Carnegie Mellon University
Browse
wmcginley_physics_f2019.pdf (12.92 MB)

Development of the Barrel Calorimeter Reconstruction and Measurement of the Beam Asymmetry (Sigma) for Pi0 and Eta mesons with the GlueX Experiment

Download (12.92 MB)
thesis
posted on 2019-11-13, 19:38 authored by William McginleyWilliam Mcginley
The GlueX experiment is located in Hall D at Je erson Lab with the primary goal of mapping out the spectrum of hybrid mesons. GlueX features a nearly-4π hermetic detector capable of measuring neutral and charged particles produced by a 9 GeV linearly polarized photon beam incident on a liquid hydrogen target. A description of the detector is presented to give an overview of the experiment. A lot of e ffort has been put forth into analyzing the data recorded by the detector. Here I discuss improving
the performance of the Barrel Calorimeter subdetector by calibrating the gains and improving the reconstruction software. The immediate physics goal of GlueX is to measure observables of known particles, especially those that are expected to be decay particles of hybrid mesons, such as π0 and η. To understand the photoproduction mechanism of these two particles the beam asymmetry (∑)
observable is measured. The measurements of ∑ are obtained as a function of the four-momentum transfer squared, -t, in the photon energy range of 8.2 GeV to 8.8 GeV in the three dominant decay modes of the η meson and in the dominant decay mode of the π0 meson. These are the first results for the η meson at this beam energy in multiple decay modes. The results agree with previously published GlueX results for η and π0 and are made with signi ficantly higher statistical precision. There is also agreement between theory predictions and the results which indicates that the resonance production mechanisms of the π0 and η mesons are dominated by natural parity exchange.

History

Date

2019-09-20

Degree Type

  • Dissertation

Department

  • Physics

Degree Name

  • Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)

Advisor(s)

Curtis Meyer

Usage metrics

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC