The Heavy Photon Search Test Detector
Marco Battaglieri, Sergey Boyarinov, Stephen Bueltmann, Volker, Burkert, Andrea Celentano, Gabriel Charles, William Cooper, Chris Cuevas,, Natalia Dashyan, Raffaella DeVita, Camille Desnault, Alexandre Deur, Hovanes, Egiyan, Latifa Elouadrhiri, Rouven Essig, Vitaliy Fadeyev

TL;DR
The paper describes the design, implementation, and performance of the HPS Test Run apparatus, a detector system aimed at searching for heavy photons via electron-positron pairs, demonstrating technical feasibility for future experiments.
Contribution
It introduces the HPS Test Run detector setup, including its silicon tracker and calorimeter, and validates its performance for heavy photon searches at JLab.
Findings
Successful demonstration of detector performance and trigger rates.
Effective identification of e+e- pairs with displaced vertices.
High-rate data acquisition system validated for future runs.
Abstract
The Heavy Photon Search (HPS), an experiment to search for a hidden sector photon in fixed target electroproduction, is preparing for installation at the Thomas Jefferson National Accelerator Facility (JLab) in the Fall of 2014. As the first stage of this project, the HPS Test Run apparatus was constructed and operated in 2012 to demonstrate the experiment's technical feasibility and to confirm that the trigger rates and occupancies are as expected. This paper describes the HPS Test Run apparatus and readout electronics and its performance. In this setting, a heavy photon can be identified as a narrow peak in the ee invariant mass spectrum, above the trident background or as a narrow invariant mass peak with a decay vertex displaced from the production target, so charged particle tracking and vertexing are needed for its detection. In the HPS Test Run, charged particles are…
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