Track Reconstruction at a Muon Collider in the Presence of Beam-induced Background

ORAL

Abstract

Among the projects currently under study for the post-LHC generation of particle accelerators, the muon collider represents a unique machine, which has the capability to provide leptonic collisions at energies of several TeV and to open the path to a vast and mostly unexplored Physics programme. However, on the experimental side, such a great Physics potential is accompanied by unprecedented technological challenges, due to the fact that muons are unstable particles. Their decay products interact with the machine elements and produce an intense flux of background particles that eventually reach the detector and might degrade its performance. Being the closest detector to the beamline, the tracker is the most affected by the beam-induced background. This contribution will outline the measures adopted in order to mitigate the background effects on the track reconstruction and will present the tracking performance in the presence of the beam-induced background.

Authors

  • Massimo Casarsa

    • INFN Trieste
  • Alessandro Montella

    • University and INFN of Trieste
  • Paolo Andreetto

    • INFN Padua
  • Laura Buonincontri

    • INFN and University of Padua
  • Alessio Gianelle

    • INFN Padua
  • Lorenzo Sestini

    • INFN Padua
  • Donatella Lucchesi

    • University and INFN of Padua
  • Nazar Bartosik

    • INFN Turin
  • Nadia Pastrone

    • INFN Turin
  • Sergo Jindariani

    • Fermilab
  • Hannsjoerg Weber

    • Fermilab
  • Karol Krizka

    • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • Simone Pagan Griso

    • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • Elodie Resseguie

    • Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory
  • Lawrence Lee

    • Harvard University
  • Federico Meloni

    • DESY
  • Philip Chang

    • University of California San Diego
  • David Yu

    • Brown University