Персона:
Тетерин, Пётр Евгеньевич

Загружается...
Profile Picture
Email Address
Birth Date
Научные группы
Организационные подразделения
Организационная единица
Институт ядерной физики и технологий
Цель ИЯФиТ и стратегия развития - создание и развитие научно-образовательного центра мирового уровня в области ядерной физики и технологий, радиационного материаловедения, физики элементарных частиц, астрофизики и космофизики.
Статус
Фамилия
Тетерин
Имя
Пётр Евгеньевич
Имя

Результаты поиска

Теперь показываю 1 - 8 из 8
  • Публикация
    Только метаданные
    Fast simulation of muons produced at the SHiP experiment using Generative Adversarial Networks
    (2019) Ahdida, C.; Albanese, R. M.; Alexandrov, A.; Anokhina, A.; Atkin, E.; Dmitrenko, V.; Etenko, A.; Filippov, K.; Gavrilov, G.; Grachev, V.; Kudenko, Y.; Novikov, A.; Polukhina, N.; Samsonov, V.; Shustov, A.; Skorokhvatov, M.; Smirnov, S.; Teterin, P.; Ulin, S.; Uteshev, Z.; Vlasik, K.; Аткин, Эдуард Викторович; Дмитренко, Валерий Васильевич; Этенко, Александр Владимирович; Грачев, Виктор Михайлович; Куденко, Юрий Григорьевич; Полухина, Наталья Геннадьевна; Шустов, Александр Евгеньевич; Скорохватов, Михаил Дмитриевич; Смирнов, Сергей Юрьевич; Тетерин, Пётр Евгеньевич; Улин, Сергей Евгеньевич; Утешев, Зияэтдин Мухамедович; Власик, Константин Федорович
    © 2019 CERN.This paper presents a fast approach to simulating muons produced in interactions of the SPS proton beams with the target of the SHiP experiment. The SHiP experiment will be able to search for new long-lived particles produced in a 400 GeV/c SPS proton beam dump and which travel distances between fifty metres and tens of kilometers. The SHiP detector needs to operate under ultra-low background conditions and requires large simulated samples of muon induced background processes. Through the use of Generative Adversarial Networks it is possible to emulate the simulation of the interaction of 400 GeV/c proton beams with the SHiP target, an otherwise computationally intensive process. For the simulation requirements of the SHiP experiment, generative networks are capable of approximating the full simulation of the dense fixed target, offering a speed increase by a factor of (106). To evaluate the performance of such an approach, comparisons of the distributions of reconstructed muon momenta in SHiP's spectrometer between samples using the full simulation and samples produced through generative models are presented. The methods discussed in this paper can be generalised and applied to modelling any non-discrete multi-dimensional distribution.
  • Публикация
    Открытый доступ
    Sensitivity of the SHiP experiment to Heavy Neutral Leptons
    (2019) Ahdida, C.; Albanese, R.; Alexandrov, A.; Anokhina, A.; Atkin, E.; Dmitrenko, V.; Etenko, A.; Filippov, K.; Gavrilov, G.; Grachev, V.; Kudenko, Y.; Novikov, A.; Polukhina, N.; Samsonov, V.; Shustov, A.; Skorokhvatov, M.; Smirnov, S.; Teterin, P.; Ulin, S.; Uteshev, Z.; Vlasik, K.; Аткин, Эдуард Викторович; Дмитренко, Валерий Васильевич; Этенко, Александр Владимирович; Грачев, Виктор Михайлович; Куденко, Юрий Григорьевич; Полухина, Наталья Геннадьевна; Шустов, Александр Евгеньевич; Скорохватов, Михаил Дмитриевич; Смирнов, Сергей Юрьевич; Тетерин, Пётр Евгеньевич; Улин, Сергей Евгеньевич; Утешев, Зияэтдин Мухамедович; Власик, Константин Федорович
    Heavy Neutral Leptons (HNLs) are hypothetical particles predicted by many extensions of the Standard Model. These particles can, among other things, explain the origin of neutrino masses, generate the observed matter-antimatter asymmetry in the Universe and provide a dark matter candidate. The SHiP experiment will be able to search for HNLs produced in decays of heavy mesons and travelling distances ranging between O(50 m) and tens of kilometers before decaying. We present the sensitivity of the SHiP experiment to a number of HNL's benchmark models and provide a way to calculate the SHiP's sensitivity to HNLs for arbitrary patterns of flavour mixings. The corresponding tools and data files are also made publicly available.
