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AbstractAbstract
[en] Searching for heavy stable particle production in a new energy region of hadron-hadron collisions is of fundamental theoretical interest. Observation of such particles produced in high energy collisions would indicate the existence of stable heavy leptons or any massive hadronic system carrying new quantum numbers. Experimentally, evidence of its production has not been found for PP collisions either at FNAL or at the CERN ISR for √S = 23 and 62 GeV respectively. However, many theories beyond the standard model do predict its existence on a mass scale ranging from 50 to a few hundred GeV. If so, it would make a high luminosity TeV collider an extremely ideal hunting ground for searching the production of such a speculated object. To measure the mass of a heavy stable charged particle, one usually uses its time of flight (TOF) and/or dE/dX information. For heavy neutral particle, one hopes it may decay at some later time after its production. Hence a pair of jets or a jet associated with a high P/sub t/ muon originated from some places other than the interacting point (IP) of the colliding beams may be a good signal. In this note, we examine the feasibility of TOF measurement on a heavy stable particle produced in PP collisions at √S = 1 TeV and a luminosity of 1033 cm-2sec-1 with a single arm spectrometer pointing to the IP
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Loken, S.C.; Nemethy, P. (eds.); Lawrence Berkeley Lab., CA (USA); p. 134-136; Apr 1983; p. 134-136; DPF workshop on collider detectors: present capabilities and future possibilities; Berkeley, CA (USA); 28 Feb - 4 Mar 1983; Available from NTIS, PC A09/MF A01; 1 as DE83015006
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