English

Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors on CMOS technologies

Instrumentation and Detectors 2022-03-30 v2 High Energy Physics - Experiment Nuclear Experiment

Abstract

Collider detectors have taken advantage of the resolution and accuracy of silicon detectors for at least four decades. Future colliders will need large areas of silicon sensors for low mass trackers and sampling calorimetry. Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors (MAPS), in which Si diodes and readout circuitry are combined in the same pixels, and can be fabricated in some of standard CMOS processes, are a promising technology for high-granularity and light detectors. In this paper we review 1) the requirements on MAPS for trackers and electromagnetic calorimeters (ECal) at future colliders experiments, 2) the ongoing efforts towards dedicated MAPS for the Electron-Ion Collider (EIC) at BNL, for which the EIC Silicon Consortium was already instantiated, and 3) space-born applications for MeV γ\gamma-ray experiments with MAPS based trackers (AstroPix).

Keywords

Cite

@article{arxiv.2203.07626,
  title  = {Monolithic Active Pixel Sensors on CMOS technologies},
  author = {Nicole Apadula and Whitney Armstrong and James Brau and Martin Breidenbach and R. Caputo and Gabriella Carinii and Alberto Collu and Marcel Demarteau and Grzegorz Deptuch and Angelo Dragone and Gabriele Giacomini and Carl Grace and Norman Graf and Leo Greiner and Ryan Herbst and Gunther Haller and Manoj Jadhav and Sylvester Joosten and Christopher J. Kenney and C. Kierans and Jihee Kim and Thomas Markiewicz and Yuan Mei and Jessica Metcalfe and Zein-Eddine Meziani and Tim K. Nelson and Chao Peng and Giovanni Pinaroli and Paul E. Reimer and Lorenzo Rota and Marshall Scott and Julie Segal and Ernst Sichterman and Nikolai Sinev and A. Steinhebel and David Strom and Alessandro Tricoli and Caterina Vernieri and Charles Young and Maria Zurek},
  journal= {arXiv preprint arXiv:2203.07626},
  year   = {2022}
}

Comments

25 pages, 18 figures, contribution to Snowmass 2021

R2 v1 2026-06-24T10:13:25.898Z