Difference between revisions of "EG1BFragmentationTestTalk"

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One can conclude from the above Figure that the inclusive corrections do not impact a single pion production for the exclusive cases.<br>
 
One can conclude from the above Figure that the inclusive corrections do not impact a single pion production for the exclusive cases.<br>
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=Asymmetries=
  
 
[https://wiki.iac.isu.edu/index.php/Delta_D_over_D Go Back]
 
[https://wiki.iac.isu.edu/index.php/Delta_D_over_D Go Back]

Revision as of 19:33, 29 May 2012

Fragmentation Test

The goal of this work is to measure the fragmentation function dependence on the Bjorken scaling variable ([math]x_b[/math]) and the four momentum transfer squared ([math]Q^2[/math]) as well as evaluate the independence of the fractional energy of the observed final state hadron ([math]z[/math]). The fragmentation function ([math]\Delta R_{np}^{\pi^+ + \pi^-}[/math] ) can be expressed in terms of the ratio of the difference of polarized to unpolarized cross sections for the semi inclusive deep inelastic scattering for proton and neutron targets.

[math]\Delta R_{np}^{\pi^+ + \pi^-} = \frac{\Delta \sigma_p^{\pi^+ + \pi^-} - \Delta \sigma_{n}^{\pi^+ + \pi^-}}{\sigma_p^{\pi^+ + \pi^-} - \sigma_{n}^{\pi^+ + \pi^-}}[/math]


Data Files

The data files from the EG1b experiment chosen for this analysis are listed below

Run Set Target Type Torus Current(A) Target Polarization Half Wave Plane(HWP)
28100 - 28102 ND3 +2250 -0.18 +1
28106 - 28115 ND3 +2250 -0.18 -1
28145 - 28158 ND3 +2250 -0.20 +1
28166 - 28190 ND3 +2250 +0.30 +1
28205 - 28217 NH3 +2250 +0.75 +1
28222 - 28236 NH3 +2250 -0.68 +1
28242 - 28256 NH3 +2250 -0.70 -1
28260 - 28275 NH3 +2250 +0.69 -1
28287 - 28302 ND3 -2250 +0.28 +1
28306 - 28322 ND3 -2250 -0.12 +1
28375 - 28399 ND3 -2250 +0.25 -1
28407 - 28417 NH3 -2250 +0.73 -1
28456 - 28479 NH3 -2250 -0.69 +1
EG1b Runs used for Analysis (Run Sets, Target Type, Torus Current, Target Polarization, HWP).


Electron-Pion separation

The CLAS trigger system is a coincidence of the negatively charged particle track detected in the electromagnetic calorimeter and cherenkov counter in [math]150 ns[/math] time window. Unfortunately, a background of high energy negative pions may be misidentified as electrons. These pions are mis-identified as electrons due to quasi-real photoproduction, when the polar angle of the scattered lepton is approximately zero and is not accounted by the CLAS detector. The pion contamination of the electron sample is reduced using cuts on the energy deposited in the electromagnetic calorimeter and the momentum measured in the track reconstruction for the known magnetic field. The energy deposition mechanism for the pions and electrons in the electromagnetic calorimeter is different. The total energy deposited by the electrons in the EC is proportional to their kinetic energy, whereas pions are minimum ionizing particles and the energy deposition is independent of their momentum. The pion background is further supressed using, geometrical and time matching between the cherenkov counter hit and the measured track in the drift chamber.

Figure 2.1 Example of electron passing through the drift chambers and creating the signal in the cherenkov counter and electromagnetic calorimeter. Electron track is highlighted by the blue line (Run number 27095, Torus Current +2250 (inbending)).


EC Cuts

The energy deposited in the calorimeter for electrons and pions is different. Pions are minimum ionizing charged particles when their momentum is above ~ 0.8 GeV and therefore the energy they deposit in the calorimeter is momentum independent. On the other hand, electrons produce photoelectrons and generate an electromagnetic shower releasing energy into the calorimeter that is proportional to their momentum. The following cut is introduced to take advantage of this feature: [math]EC_{total}\gt 0.2*p[/math]. The cut was also applied to the energy collected in the inner part of the calorimeter: [math]EC_{inner}\gt 0.06*p[/math] , because the ratio of the total energy deposited to the energy deposited in the inner calorimeter depends on the thickness of the detector and is a constant.