  • Публикация
    Открытый доступ
    Development of Transition Radiation Detectors for hadron identification at TeV energy scale
    (2019) Cherry, M. L.; Dachs, F.; Fusco, P.; Gargano, F.; Belyaev, N.; Doronin, S. A.; Filippov, K.; Ponomarenko, D.; Pyatiizbyantseva, D.; Romaniouk, A.; Savchenko, A. A.; Sergeeva, D. Y.; Shulga, E.; Smirnov, S.; Smirnov, Y.; Strikhanov, M.; Teterin, P.; Tikhomirov, V.; Tishchenko, A. A.; Vorobev, K.; Доронин, Семен Александрович; Пятиизбянцева, Диана Николаевна; Романюк, Анатолий Самсонович; Савченко, Александр Алексеевич; Сергеева, Дарья Юрьевна; Смирнов, Сергей Юрьевич; Смирнов, Юрий Сергеевич; Стриханов, Михаил Николаевич; Тетерин, Пётр Евгеньевич; Тихомиров, Владимир Олегович; Тищенко, Алексей Александрович; Воробьёв, Константин Александрович
    © Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd.Many modern and future accelerator and cosmic ray experiments require identification of particles with Lorentz γ-factor up to 104 and above. The only technique which reaches this range of Lorentz factors is based on the transition radiation detectors (TRD). This paper describes the development of a TRD based on straw proportional tubes. A prototype of such kind of detector was built and tested at the CERN SPS accelerator. Monte Carlo simulation model of the detector which matches well the experimental data was developed. This program was used for the simulation of a full-scale TRD for hadron identification at TeV energy scale.
  • Публикация
    Открытый доступ
    The experimental facility for the Search for Hidden Particles at the CERN SPS
    (2019) Ahdida, C.; Albanese, R.; Alexandrov, A.; Anokhina, A.; Atkin, E.; Dmitrenko, V.; Etenko, A.; Filippov, K.; Gavrilov, G.; Grachev, V.; Kudenko, Y.; Novikov, A.; Polukhina, N.; Samsonov, V.; Shustov, A.; Skorokhvatov, M.; Smirnov, S.; Teterin, P.; Ulin, S.; Uteshev, Z.; Vlasik, K.; Аткин, Эдуард Викторович; Дмитренко, Валерий Васильевич; Этенко, Александр Владимирович; Грачев, Виктор Михайлович; Куденко, Юрий Григорьевич; Полухина, Наталья Геннадьевна; Шустов, Александр Евгеньевич; Скорохватов, Михаил Дмитриевич; Смирнов, Сергей Юрьевич; Тетерин, Пётр Евгеньевич; Улин, Сергей Евгеньевич; Утешев, Зияэтдин Мухамедович; Власик, Константин Федорович
    The Search for Hidden Particles (SHiP) Collaboration has shown that the CERN SPS accelerator with its 400 GeV/c proton beam offers a unique opportunity to explore the Hidden Sector [1-3]. The proposed experiment is an intensity frontier experiment which is capable of searching for hidden particles through both visible decays and through scattering signatures from recoil of electrons or nuclei. The high-intensity experimental facility developed by the SHiP Collaboration is based on a number of key features and developments which provide the possibility of probing a large part of the parameter space for a wide range of models with light long-lived super-weakly interacting particles with masses up to O(10) GeV/c(2) in an environment of extremely clean background conditions. This paper describes the proposal for the experimental facility together with the most important feasibility studies. The paper focuses on the challenging new ideas behind the beam extraction and beam delivery, the proton beam dump, and the suppression of beam-induced background.
  • Публикация
    Открытый доступ
    First measurements of the spectral and angular distribution of transition radiation using a silicon pixel sensor on a Timepix3 chip
    (2019) Schioppa, E. J.; Dachs, F.; Alozy, J.; Campbell, M.; Belyaev, N.; Doronin, S.; Filippov, K.; Krasnopevtsev, D.; Ponomarenko, D.; Pyatiizbyantseva, D.; Radomskii, R.; Romaniouk, A.; Shulga, E.; Smirnov, S.; Smirnov, Y.; Sergeeva, D. Y.; Savchenko, A. A.; Strikhanov, M.; Tishchenko, A. A.; Teterin, P.; Vorobev, K.; Доронин, Семен Александрович; Пятиизбянцева, Диана Николаевна; Романюк, Анатолий Самсонович; Смирнов, Сергей Юрьевич; Смирнов, Юрий Сергеевич; Сергеева, Дарья Юрьевна; Савченко, Александр Алексеевич; Стриханов, Михаил Николаевич; Тищенко, Алексей Александрович; Тетерин, Пётр Евгеньевич; Воробьёв, Константин Александрович
    © 2018 Elsevier B.V. X-ray Transition radiation detectors (TRDs) are used for particle identification in both high energy physics and astroparticle physics. Particle identification is often achieved based on a threshold effect of the X-ray transition radiation (TR). In most of the detectors, TR emission starts at γ factors above ∼500 and reaches saturation at γ∼2−3⋅103. However, many experiments require particle identification up to γ∼105, which is difficult to achieve with current detectors, based only on the measurement of the photon energy together with the particle ionization losses. Additional information on the Lorentz factor can be extracted from the angular distribution of TR photons. TRDs based on pixel detectors give a unique opportunity for precise measurements of spectral and angular distributions of TR at the same time. A 500 μm thick silicon sensor bump bonded to a Timepix3 chip was used in a test beam measurement at the CERN SPS. A beam telescope was employed to separate clusters produced by the primary beam particles from the potential TR clusters. Spectral and angular distributions of TR were studied with high precision for the first time using beams of pions, electrons and muons at different momenta. In this paper, the measurement and analysis techniques are described, and first results are presented.
