Design and status of the Mu2e crystal calorimeter
N. Atanov (1), V. Baranov (1), J. Budagov (1), Yu. I. Davydov (1), V., Glagolev (1), V. Tereshchenko (1), Z. Usubov (1), F. Cervelli (2), S. Di, Falco (2), S. Donati (2), L. Morescalchi (2), E. Pedreschi (2), G. Pezzullo, (2), F. Raffaelli (2), F. Spinella (2), F. Colao (3)

TL;DR
The paper details the design, construction, and testing of the Mu2e crystal calorimeter, which is crucial for particle identification and trigger functions in the search for charged-lepton flavor violation at Fermilab.
Contribution
It introduces the innovative design and testing of the Mu2e calorimeter prototype, demonstrating its performance in timing and energy resolution for 100 MeV electrons.
Findings
Achieved timing resolution better than 0.5 ns
Energy resolution below 10% at 100 MeV
Successful operation of the prototype in beam tests
Abstract
The Mu2e experiment at Fermilab searches for the charged-lepton flavour violating (CLFV) conversion of a negative muon into an electron in the field of an aluminum nucleus, with a distinctive signature of a mono-energetic electron of energy slightly below the muon rest mass (104.967 MeV). The Mu2e goal is to improve by four orders of magnitude the search sensitivity with respect to the previous experiments. Any observation of a CLFV signal will be a clear indication of new physics. The Mu2e detector is composed of a tracker, an electro- magnetic calorimeter and an external veto for cosmic rays surrounding the solenoid. The calorimeter plays an important role in providing particle identification capabilities, a fast online trigger filter, a seed for track reconstruction while working in vacuum, in the presence of 1 T axial magnetic field and in an harsh radiation environment. The…
Peer Reviews
No public reviews on file for this paper yet. If you reviewed it on a platform where reviews are public (OpenReview, ICLR, NeurIPS, ICML), you can paste yours below so the community can read it here.
Videos
No videos yet. Explain this paper in a talk, walkthrough, or lecture? Add one.
