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INSPYRE 2023 – Experiments

Marzo 8, 2023 Non categorizzato 791 Views

From Quarks to Black Holes: let’s get INSPYRED!

Experiments

March  29 – 30, 2023

A

Experiences with ArduSiPM an all-in-one particle detector (V. Bocci, F. Iacoangeli, INFN-Roma 1)

The construction of a homemade particle detector is a complex task, given the difficulty in sourcing materials and their associated costs. Within the framework of institutional research at INFN, we have developed a compact and affordable scintillation detector based on the Arduino Due, which includes all the functionalities of a modern particle physics detector. ArduSiPM was used in research projects and numerous outreach activities. During the event, we will show how to assemble the sensor, use the acquisition and control programs, explain its functionalities, and teach how to use it in educational experiences to detect cosmic rays or environmental radiation measurements. Information on the detector can be found at https://sites.google.com/view/particle-detectors/home

Tutor’s Biography

Valerio Bocci
Valerio Bocci is a physicist at the National Institute of Nuclear Physics (INFN) with expertise in electronic instrumentation for particle physics experiments at CERN, LNF, and other laboratories. He is also involved in developing particle detectors for medical physics.
He is a Professor at the Department of Physics of the Sapienza University of Rome for the courses: “Electronics for High Energy Physics” for Ph.D. students and “Solid-State Sensor” for the master’s degree course.
In recent years, he has developed compact detectors using advanced sensors and electronic systems for various scientific fields, including molecular biology and education. Additionally, he is active in scientific dissemination through seminars and public events and has designed instruments for measuring cosmic rays using stratospheric balloons in collaboration with schools.
Francesco Iacoangeli
Francesco Iacoangeli is a physicist at the National Institute of Nuclear Physics (INFN) with a Ph.D. in Systems and Technologies for Space. He has extensive experience in experimental physics, having worked on various projects and experiments such as the CERN LHCb Experiment, the CERN UA9 Experiment, and space experiments ASI-PAMELA and ALTCRISS. He is involved in developing electronics and particle detectors for high-energy physics experiments, satellites, and medical physics. In recent years, Francesco has focused on creating compact all-in-one detectors that employ advanced sensors and system-on-chip electronics. These detectors have been applied to physics experiments and fields such as molecular biology and education. He actively participates in scientific outreach and has developed instruments to measure cosmic rays with stratospheric balloons in collaboration with schools.

Tools needed for this activity

For this activity students should bring their own pc

B

Build your spacetime – let’s discover Einstein’s gravity (A. Postiglione, INFN-LNF)

What is gravity? How do planets, stars and galaxies move in the Universe? What do Einstein describe with his Theory of Relativity? Let’s find it out together with this interactive activity that will allow us to build and use our own spacetime model! In this way we will discover that masses can deform spacetime, bend light, and create black holes and gravitational waves.

Tutor’s Biography

Adriana Postiglione
Adriana Postiglione is a researcher in physics education and a science communicator at the Frascati National Laboratory, INFN. After her PhD in physics about the large scale structure of the Universe, she dedicated herself to disseminating and teaching physics to a public of non-experts. She now works on the development of new methodologies and techniques to talk about her discipline, especially with high school students and teachers.

Tools needed for this activity

No tools needed for this activity

C

Introduction to simulation techniques for medical applications (A. Filippi, INFN-To)

Plan of the working group activity
The simulation of the interaction of particles and radiation with materials is fundamental for the design of particle physics experiments and the study of their expected performances, but it can also be exploited for more everyday life applications, for instance related to medicine.
In particular, in medical field it is important to resort to simulations to estimate the energy released in biological tissues following the treatment with particle beams or radiation, its effect and the possible damage.
To this perspective, simulations provide fundamental information to prepare radiotherapic plans with beams or radiopharmaceuticals, for radiodiagnostic and radioprotection purposes, and also for the design of shielding for radiospatial applications in extraterrestrial environments.
Complete simulation tools are based on very complicated software packages, of course beyond the scope of this class.
Nonetheless, in this working group the students will approach a user-friendly interface based on the GEANT4 simulation package that will allow them to learn how to setup a system with a particle beam of desired shape,energy and intensity, interacting on simplified (but realistic) phantoms of some body organs, as well as on simple solid shapes invented by themselves.
The output from the simulation at the microscopical level will be analyzed and discussed in term of the possibile reactions that the particles will undergo in the materials of the experimental setup.
The students will visualize the interaction of particles or radiation with the materials, that will disclose the fundamental mechanisms at the basis of the medical investigation techniques, in particular those based on X-rays and radioactive beams or sources.