  • Публикация
    Открытый доступ
    Identification of particles with Lorentz factor up to 10 4 with Transition Radiation Detectors based on micro-strip silicon detectors
    (2019) Alozy, J.; Campbell, M.; Cherry, M.; Dachs, F.; Belyaev, N.; Doronin, S.; Fillipov, K.; Krasnopevtsev, D.; Ponomarenko, D.; Pyatiizbyantseva, D.; Radomskii, R.; Romaniouk, A.; Savchenko, A. A.; Sergeeva, D. Y.; Shulga, E.; Smirnov, S.; Smirnov, Y.; Strikhanov, M.; Teterin, P.; Tishchenko, A.; Vorobev, K.; Доронин, Семен Александрович; Пятиизбянцева, Диана Николаевна; Романюк, Анатолий Самсонович; Савченко, Александр Алексеевич; Сергеева, Дарья Юрьевна; Смирнов, Сергей Юрьевич; Смирнов, Юрий Сергеевич; Стриханов, Михаил Николаевич; Тетерин, Пётр Евгеньевич; Тищенко, Алексей Александрович; Воробьёв, Константин Александрович
    © 2019 This work is dedicated to the study of a technique for hadron identification in the TeV momentum range, based on the simultaneous measurement of the energies and of the emission angles of the Transition Radiation (TR) X-rays with respect to the radiating particles. A detector setup has been built and tested with particles in a wide range of Lorentz factors (from about 10 3 to about 4×10 4 crossing different types of radiators. The measured double-differential (in energy and angle) spectra of the TR photons are in a reasonably good agreement with TR simulation predictions.
  • Публикация
    Открытый доступ
    Measurement of the energy spectra and of the angular distribution of the Transition Radiation with a silicon strip detector
    (2019) Loparco, F.; Alozy, J.; Campbell, M.; Cherry, M.; Belyaev, N.; Doronin, S. A.; Filippov, K.; Krasnopevtsev, D.; Ponomarenko, D.; Pyatiizbyantseva, D.; Radomskii, R.; Romaniouk, A.; Sergeeva, D. Y.; Shulga, E.; Smirnov, S.; Smirnov, Y.; Strikhanov, M.; Teterin, P.; Tishchenko, A. A.; Vorobev, K.; Доронин, Семен Александрович; Пятиизбянцева, Диана Николаевна; Романюк, Анатолий Самсонович; Сергеева, Дарья Юрьевна; Смирнов, Сергей Юрьевич; Смирнов, Юрий Сергеевич; Стриханов, Михаил Николаевич; Тетерин, Пётр Евгеньевич; Тищенко, Алексей Александрович; Воробьёв, Константин Александрович
    © Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd.We plan to develop an advanced Transition Radiation Detector (TRD) for hadron identification in the TeV momentum range, based on the simultaneous measurement of the energies and of the emission angles of the Transition Radiation (TR) X-rays with respect to the radiating particles. To study the feasibility of this project, we have carried out a beam test campaign at the CERN SPS facility with 20 GeV/c electrons and muons up to 300 GeV/c. To detect the TR X-rays and the radiating particles, we used a 300 μm thick double-sided silicon strip detector, with a strip readout pitch of 50 μm. A 2 m long helium pipe was placed between the radiators and the detector, in order to ensure adequate separation between the TR X-rays and the radiating particle on the detector plane and to limit the X-ray absorption before the detector. We measured the double-differential (in energy and angle) spectra of the TR emitted by several radiators. The results are in good agreement with the predictions obtained from the TR theory.