteten Kanal der Transferionisation, der zu einer Fragmentenergie von etwa 9eV führt, wurden im Experiment keine Modulation der Streuverteilung beobachtet. Der beobachtete Reaktionskanal der Dissoziation wirft weitere Fragen auf, die über das einfache Doppelspalt-Bild hinausgehen. So kann das dissoziierende D2-Ion sowohl in einem geraden als auch in einem ungeraden Zustand seiner elektronischen Wellenfunktion zurückbleiben. Diese Symmetrie der elektronischen Wellenfunktion beeinflusst ebenfalls die Phase der gestreuten Welle. Eine zuverlässige Vorhersage des zu erwartenden Kontrastes des Interferenzmusters hängt von der relativen Stärke der Anregung in den geraden und ungeraden Zustand ab. Dieser Effekt ist bisher nicht in den theoretischen Modellen berücksichtigt. Diese Frage kann aber auch durch weitere Experimente geklärt werden. Im Rahmen einer anderen Diplomarbeit [Wim04] wurde ein sehr ähnliches Experiment vermessen: Ein einfach geladenes Wasserstoffmolekülion wird beschleunigt, stößt mit einem nahezu ruhenden Atom und fängt dabei ein Elektron ein. Durch den Elektroneneinfang geht das Molekül u. a. in einen 1ssu-Zustand über, der zur Dissoziation führt. Genau wie in diesem Experiment auch, kann dadurch die Molekülachse festgehalten werden. Betrachtet man in der Auswertung die Bewegung beider Teilchen in inverser Kinematik, d.h. lässt man das neutrale Atom auf das Molekül zufliegen, so zeigen sich in der Impulsverteilung des Rückstoßions (Atomions) Minima und Maxima, deren Position sich mit der Drehung des Moleküls ändert. Dies bestätigt eigentlich die Existenz von Interferenzen. Nur wird hier, wie bereits gesagt, die inverse Kinematik betrachtet, zudem vermisst man eigentlich den umgekehrten Übergang vom 1ssg-Zustand des Molekülions in den 1ssu-Zustand des Moleküls. Um theoretische Berechnungen jedoch direkt zu bestätigen, ist es durchaus erstrebenswert, die Kinematik wie hier in dem hier vorgestellten Experiment zu vermessen. Aus diesem Grund werden in nächster Zeit noch weitere Messungen vorgenommen, in denen mit gleichem Aufbau, jedoch mit einer niedrigeren Projektilenergie (10 keV - 25 keV), die gleiche Reaktion untersucht wird. Mit der niedrigeren Energie des Projektils soll eine sehr viel bessere Streuwinkelauflösung erreicht werden, so dass sie die Beobachtung möglicher Interferenzen definitiv nicht mehr begrenzt. Dadurch können zum einen die Ergebnisse dieser Arbeit auf ihre Richtigkeit überprüft werden. Wenn tatsächlich Interferenzstrukturen zu beobachten sind, zeigen zum anderen eventuelle Veränderungen, ob eine Analogie zum Doppelspalt gerechtfertigt ist.
Higher-order effects are calculated in the framework of the eigenchannel theory for elastic and inelastic electron-nucleus scattering in the energy region 100≤E≤250 MeV. A dispersion effect of about 12% is found for the elastic scattering on Ni58 at a momentum transfer q≈500 MeV/c. For inelastic scattering, the reorientation effect is discussed, in addition to the dispersion effect. The total higher-order effect changes the form factor for a hindered first-order transition by 50% at its minima. Furthermore, the dependence of the higher-order effects on the transition potentials of the virtual excitations, the model dependence, and the dependence on the energy E of the electron and the momentum transfer q are discussed. A closed formula for the S matrix is developed by calculating the eigenchannels in stationary perturbation theory.
The ALICE Collaboration is collecting data with both Minimum Bias and Muon triggers with pp collisions at √s = 13 TeV in the ongoing LHC Run II. An excellent performance of tracking and PID in the central barrel and in the muon spectrometer has been obtained. First results on the charged-particle pseudorapidity density and on identified particle transverse momentum spectra at √s = 13 TeV is presented.
ALICE is the dedicated heavy-ion experiment at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN. After a two-year long shutdown, the LHC restarted its physics programme in June 2015 with proton-proton collisions at √s = 13 TeV and Pb-Pb collisions at √sNN = 5.02 TeV, the highest centre-of-mass energy ever reached in laboratory. Recent results and future perspective for ALICE will be presented.
Measurements of the transverse momentum spectra of light flavor particles at intermediate and high pT are an important tool for QCD studies. In pp collisions they provide a baseline for perturbative QCD, while in Pb–Pb they are used to investigate the suppression caused by the surrounding medium. In p–Pb collisions, such measurements provide a reference to disentangle final from initial state effects and thus play an important role in the search for signatures of the formation of a deconfined hot medium. While the comparison of the p–Pb and Pb–Pb data indicates that initial state effects do not play a role in the suppression of hadron production observed at high pT in heavy ion collisions, several measurements of particle production in the low and intermediate pT region indicate the presence of collective effects.
The present status in the field of strange mesons in nuclei and neutron stars is reviewed. In particular, the K̅N interaction, that is governed by the presence of the Λ(1405), is analyzed and the formation of the K̅NN bound state is discussed. Moreover, the properties of K̅ in dense nuclear matter are studied, in connection with strangeness production in nuclear collisions and kaon condensation in neutron stars.
We discuss the behavior of dynamically-generated charmed baryonic resonances in matter within a unitarized coupled-channel model consistent with heavy-quark spin symmetry. We analyze the implications for the formation of D-meson bound states in nuclei and the propagation of D mesons in heavy-ion collisions from RHIC to FAIR energies.