Before cuts.
After EC cuts.


[math]EC_{inner}/p[/math] vs [math]EC_{tot}/p[/math] before and after EC cuts ([math]EC_{tot}\gt 0.2p[/math], for EC inner - [math]EC_{inner}\gt 0.08p[/math]). After applying EC cuts about 46 % of the events have been removed from the electron sample.


Cherenkov Cuts

In addition to the cut on the energy deposited into the electromagnetic calorimeter, misidentified electrons are reduced by requiring a signal in the threshold CLAS Cherenkov detector. Pion's misidentified as electrons have been shown to produce around ~1.5 photoelectons (PEs) in the Cherenkov detector, as shown below. Geometrical cuts on the location of the particle at the entrance to the Cerenkov detector were applied to reduce the pion contamination. The second histogram below shows that, after these cuts, the peak around 1.5 PEs is substantially reduced. It appears, that pion contamination in electron sample is [math]9.63 % \pm 0.01 %[/math] before applying the hard cut on the number of photoelectrons produced in the cherenkov counter and after [math]nphe\gt 2.5[/math] cut contamination is about [math]4.029% \pm 0.003[/math].

Before Cuts.
After OSI Cuts.


The number of photoelectrons before and after OSI Cuts.


SIDIS Analysis

Inclusive Electron Detection Efficiency

WInclusiveoverlay4-2GeVfcup.gif


A comparison of the Inclusive electron rates observed in the scintillator paddles that will be used to reconstruct electrons for SIDIS events.


Ratios of the inclusive electron rate, normalized using the gated faraday cup, of scintillator paddles 5 and 10 were measured. The two ratios are constructed to quantify the CLAS detectors ability to observe the same electron kinematics in scintillator paddle #5 for a positive Torus polarity and scintillator #10 using the negatie Torus polarity.

[math]\frac{ND3,B\gt 0, PaddleNumber^{e^-}=5}{ND3,B\lt 0, PaddleNumber^{e^-}=10}=1.57 \pm 0.16[/math]


[math]\frac{NH3,B\gt 0, PaddleNumber^{e^-}=5}{NH3,B\lt 0, PaddleNumber^{e^-}=10}=1.76 \pm 0.17[/math]


Notice the above ratios are statistically the same. The semi-inclusive analysis to be performed in this thesis will be taking ratios using an ND3 and and NH3 target. Below is the observed ratio comparing the inclusive electrons observed in scintillator #5 for a positive torus polarity and ND3 target to the electrons observed in scintillator #10 when the torus polarity is negative and the target is NH3.

[math]\frac{ND3,B\gt 0, PaddleNumber^{e^-}=5}{NH3,B\lt 0, PaddleNumber^{e^-}=10}=1.55 \pm 0.15[/math]


The above ratios, which have been observed to be ammonia target independent, indicate a difference in an electron detector efficiency when the Torus polarity is flipped. An electron detection efficiency "correction coefficient" is defined in terms of the above ratio and measured to be [math]\frac{ND3,B\gt 0,E_{PaddleNumber}=5}{NH3,B\lt 0,E_{PaddleNumber}=10} = 0.645[/math] and [math]\frac{ND3,B\lt 0,E_{PaddleNumber}=10}{NH3,B\gt 0,E_{PaddleNumber}=5} = 1.82[/math]. The impact of these corrections on the data is illustrated in the next section.

Exclusive Event Reconstruction Efficiencies

The MAID 2007 model has predictions of the total cross section for the following two cases, that are related to our work:

[math]\gamma^*[/math] + proton[math](NH_3) \rightarrow[/math] [math]\pi^+[/math] + neutron


[math]\gamma^*[/math] + neutron[math](ND_3) \rightarrow[/math] [math]\pi^-[/math] + proton


Maid2007minusexperiment.png


The difference between the measured [math]\pi^-[/math] to [math]\pi^+[/math] exclusive ratio to the ratio predicted by MAID 2007.


One can conclude from the above Figure that the inclusive corrections do not impact a single pion production for the exclusive cases.

Asymmetries

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