Overview 1 Stony Brook High Energy Collider Group Overview P. Grannis Nov. 19, 2009
Jan 27, 2016
Overview 1
Stony Brook High Energy Collider Group Overview
P. Grannis Nov. 19, 2009
Overview 2
Outline
The people
Past experimental program
Proposed program
Proposal budget overview
Overview 3
The group
Stony Brook HEP has two component groups –
A. The Neutrino and Nucleon Decay group funded by DOE Chang Kee Jung (Prof), Clark McGrew (Assoc Prof), Peter Paul (Dist.
Prof emeritus), currently working on SuperKamiokande, T2K, and planning for future large underground H2O Cerenkov detector.
HE and NN groups are closely allied intellectually and share technical and administrative services, seminars etc., but are distinct in scientific personnel and experiments.
The NSF and DOE high energy collider groups are fully unified, working on both ATLAS and DØ with common tasks, analyses, student supervision etc.
B. High Energy Collider group with portions funded by NSF and DOE – the focus of this review
(Mike Marx is part of the HE group; now Associate Provost for Brookhaven Affairs and not currently working on High Energy experiments.
Overview 4
Senior personnel
R. Engelmann Professor ATLAS NSF
P. Grannis * Dist. Prof. emeritus DØ (ILC) NSF
J. Hobbs Professor DØ, ATLAS DOE
R. McCarthy Professor DØ, ATLAS NSF
M. Rijssenbeek Professor DØ, ATLAS DOE
D. Schamberger † Sr. Scientist DØ, ATLASNSF
D. Tsybychev Assistant Professor DØ, ATLAS NSF
Red – NSF support; Blue – DOE support
* Grannis is retired from University academic appointment and holds Research Prof. appointment; support requested at 25% of full time.
† Schamberger is on a State University line, reimbursed for 65% of salary by grant funds.
Overview 5
Current High Energy funding
In current year, we have 3 separate NSF grants, proposed to be merged into a single new grant:
a) Grannis PI: (Engelmann, McCarthy, Schamberger) – 3 yr 2007–10 ($880K)
b) Grannis PI: supplement to previous 3 year grant ($205K)
c) Tsybychev PI: 1 year grant 2009 – 2010 ($140K)
DOE HE Collider task – Rijssenbeek, Hobbs ($461K)
Also have special NSF funds through Columbia ($66K) and BNL MoU
funds for ATLAS postdoc support ($20K)
Tsybychev has proposed a DOE Early Career Award (~$150K/yr for 5
yrs)
Overview 6
Postdocs
Atlas
Ashfaq Ahmad NSF calorimeter calibration
Carolina Deluca-Silberberg NSF pixels
Erik Devetak NSF just starting (pixels)
Alexander Khodinov DOE muon detector
Adam Yurkewicz NSF calorimeter commissioning
DØ
Subhendu Chakrabarti NSF Higgs searches (ILC)
Junjie Zhu DOE W mass, EW physics, STT
Overview 7
Students (advisors)
ATLASRegina Caputo (JH) DOE calorimeter calibration, (W/Z+jets? DØ?)Burton DeWilde (DT) NSF silicon strips, pixels (W+heavy flavor)Jason Farley (RE) NSF calorimeter calibration (W/Z+jets) Jet Goodson (RM) NSF calorimeter commissioning, Susy trileptonsJulia Gray (MR) DOE calorimeter calibration (W/Z+jets)David Puldon* (DT/RM) NSF silicon strip testing (W/Z+jets)John Stupak* (MR/DT) NSF silicon pixels
DØFeng Guo (MR) DOE W/Z mass ratioJun Guo † (RM) NSF W massRafael Lopes de Sa* (JH) DOE W massEmanuel Strauss† (JH/PG) NSF Higgs search Katy Tschann-Grimm (PG) NSF Higgs search (was ATLAS calorimeter studies)
* Not yet Ph.D. candidate † just completed Recent students: Thioye (AtlasYale/Atlas); Herner(D0Michigan/D0); Strauss(D0SLAC/Atlas); Jun Guo(D0Columbia/Atlas)
Overview 8
Staff
We have technical and administrative staff who serve the combined NN and Collider groups.
Jack Steffens – technician Jack is on a State line, reimbursed by grants at the xx% level. The source of grant funds is adjusted annually dependent on the projects he is working on. Most recently he has spent most of his time on T2K POD detectors
Kim Kwee Ng – computer professional. Kim is 100% on a State line; he has departmental duties, but spends about 75% of his time supporting our computing operation.
