A cylindrical drift chamber for radiative muon capture experiments at TRIUMF

1990 
Radiative muon capture (RMC), mu Z to nu (Z-1) gamma , is a process which is particularly sensitive to the induced pseudoscalar coupling constant, g/sub p/, which is still very poorly determined experimentally. Due to the extremely small branching ratio ( approximately 6*10/sup -8/), the elementary reaction mu p to nu n gamma has never been measured. To date, efforts have been concentrated on nuclear RMC where the branching ratio is much larger, but the interpretation of these results is hindered by nuclear structure uncertainties. A measurement is being carried out at TRIUMF to determine the rate of RMC on hydrogen to a precision of 8%, leading to a determination of g/sub p/ with an error of 10%. The detection system is based on a large-volume cylindrical drift chamber, in an axial magnetic field, acting as an e/sup +/e/sup -/ pair spectrometer with a solid angle of approximately=2 pi . At a magnetic field of 2.7 kG, the acceptance of 70-MeV photons is about 0.8% for a 1.0-mm-thick Pb photon converter. Monte Carlo calculations indicate a photon energy resolution of >
    • Correction
    • Source
    • Cite
    • Save
    • Machine Reading By IdeaReader
    4
    References
    4
    Citations
    NaN
    KQI
    []