12–23 Jul 2021
Online
Europe/Berlin timezone

Calibration of Aerogel Tiles for the RICH of the HELIX Experiment

16 Jul 2021, 18:00
1h 30m
TBA

TBA

Poster CRD | Cosmic Ray Direct Discussion

Speaker

stephan o'brien (McGill University)

Description

HELIX (High Energy Light Isotope eXperiment) is a balloon-borne instrument designed to measure the chemical and isotopic abundances of light cosmic-ray nuclei. In particular, HELIX is optimized to measure 10Be and 9Be in the range 0.2 GeV/n to beyond 3 GeV/n. To achieve this, HELIX utilizes a 1 Tesla superconducting magnet with a high-resolution gas drift tracking system, time-of-flight detector, and a ring-imaging Cherenkov (RICH) detector. The RICH detector consists of aerogel tile radiators (refractive index ~1.15) with a silicon photomultiplier detector plane. To adequately discriminate between 10Be and 9Be isotopes, the refractive index of the aerogel tiles must be known to a precision of 0.1%. In this contribution, detailed mapping of the refractive index across the aerogel tiles is presented and the methodology used to obtain these measurements is discussed.

Keywords

cosmic ray; RICH; aerogel; Calibration; balloon

Subcategory Experimental Methods & Instrumentation
Collaboration other (fill field below)
other Collaboration HELIX

Primary author

stephan o'brien (McGill University)

Presentation materials