Joan Napolitano – Administrative assistant who manages personnel and grant activities for NN, Collider and X-ray groups
Jennifer Flynn – Administrative assistant part time; procurements, travel.
(Dean Schamberger (co-PI on NSF Collider grant) is on a State line, reimbursed by grant funds at the 65% level. He provides computing and software service to the Department as a whole.)
In 2006, we lost the services of our electronics engineer to budget restrictions.
Overview 9
Some past experiments
CERN ISR (Pisa Stony Brook) – total XS, inclusive production, high pT
FNAL – p/ d bubble chamber
CESR CUSB – Upsilon studies
FNAL E288, E494, E605 – 2 arm spectrometer: dileptons, dihadrons
BNL – anomalous single electrons, dileptons, charm search
BNL – quasi elastic p and elastic e scattering
FNAL – DØ
SuperKamiokande – neutrino oscillations, proton decay
KEK - K2K: KEK to SuperK neutrino oscillations
JPARC -T2K: Tokai to SuperK neutrino oscillations
CERN - ATLAS
(Red: active)
Overview 10
Recent SB hardware project leadership
Pisa Stony Brook: luminosity spectrometer and detector – Finocchiaro,
Grannis
E494: first ring imaging Cerenkov detector -- McCarthy
BNL: anomalous dileptons – EM trigger -- Grannis
DØ: central drift chamber (Run I) – Finocchiaro, Rijssenbeek
DØ: liquid argon calorimeter assembly, commissioning – McCarthy
DØ: LAr calorimeter electronics -- Schamberger
DØ: silicon track trigger (Run II) -- Hobbs
DØ: preshower trigger (Run II) -- Grannis
DØ: layer 0 silicon detector (Run II) -- Tsybychev
ATLAS: LAr calorimeter high voltage feedthroughs – McCarthy, Rijssenbeek
T2K: near detector – McGrew, Jung
Overview 11
DØ leadership roles
Spokesman (1983 – 93), co-spokesman (1993 – 96) (Grannis)
Physics Coordinator (Hobbs, 2004 – 06)
Physics group conveners direct all analyses in five (Run I) or six (Run II) groups. We have held several of these responsibilities:
DØ Institutional Board chair (Grannis 1998 – 2000)
Electroweak (Rijssenbeek, 1992 – 94) QCD (McCarthy 1995 – 97) New phenomena (Hobbs 1995 – 97) Higgs (Hobbs 2001 – 03) b-Physics (Tsybychev 2007 – 2009) Electroweak (Zhu 2008 - )
Overview 12
Some SB physics highlights
Discovery of Upsilon 1S, 2S, 3S – Jostlein, (McCarthy)
Discovery of pp total cross section rising with √s † - Finocchiaro, Grannis
Unsplitting the A2 -- Kirz, Finocchiaro
Discovery of Upsilon 4S§ - Lee-Franzini, Schamberger
Discovery of top quark* - Grannis, Hobbs, Rijssenbeek et al.
First evidence of BS mixing - Tsybychev
Discovery of b - Tsybychev
Best current measurement of MW – Hobbs, McCarthy, Rijssenbeek
First observation of atmospheric neutrino oscillations – McGrew, Jung
† Pisa-Stony Brook and CERN-Rome jointly; §CLEO and CUSB jointly; *CDF and DØ jointly;
Overview 13
ILC activities
We expect that the discoveries at the LHC will need further study with a lepton collider, in which the character of these discoveries can be more completely understood. Grannis has played several leadership roles in developing the ILC as the next step for particle physics beyond the LHC. Initial co-chair of Americas LC steering group ILCSC (international steering group) ITRP technology choice group (warm vs. cold) White papers on ILC physics capabilities ILC parameters specification committee Chair of GDE Director search IDAG detector advisory group to validate detectors for inclusion in 2012 TDR DOE OHEP program manager for ILC 2005 - 07
Wrote papers outlining a plan for ILC running in a physics-rich scenario and on how to disentangle Susy states in data.
Chakrabarti developed tau identification (, , l) tools enabling determination of polarization for the SiD letter of intent.
Overview 14
Interactions between DOE and NSF collider groups The two portions of the collider group work together very closely on DØ
and ATLAS – we share the mentoring of students and postdocs and often collaborate on the same hardware and physics projects.
Weekly video meetings of both ATLAS and DØ groups (SB/CERN and SB/FNAL). All DOE and NSF faculty, postdocs and students participate with a weekly in-depth talk by one person and brief status reports by all.
