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ARTÍCULO
TITULO

The Mu2e Crystal Calorimeter: An Overview

Nikolay Atanov    
Vladimir Baranov    
Leo Borrel    
Caterina Bloise    
Julian Budagov    
Sergio Ceravolo    
Franco Cervelli    
Francesco Colao    
Marco Cordelli    
Giovanni Corradi    
Yuri Davydov    
Stefano Di Falco    
Eleonora Diociaiuti    
Simone Donati    
Bertrand Echenard    
Carlo Ferrari    
Antonio Gioiosa    
Simona Giovannella    
Valerio Giusti    
Vladimir Glagolev    
Francesco Grancagnolo    
Dariush Hampai    
Fabio Happacher    
David Hitlin    
Matteo Martini    
Sophie Middleton    
Stefano Miscetti    
Luca Morescalchi    
Daniele Paesani    
Daniele Pasciuto    
Elena Pedreschi    
Frank Porter    
Fabrizio Raffaelli    
Alessandro Saputi    
Ivano Sarra    
Franco Spinella    
Alessandra Taffara    
Anna Maria Zanetti and Ren Yuan ZhuaddShow full author listremoveHide full author list    

Resumen

The Mu2e experiment at Fermilab will search for the standard model-forbidden, charged lepton flavour-violating conversion of a negative muon into an electron in the field of an aluminium nucleus. The distinctive signal signature is represented by a mono-energetic electron with an energy near the muon?s rest mass. The experiment aims to improve the current single-event sensitivity by four orders of magnitude by means of a high-intensity pulsed muon beam and a high-precision tracking system. The electromagnetic calorimeter complements the tracker by providing high rejection power in muon to electron identification and a seed for track reconstruction while working in vacuum in presence of a 1 T axial magnetic field and in a harsh radiation environment. For 100 MeV electrons, the calorimeter should achieve: (a) a time resolution better than 0.5 ns, (b) an energy resolution <10%, and (c) a position resolution of 1 cm. The calorimeter design consists of two disks, each loaded with 674 undoped CsI crystals read out by two large-area arrays of UV-extended SiPMs and custom analogue and digital electronics. We describe here the status of construction for all calorimeter components and the performance measurements conducted on the large-sized prototype with electron beams and minimum ionizing particles at a cosmic ray test stand. A discussion of the calorimeter?s engineering aspects and the on-going assembly is also reported.

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