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  • About
  • The Global ETD Search service is a free service for researchers to find electronic theses and dissertations. This service is provided by the Networked Digital Library of Theses and Dissertations.
    Our metadata is collected from universities around the world. If you manage a university/consortium/country archive and want to be added, details can be found on the NDLTD website.
1

Analysis tools for the EMMA experiment

Räihä, T. (Tomi) 15 October 2012 (has links)
Abstract Cosmic rays are energetic particles traversing space that bombard Earth's atmosphere frequently and produce vast particle showers while interacting with air nuclei. The origin and composition of high-energy cosmic rays in the knee region (1015 - 1016 eV) of the cosmic-ray energy spectrum remain unclear despite of novel detection and analysis methods used in various surface and underground experiments. The understanding of the knee has improved from its first detection but still there is notable deviation in results between experiments depending on the used detection methods. The aim of the underground cosmic-ray experiment EMMA (Experiment with Multi-Muon Array) is to shed more light on the origin of the knee. EMMA is based on the idea to measure the lateral shape of high-energy muon component produced in cosmic-ray initiated particle showers on an event-by-event basis, that is, separately for each shower, offering a unique way to study the composition of cosmic rays in the knee region. The present work comprises the design, development and implementation of a comprehensive set of analysis tools for the EMMA experiment. It includes the development of the simulation program to generate realistic event data, the track reconstruction program ETANA to reconstruct hits and tracks in detector stations, the visualisation program EmmaEve to scan events, the graphical monitoring program EmmaDiagnosticsGUI to control the functionality of detectors on-line, the efficiency monitoring program to control chamber efficiencies in three-layer stations and the design of the EMMA database to store reconstruction results. Especially the design and tests of ETANA form the backbone of the present work as its optimised performance is crucial for the analysis of EMMA data. Furthermore, in the present work the influence of rock overburden above EMMA on the properties of high-energy muons is investigated by detailed simulations. The reconstruction of hits in drift chambers is studied with measured data including the estimation of the quality of reconstructed hits, the functionality of hit formation procedure and the influence of afterpulses on hit reconstruction. The validity of simulated data that are generated by the EMMA event generation program is evaluated by comparing simulated and measured data with each other. Finally, synergy benefits between the EMMA and ALICE experiments are discussed, which are both underground experiments but different in nature.
2

Design, construction and commissioning of the EMMA experiment

Sarkamo, J. (Juho) 28 October 2014 (has links)
Abstract The work describes the design, construction and commissioning of the underground cosmic-ray experiment Experiment with MultiMuon Array (EMMA). The experiment is built into the Pyhäsalmi mine, in the town of Pyhäjärvi, Finland. The aim of EMMA is to determine the elemental composition of cosmic rays at an energy region around 4 PeV, the energy region called the ’knee’ region. This is achieved by measuring the lateral density distribution of high-energy muons originating from Extensive Air Showers (EAS). The design calculations for the EMMA experiment, which are based on the use of the parametrization of the lateral density distribution of muons, the method of shower reconstruction, and the energy and composition indicators, are presented. A strategy for reconstructing the composition of the cosmic rays is presented and it demonstrates the potential of applying unfolding techniques to the EMMA data. The effect of an array extension on the performance of EMMA is studied. The hardware used in the EMMA experiment is presented starting with an overview of the array and its detector stations. The EMMA array employs three different particle detectors, for which the main technical properties are given, and their use in the EMMA array is presented. A description of the infrastructure of the experiment is given and the rock overburden at the EMMA site at the depth of 80 metres is documented. The work contains the latest analysis of EAS data recorded by the tracking detectors of the experiment, which demonstrates that the experiment is taking data as planned and that the data are according to EAS physics expectations. Methods for event selection and tracking efficiency correction are presented, after which the analysis results of measured track multiplicity spectra are given. The shape of the recorded multiplicity spectrum indicates that the simplest model of a knee-like spectrum with a pure proton composition can not explain the data and that further analysis of the spectrum is required.

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