Recent examples of Stony Brook DOE/NSF collaboration:
DØ W mass measurement: DOE supported faculty, postdoc, student & NSF faculty, student.
DØ Higgs searches: DOE side did h()b Susy H/A and SM Z()H(bb) (with partial supervision by NSF side) and NSF side did H() W/Z(qq). People worked closely together.
DØ ZZ production; jet energy resolution improvement
ATLAS calorimeter HV system, commissioning, calibration.
Overview 15
Recent DØ & ATLAS activities covered in this review
ATLASLAr calorimeter high voltage system (McCarthy)Calorimeter commissioning (Yurkewicz) EM calorimeter calibrations (Engelmann)Pixel commissioning and monitoring (Deluca-Silberberg)Forward muon chambers (Rijssenbeek)Upgrade pixel Inner B Layer planning (Tsybychev)
DØ Calorimeter operations (Schamberger)Layer Ø silicon strips (Tsybychev)W mass, width (McCarthy)Higgs searches (Chakrabarti, Hobbs)Dibosons (Hobbs)b-physics (Tsybychev)Leptoquarks, Jet energy resolution, Editorial boards (Grannis)
Gauging the group’s ability to carry out the proposed program is based on past performance.
Overview 16
Proposed 3 year program - DØ
DOE and Fermilab have stated their firm intent to run CDF/DØ through Sept. 2011. We expect that by the end of the run, 12 fb-1 of data will be delivered (10 fb-1 to analyses). We can foresee scenarios in which a run in FY12 would be desirable. We intend to continue our DØ involvement at approximately the current level through the end of the Tevatron running.
Schamberger is the leading expert on the DØ LAr calorimeter operation. He will continue to be responsible for solving new problems and keeping the calorimeter running efficiently and precisely calibrated.
We will focus on two high priority DØ physics topics, continuing past work:(a) The Tevatron W mass measurements are presently the least restrictive components in constraining the SM. With the full data set, we expect to reach MW=16 MeV per expt (12 MeV Tevatron avg, 10 MeV World avg). LHC will have difficulty matching this precision! When the Higgs is discovered, its mass – in conjunction with W mass, top mass and Z observables – can tell us whether it is SM or something else. This is one of the primary Tevatron legacy measurements.
Overview 17
(b) The SM Higgs is now ruled out for MH<114 GeV (LEP) and for 160-170 GeV (Tevatron). Precision EW measurements strongly favor the lower end of the allowed range between 114 and 160 GeV which is the most difficult for LHC to reach. With 10 fb-1, Tevatron can rule out MH < 200 GeV where it does not exist.
10 fb-1
We will continue our present search for low mass Higgs in the jj final state. With a new student replacing Strauss, we intend to pursue one of the other low mass searches (the choice to be made on where we can maximally impact the Higgs searches).
Proposed 3 year program - DØ
Overview 18
Proposed 3 year program - ATLAS
In ATLAS, our current hardware responsibilities for the LAr calorimeters and silicon pixel detector will govern our initial efforts. Through our past accomplishments, we are well positioned to bring these detectors into routine operation quickly and to obtain accurate calibrations and algorithms for EM energy scale, missing ET, and b-tagging algorithms.
These activities lead us naturally to high priority physics topics. The initial effort will be on measurement of SM processes to verify that the analysis chain is robust. We will first concentrate on two topics: (a) measurements of W/Z inclusively, and with jets, and (b) multi-lepton production. The former allow confrontation of data with MC event generators where the latter are currently flawed and improvement in understanding QCD. The latter opens a window for Susy gaugino searches using the trilepton channels.
Subsequently we will extend to measurements of W/Z + heavy flavor jets. These QCD processes are the main backgrounds to many rare processes (top, Higgs, Susy, strong coupling, extra dimensions …). These measurements lead naturally to dedicated searches for new phenomena involving final states with W/Z and heavy quarks.
Overview 19
We expect upgrades to ATLAS to begin in the next three year grant period. ATLAS has internally approved a new inner layer of silicon pixels to be inserted inside the existing pixel detectors prior to the main LHC and ATLAS upgrades. This addition will occur before the main SLHC and detector upgrades. We have agreed to contribute to this IBL project, bringing the experience we gained from the DØ Layer 0 detector inserted within the pre-existing silicon strip detectors, as well as our involvement in the initial ATLAS pixel detector operation. Our focus will be on chip and sensor stave testing and development of simulation tools to evaluate and compare a range of design alternatives. We are collaborating with LBNL and SLAC on this project.