Tutor’s Biography

Alessandra Filippi
Graduated in theoretical physics in 1991, PhD in nuclear physics in 1996, Alessandra is currently Senior Scientist at INFN Torino (Italy).
Her field of interest covers the experimental nuclear and hadronic physics at intermediate and low energies, with activity focus on data analysis, interpretation of the obtained results and the development of codes for the simulation of physical processes and detector setups as well as event pattern recognition and reconstruction.
She’s been working in International Collaborations at several Laboratories (CERN, LNF, Julich, SLAC) also covering leading roles. She’s presently involved in experiments at the Jefferson Laboratory (USA), where her activity is mostly dedicated to hadron spectroscopy and light dark matter searches.
She’s author of more than 400 scientific papers on International Physics Journals.
Since 2019 she’s been holding classes for the Speciality School of Medical Physics at the Torino University, on Information Technology and Montecarlo Methods for Dose Evaluation.

Tools needed for this activity

No tools needed for this activity

D

Determination of nuclides through gamma spectrometry (R. Bedogni, A. Calamida, L. Russo, INFN-LNF)

The participants in the experience “Determination of nuclides through gamma spectrometry” will learn the basics of gamma spectrometry through Scintillation detectors. Particularly, they will learn about (1) physics of a scintillation detector (2) Analog electronics to transform the light pulses in the scintillator into measurable electrical pulses (3) Digital electronics to measure the electrical pulses and produce a pulse height distribution (4) Basics of nuclide identification though the gamma rays signature.

Tutor’s Biography

Roberto Bedogni
·      Head of the LEMRAP laboratory (Laboratory for Environmental and Medical Radiation Physics) at INFN-Frascati
·      Main fields: Dosimetry and metrology of ionising radiation, development of radiation sensors, irradiation assemblies, spectrometers and related computational tools
·      University of Bologna (Italy): Degree in Physics (1998) + Post degree health physics specialization (2000)
·      Universidad autonoma de Barcelona (Spain): PhD Physics (2006)
·      Researcher at ENEA (national agency for research in new technology, energy    and the environment, from 1999 – 2004,
.       INFN National Institute for Nuclear Physics, Frascati National Labs, 2004 – present).
·      Participation / management of national and international projects in the field.
·      Convenor of ISO TC85/SC2/WG2/ Reference radiation fields/ Neutron subgroup
·      Author of 130+scientific papers, h-index 19
·      Teacher at Ph.D schools & professional courses
·      IAEA expert for in-country missions and regional training courses in the field of dosimetry and calibration
Alessandro Calamida
Alessandro Calamida, nato a Roma (RM) il 15/06/1991.
Titoli di studio:
·      Dottorato di ricerca in “Fisica degli Acceleratori” presso l’Università degli studi di Roma “La Sapienza”, conseguito il 21/04/2021;
·      Master di II livello in “Energia di Fusione Nucleare”, conseguito il 27/10/2017, voto: 104/110;
·      Laurea Magistrale in Fisica presso l’Università degli studi di Roma “Tor Vergata”, conseguita il 26/02/2016, voto: 110/110;
·      Laurea Magistrale in Fisica presso l’Università degli studi di Roma “Tor Vergata”, conseguita il 25/10/2013, voto: 105/110;
·      Diploma di maturità scientifica presso l’istituto d’istruzione superiore “Maria Montessori” di Roma, conseguito il 30/06/2010, voto: 83/100.
Esperienze di lavoro:
·      Dal 02/2021 in corso: assegnista presso i laboratori nazionali di Frascati dell’INFN sotto la supervisione del doc. Roberto Bedogni. Lavoro per la i progetti di trasferimento tecnologico “DOIN” e “DOIN+” dell’INFN. Collaborazione sui progetti dell’INFN ENTER, SAMADHA e FLASHDOS;
·      Dal 11/2017 al 01/2021: dottorando presso l’esperimento FNG (Frascati Neutron Generator) dell’ENEA sotto la supervisione del Doc. Salvatore Fiore. Lavoro con simulazioni FLUKA per l’upgrade di FNG;
·      Dal 07/2017 al 10/2017: stagista per la ditta Vitrociset di Roma nell’ambito dello stage finale del master. Lavoro sul Task 7 del progetto ITER: “Evaluation of the Stray Radiation on the Fused Silica Windows of ITER”;
·      Dal 04/2015 al 02/2016: laureando presso il gruppo ATLAS dell’Università degli Studi di Roma “Tor Vergata”.
Altre competenze:
·      Competenze linguistiche: italiano (madrelingua), inglese (livello C1);
·      Competenze informatiche: Microsoft: Windows XP, Vista, 7, 8 e 10, Office, Linux, CST, FLUKA, Root;
Linguaggi di programmazione: C++, Latex, Fortran 77 e 95

