Phototube Testing for the MiniBooNE Experiment
ORAL
Abstract
The MiniBooNE experiment at FNAL is a neutrino $\nu_\mu \rightarrow \nu_e$ oscillation search whose detector is a 12 m spherical oil tank lined with 1520 8 inch photomultiplier tubes, Hamamatsu models R1408 and R5912, with custom--designed bases. Tests were performed on all the phototubes to determine the dark rate, charge and timing resolutions of the response, double--pulsing rate, and desired operating voltage for each tube, so that they could be sorted for optimal use in the detector. Eight additional phototubes were tested to find the angular dependance of their response, and these results for the R1408 and R5912 phototubes were fit to 5-- and 6--degree polynomials, respectively. This test was performed again at various voltages. These fits were incorporated into the MiniBooNE Monte Carlo. After the Super--K phototube implosion accident, an analysis was performed to determine the risk of a similar accident with MiniBooNE, and the risk was found to be negligible. *MiniBooNE is an experiment at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory
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Authors
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Laura Gladstone
Columbia Univ.
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Steve Brice
FNAL
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Len Bugel
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Janet Conrad
Columbia Univ.
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Bonnie Fleming
Yale Univ., Yale University
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Eric Hawker
Western Illinois Univ., Macomb
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Phillip Killewald
Univ. of Michigan
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Justin May
SLAC
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Shawn McKenney
LNAL
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Paul Nienaber
St. Mary's Univ. of Minnesota, Winona
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Ryan Patterson
Princeton Univ.
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Byron Roe
Univ. of Michigan
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Vern Sandberg
LNAL
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Darrel Smith
Embry Riddle Aeronautical Univ.
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Matt Wysocki
Univ. of Michigan