Further in the future, we expect upgrades of the LHC to higher luminosity which will necessitate major upgrades to the tracking system, with replacement of inner silicon strips by pixels and the outer TRT with silicon strips. We have tested prototype strip sensors in Stony Brook, and will continue to play a role in developing the silicon strip upgrades.
Proposed 3 year program - ATLAS
Overview 20
Overview of proposed budget Senior scientist salaries: 2 months summer for academic faculty;
25% time for Grannis; 65% of full salary for Schamberger.
Postdocs: 5 (1 DØ, 4 ATLAS) up 1 from past due to adding new faculty
Students: 7 (2 DØ, 5 ATLAS) up 1 from past due to adding new faculty
Staff: portion of administrative staff & technician, prorated across groups
Domestic travel, foreign travel, M&S, maintenance agreements taken from average expenditure over past 5 years.
Equipment: 2 server computers for ATLAS, 1 for D0. Other equipment requested to enable ATLAS pixel chip and stave testing and development.
Assume 3% year COL increases in out-year salaries except for students (recently raised), for travel and M&S. COL increase in SWF, travel, M&S partially offset by front-end loading of Equipment purchases.
Fringe rates at established campus rates.
Overhead at 75% off campus/25% on campus rates.
Overview 21
budget
(yr1)
fract of
total Atlas D0 ILC E&O
5 Senior personnel salaries $194,980 0.139 $55,687$109,18
1 $5,307 $24,805
5 Postdoc salaries $250,236 0.178
$200,374 $44,876 $4,986 $0
Technical staff salaries $6,000 0.004 $6,000 $0 $0 $0
7 Graduate Student stipends $168,350 0.120 $96,200 $72,150 $0 $0
Administrative staff salaries $30,337 0.022 $18,202 $12,135 $0 $0
Total Salaries and Wages $649,903 0.463
$376,464
$238,342 $10,293 $24,805
Total Fringe Benefits $180,792 0.129
$108,269 $63,919 $2,719 $5,885
Total SWF $830,695 0.591
$484,732
$302,261 $13,012 $30,690
Dzero Disk Server $5,000 $0 $5,000 $0 $0
Disk Server and CPU for ATLAS $5,000 $5,000 $0 $0 $0
ATCA crate $5,000 $5,000 $0 $0 $0
ATCA Reconfigable Cluster Elmnt $10,000 $10,000 $0 $0 $0
HSIO interface board $5,000 $5,000 $0 $0 $0
Temperature control box $20,000 $20,000 $0 $0 $0
Total Equipment $50,000 0.036 $45,000 $5,000 $0 $0
Yr 1 Budget summary (1)
(Estimate breakdown for ATLAS, DØ, ILC, E&O )
Overview 22
budget
(yr1)
fract of
total Atlas D0 ILC E&O
Domestic Travel $20,000 0.014 $4,000 $14,000 $2,000 $0
Foreign Travel $17,500 0.012 $12,250 $3,500 $1,750 $0
per diem for CERN personnel $83,030 0.059 $83,030 $0 $0 $0
Material and Supplies $12,000 0.009 $6,000 $6,000 $0 $0
Publication $1,000 0.001 $0 $1,000 $0 $0
Lab accnts, maint. agreements, shops, phones, postage $31,600 0.022 $22,120 $9,480 $0 $0
Grad student tuition (no ovhd) $25,128 0.018 $14,373 $10,755 $0 $0
Total Direct Costs$1,070,95
3 0.762
$671,505
$351,995 $16,762 $30,690
Overhead $333,601 0.238
$205,064
$112,641 $5,615 $10,281
Total Costs$1,404,55
4 1.000
$876,570
$464,636 $22,377 $40,971
task fraction 0.624 0.331 0.016 0.029
Yr 1 Yr 2 Yr 3 Total
Total Costs$1,404,55
4$1,418,51
1$1,438,07
5$4,261,14
0
Yr 1 Budget summary (2)
3 yr Budget
Overview 23
Yuan Hu
Feng GuoJun Guo (Columbia)
Tsybychev
Ken Herner (U. Mich)
Hobbs
Emanuel Strauss (SLAC)
Schamberger
Grannis
Junjie Zhu
The Stony Brook Group
(current institution)
HobbsMcCarthy Engelmann Jason Farley
Schamberger
Julia Gray
Regina Caputo
Jet Goodson Katy
Tschann-Grimm
Mustapha Thioye (Yale)
Adam Yurkewicz
Ashfaq Ahmad
Missing:
Subhendu Chakrabarti
Carolina Deluca-Silberberg
Erik Devetak
Pre-candidacy students
ATLAS @ Stony Brook