Tools needed for this activity

No tools needed for this activity

E

Nanotechnology for environmental monitoring (A. Gaiardo, P. Tosato, M. Valt, FBK)

The quality of the air we breathe is a central issue in contemporary society; its punctual and distributed monitoring becomes increasingly accessible thanks to low-cost sensors based on nanotechnologies.

The workshop will introduce nanotechnologies and chemical-physical characterization methods used in the realization of solid-state gas sensors based on nanostructured semiconductors and in hands-on hardware and software integration activity. Some of these devices are produced at the Bruno Kessler Foundation and others are commercially available, the integration will take place on a STMicroelectronics STM32-Nucleo platform through Arduino IDE environment.

Tutor’s Biography

Andrea Gaiardo
Obtained the M.Sc. degree in Chemistry (Magna cum Laude) from the University of Ferrara, (Ferrara, Italy) in 2013. He received the Ph.D. degree in Physics from the University of Ferrara in 2018. His work is focused on the research and development of gas sensing systems for several applications, including health screening, precision agriculture and outdoor air quality monitoring. In this field, he has published more than 40 articles (H-Index = 14, source Scopus, 01/2023), and he has been guest editor of three special issues. He has collaborated in both national and European projects. Currently, he is a researcher in the Micro-Nano Facilities group of the Bruno Kessler Foundation.
Pietro Tosato
Obtained the M.Sc. degree in mechatronic engineering and the Ph.D. in electronic engineering from the University of Trento in 2015 and 2019, respectively. His work mainly focused on low-power electronics for Internet of Things and Smart Grid applications. He currently works in the Micro-Nano Facility group in Bruno Kessler Foundation developing sensor electronic interfaces for diverse applications, like gas sensing and radiation detectors.
Matteo Valt
Obtained his Ph.D. degree in Physics in March 2020 with a thesis titled: “2D materials for room-temperature chemiresistive gas sensing” at the University of Ferrara. Previously, he obtained his M.Sc. degree in Chemistry with a thesis on Functionalization of Graphene Oxide for Gas Sensing and Cation Trapping. Currently, he is a researcher in the Micro-Nano Facilities group of the Bruno Kessler Foundation. His current research interests are related to the development and employment of novel materials for chemiresistive gas sensing in diverse fields of applications.

Tools needed for this activity

For this activity students should bring their own pc (https://github.com/stm32duino/Arduino_Core_STM32/wiki/Getting-Started)

Materials

Slides

F

Plasma – The fourth state of matter (A. Biagioni, C. Mariani, INFN-LNF)

What is a plasma, the state of matter that composes the 99% of the universe? How can it be investigated? Let’s find it out together with this interactive activity that will allow us to study it and detect it! In this way we will discover, with some basic physics principles, how spectroscopy works and how to measure the plasma.

Tutor’s Biography

Angelo Biagioni
Angelo Biagioni has graduated from University of Rome La Sapienza in electronic engineering, where he also earned a doctorate degree in electromagnetism. He made teaching activities at the University of Rome La Sapienza for courses in classical mechanics, electromagnetism and thermodynamics. He is supervisor for the PhD in accelerator Physics. Since 2014, he has conducted research activity at the National Institute of Nuclear Physics – section of National Laboratory of Frascati. He has currently a permanent position at INFN LNF – Accelerator Division. He collaborates to the SPARC_LAB project to implement the plasma module for the plasma-based acceleration. In particular, his research activity is devoted to the design of specific devices for producing and confining plasmas for acceleration. He has gained experience in the field of plasma physics and, in particular, have acquired capabilities to design plasma diagnostic systems for plasma sources characterization. He has contributed to establish the Plasma laboratory at the LNF, of which he is currently the responsible.
Cristina Mariani
Cristina Mariani is a graduate of the Polytechnic of Milan in B.Sc. Chemical Engineering and is currently finishing the M.Sc. of Nuclear Engineering. She has conducted research activity at the National Institute of Nuclear Physics – section of National Laboratory of Frascati in the context of the Master Thesis, concerning the design plasma module for producing and confining plasmas for plasma–based acceleration. Her expertise spans from an understanding of the background plasma physical phenomena to the capability to use the instrumentation required for the experimental investigation of the key parameters.

