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ARTÍCULO
TITULO

Double Photodiode Readout System for the Calorimeter of the HERD Experiment: Challenges and New Horizons in Technology for the Direct Detection of High-Energy Cosmic Rays

Pietro Betti    
Oscar Adriani    
Matias Antonelli    
Yonglin Bai    
Xiaohong Bai    
Tianwei Bao    
Eugenio Berti    
Lorenzo Bonechi    
Massimo Bongi    
Valter Bonvicini    
Sergio Bottai    
Weiwei Cao    
Jorge Casaus    
Zhen Chen    
Xingzhu Cui    
Raffaello D?Alessandro    
Sebastiano Detti    
Carlos Diaz    
Yongwei Dong    
Noemi Finetti    
Valerio Formato    
Miguel Angel Velasco Frutos    
Jiarui Gao    
Francesca Giovacchini    
Xiaozhen Liang    
Ran Li    
Xin Liu    
Linwei Lyu    
Gustavo Martinez    
Nicola Mori    
Jesus Marin Munoz    
Lorenzo Pacini    
Paolo Papini    
Cecilia Pizzolotto    
Zheng Quan    
Junjun Qin    
Dalian Shi    
Oleksandr Starodubtsev    
Zhicheng Tang    
Alessio Tiberio    
Valerio Vagelli    
Elena Vannuccini    
Bo Wang    
Junjing Wang    
Le Wang    
Ruijie Wang    
Gianluigi Zampa    
Nicola Zampa    
Zhigang Wang    
Ming Xu    
Li Zhang and Jinkun ZhengaddShow full author listremoveHide full author list    

Resumen

The HERD experiment is a future experiment for the direct detection of high-energy cosmic rays and is to be installed on the Chinese space station in 2027. The main objectives of HERD are the first direct measurement of the knee of the cosmic ray spectrum, the extension of electron+positron flux measurement up to tens of TeV, gamma ray astronomy, and the search for indirect signals of dark matter. The main component of the HERD detector is an innovative calorimeter composed of about 7500 LYSO scintillating crystals assembled in a spherical shape. Two independent readout systems of the LYSO scintillation light will be installed on each crystal: the wavelength-shifting fibers system developed by IHEP and the double photodiode readout system developed by INFN and CIEMAT. In order to measure protons in the cosmic ray knee region, we must be able to measure energy release of about 250 TeV in a single crystal. In addition, in order to calibrate the system, we need to measure typical releases of minimum ionizing particles that are about 30 MeV. Thus, the readout systems should have a dynamic range of about 107" role="presentation" style="position: relative;">107107 10 7 . In this article, we analyze the development and the performance of the double photodiode readout system. In particular, we show the performance of a prototype readout by the double photodiode system for electromagnetic showers as measured during a beam test carried out at the CERN SPS in October 2021 with high-energy electron beams.