The role of pixel detectors in high energy physics

2016 ◽  
Vol 11 (12) ◽  
pp. C12024-C12024
Author(s):  
A. Seiden
Author(s):  
Richard Healey

The metaphor that fundamental physics is concerned to say what the natural world is like at the deepest level may be cashed out in terms of entities, properties, or laws. The role of quantum field theories in the Standard Model of high-energy physics suggests that fundamental entities, properties, and laws are to be sought in these theories. But the contextual ontology proposed in Chapter 12 would support no unified compositional structure for the world; a quantum state assignment specifies no physical property distribution sufficient even to determine all physical facts; and quantum theory posits no fundamental laws of time evolution, whether deterministic or stochastic. Quantum theory has made a revolutionary contribution to fundamental physics because its principles have permitted tremendous unification of science through the successful application of models constructed in conformity to them: but these models do not say what the world is like at the deepest level.


Author(s):  
G. Deptuch ◽  
M. Demarteau ◽  
J. Hoff ◽  
R. Lipton ◽  
A. Shenai ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 9 ◽  
Author(s):  
Paolo Conci ◽  
Giovanni Darbo ◽  
Andrea Gaudiello ◽  
Claudia Gemme ◽  
Stefano Girardi ◽  
...  

Pixel technology is commonly used in the tracking systems of High Energy Physics detectors with physical areas that have largely increased in the last decades. To ease the production of several square meters of sensitive area, the possibility of using the industrial Wafer Level Packaging to reassemble good single sensor tiles from multiple wafers into a reconstructed full wafer is investigated. This process reconstructs wafers by compression molding using silicon charged epoxy resin. We tested high glass transition temperature low-stress epoxy resins filled with silica particles to best match the thermal expansion of the silicon die. These resins are developed and characterized for industrial processes, designed specifically for fan-out wafer-level package and panel-level packaging. In order to be compatible with wafer processing during the hybridization of the pixel detectors, such as the bump-bonding, the reconstructed wafer must respect challenging technical requirements. Wafer planarity, tile positioning accuracy, and overall thickness are amongst the main ones. In this paper the description of the process is given and preliminary results on a few reconstructed wafers using dummy tiles are reported. Strategies for Wafer Level Packaging improvements are discussed together with future applications to 3D sensors or CMOS pixel detectors.


2005 ◽  
Vol 20 (16) ◽  
pp. 3777-3782 ◽  
Author(s):  
IVAN VITEV

The status of RHIC theory and phenomenology is reviewed with an emphasis on the indications for the creation of a new deconfined state of matter. The critical role of high energy nuclear physics in the development of theoretical tools that address various aspects of the QCD many body dynamics is highlighted. The perspectives for studying nuclear matter under even more extreme conditions at the LHC and the overlap with high energy physics is discussed.


2014 ◽  
Vol 2014 ◽  
pp. 1-25 ◽  
Author(s):  
A. Gabrielli

Modern pixel detectors, particularly those designed and constructed for applications and experiments for high-energy physics, are commonly built implementing general readout architectures, not specifically optimized in terms of speed. High-energy physics experiments use bidimensional matrices of sensitive elements located on a silicon die. Sensors are read out via other integrated circuits bump bonded over the sensor dies. The speed of the readout electronics can significantly increase the overall performance of the system, and so here novel forms of readout architectures are studied and described. These circuits have been investigated in terms of speed and are particularly suited for large monolithic, low-pitch pixel detectors. The idea is to have a small simple structure that may be expanded to fit large matrices without affecting the layout complexity of the chip, while maintaining a reasonably high readout speed. The solutions might be applied to devices for applications not only in physics but also to general-purpose pixel detectors whenever online fast data sparsification is required. The paper presents also simulations on the efficiencies of the systems as proof of concept for the proposed ideas.


2021 ◽  
Vol 12 (2) ◽  
pp. 35-47
Author(s):  
Vitaly Pronskikh

The scientific community engaged in research practices of high-energy physics in megascience laboratories is constituted by various subcommunities. These subcommittees are involved in engineering activities and preoccupied by phenomenal analyses. In recent decades, interdisciplinary accelerator and detector researchers, whose work is rooted in engineering, have replaced the experimentalists and instrumentalists of the 1970s; however, the role of pure theorists has remained essentially unchanged. In this article, the author clarifies the roles and specializations of these groups and explicate community members' blurred professional identities; the emphasis lies on engineering specialists and experimentalists. This research also attempts to clarify the reasons for the substantial imbalance of prestige among groups and how it is associated with access to highly valued epistemic practices such as articulating statements regarding natural phenomena. This paper applies an ethical theory framework to reveal how the lack of access to phenomenal knowledge expression—despite mediated contribution to knowledge production—creates participatory epistemic injustice. Finally, the author suggests ways to address this problem.


2017 ◽  
Vol 12 (06) ◽  
pp. C06009-C06009 ◽  
Author(s):  
S. Terzo ◽  
E. Cavallaro ◽  
R. Casanova ◽  
F. Di Bello ◽  
F. Förster ◽  
...  

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