Thursday, January 31, 2013

1301.7225 (A. M. Baldini et al.)

MEG Upgrade Proposal    [PDF]

A. M. Baldini, F. Cei, C. Cerri, S. Dussoni, L. Galli, M. Grassi, D. Nicolò, F. Raffaelli, F. Sergiampietri, G. Signorelli, F. Tenchini, D. Bagliani, M. De Gerone, F. Gatti, E. Baracchini, Y. Fujii, T. Iwamoto, D. Kaneko, T. Mori, M. Nishimura, W. Ootani, R. Sawada, Y. Uchiyama, G. Boca, P. W. Cattaneo, A. de Bari, R. Nardò, M. Rossella, M. Cascella, F. Grancagnolo, A. L'Erario, A. Maffezzoli, A. Miccoli, G. Onorato, G. Palamà, M. Panareo, A. Pepino, S. Rella, G. F. Tassielli, G. Zavarise, G. Cavoto, A. Graziosi, G. Piredda, E. Ripiccini, C. Voena, D. N. Grigoriev, F. Ignatov, B. I. Khazin, A. Popov, Yu. V. Yudin, T. Haruyama, S. Mihara, H. Nishiguchi, A. Yamamoto, M. Hildebrandt, P. -R. Kettle, A. Papa, F. Renga, S. Ritt, A. Stoykov, T. I. Kang, G. Lim, W. Molzon, Z. You, N. Khomutov, A. Korenchenko, N. Kravchuk, N. Kuchinksy
We propose the continuation of the MEG experiment to search for the charged lepton flavor violating decay (cLFV) \mu \to e \gamma, based on an upgrade of the experiment, which aims for a sensitivity enhancement of one order of magnitude compared to the final MEG result, down to a $6 \times 10^{-14}$ level. The key features of this new MEG upgrade is an increased rate capability of all detectors to enable running at the intensity frontier, while also improving the energy, angular and timing resolutions, for both the positron and photon arms of the detector. On the positron-side a new low-mass, single volume, high granularity tracker is envisaged, in combination with a new highly segmented, fast timing counter array, to track positron from a thinner stopping target. The photon-arm, with the largest liquid xenon (LXe) detector in the world, totalling 900 l, will also be improved by increasing the granularity at the incident face, by replacing the current photomultiplier tubes (PMTs) with a larger number of smaller photosensors and optimizing the photosensor layout also on the lateral faces. A new DAQ scheme involving the implementation of a new combined readout board capable of integrating the various functions of digitization, trigger capability and splitter functionality into one condensed unit, is also under development. We describe here the status of the MEG experiment, the scientific merits of the upgrade and the experimental methods we plan to use.
View original: http://arxiv.org/abs/1301.7225

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