The MATHUSLA Test Stand
Abstract
The rate of muons from LHC collisions reaching the surface above the ATLAS interaction point is measured and compared with expected rates from decays of and bosons and - and -quark jets. In addition, data collected during periods without beams circulating in the LHC provide a measurement of the background from cosmic ray inelastic backscattering that is compared to simulation predictions. Data were recorded during 2018 in a 2.5 2.5 6.5~ active volume MATHUSLA test stand detector unit consisting of two scintillator planes, one at the top and one at the bottom, which defined the trigger, and six layers of RPCs between them, grouped into three -measuring layers separated by 1.74 m from each other. Triggers selecting both upward-going tracks and downward-going tracks were used.
Keywords
Cite
@article{arxiv.2005.02018,
title = {The MATHUSLA Test Stand},
author = {Maf Alidra and Cristiano Alpigiani and Austin Ball and Paolo Camarri and Roberto Cardarelli and John Paul Chou and David Curtin and Erez Etzion and Ali Garabaglu and Brandon Gomes and Roberto Guida and W. Kuykendall and Audrey Kvam and Dragoslav Lazic and H. J. Lubatti and Giovanni Marsella and Gilad Mizrachi and Antonio Policicchio and Mason Proffitt and Joe Rothberg and Rinaldo Santonico and Yiftah Silver and Steffie Ann Thayil and Emma Torro-Pastor and Gordon Watts and Charles Young},
journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2005.02018},
year = {2020}
}
Comments
18 pages, 11 figures, 1 table