Tools needed for this activity

No tools needed for this activity

G

Physics of photovoltaic devices (P. Bernardoni, Univ. of Ferrara)

The activity is organised in two parts, the first part is a theoretical introduction on the physics of semiconductors and how these materials can be used to manufacture optoelectronic devices such as photovoltaic cells, photodiodes and LEDs. In the second part the students will be instructed on how to acquire the characteristic I-V curve of a solar panel using simple instruments such as multimeters and an adjustable power supply. Analysing this curve they will determine the main operating parameters and the internal resistances of the panel. Shading one of the cells which compose the panel the students will understand the effect on the I-V curve and why a simple multimeter is not an effective instrument to test a solar cell.

Tutor’s Biography

Paolo Bernardoni
Paolo Bernardoni is a researcher at the Department of Chemical, Pharmaceutical and Agricultural Sciences of the University of Ferrara and is associate to the Ferrara section of the INFN. At present his main research project concerns the development of photovoltaic panels with a polymeric structure which can be manufactured using recycled materials and, in turn, recycled at the end of their life cycle. Other projects are the development of solar windows based on luminescent solar concentrators and the development of sensor networks to acquire environmental data.

Tools needed for this activity

For this activity students should bring their own pc (spreadsheet software such as Microsoft Excel, LibreOffice Calc or similar)

H

Simulation of LHC events (G. Corcella, M. Testa, INFN-LNF)

The group will work on the simulation and reconstruction of events at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC). After a theory introduction on the Standard Model of particle physics and Monte Carlo event generators, the participants will learn how to use modern tools, such as the MadGraph, PYTHIA, Root and Delphes codes, in order to simulate events at the LHC and reconstruct final-state particles. Particular attention will be paid to events with the production of Higgs bosons.

Tutor’s Biography

Gennaro Corcella
Master Degree at Bari University, Ph.D. at Milan University, Postdoctoral
Research Associate at Rochester University (NY, U.S.A.), Max Planck
Institute for Physics (Munich, Germany), CERN (Geneva, Switzerland),
Sapienza University (Rome) and Scuola Normale Superiore (Pisa). Long-term
visitor at Rutherford Appleton Laboratory (Oxfordshire, U.K.),
UNAM (Mexico City) and University of Buenos Aires (Argentina).
Staff Researcher at INFN, Laboratori Nazionali di Frascati since 2011, coordinator of the Theory Group since 2022. Chairman of the INFN LNF Spring School `Bruno Touschek’ in Nuclear, Subnuclear and Astroparticle Physics since 2018 and of the series of workshops on Linear and Future Colliders at ECT*, Trento, since 2017. Coauthor of the HERWIG event generator, associated with the ATLAS experimental group in Rome Tor Vergata since 2018. His research interests focus on the theory and phenomenology of elementary particle physics, in particular Quantum Chromodynamics, heavy-quark phenomenology, Monte Carlo parton showers and physics beyond the Standard Model.

Tools needed for this activity

No tools needed for this activity

I

Cosmic rays: falling from the stars to the ground (G. Felici, C. Gatti, A. Paoloni, INFN-LNF)

Primary cosmic rays, produced by galatic and extra-galactic sources, are continuosly hitting the atmosphere.
At ground level, muons, the most penetrating component, can be detected at the rate of about 1 particle per second per square cm.
In the past cosmic rays were used to discover new particles before the use of particle accelerators.
Nowadays, muons are mainly used to test detectors performances.
The aim of the experience is to make students get acquainted with detector technologies like scintillators and silicon photomultipliers.
The study of the muon rate as a function of the angle can be exploited to infer its properties, such as the lifetime.

Tutor’s Biography

Giulietto Felici
Senior technologist with pas experience as a high school teacher. Since 1988 held a permanent position at INFN. He contributed to the design of the readout electronics of may experiments at CERN as well as at LNF and LNGS laboratories.
Claudio Gatti
Senior researcher at LNF
Alessandro Paoloni
Born in Rome in 1971. Currently senior researcher at the INFN Frascati laboratories.
In the last 20 years active in neutrino and cosmic ray physics as well as in research and development of muon detectors.

Tools needed for this activity

No tools needed for this activity

Materials

Manual

L

Event selection of Higgs boson with the ATLAS detector at LHC (C. Arcangeletti, G. Mancini, INFN-LNF)

The students will have the opportunity to perform an event selection of the Higgs boson. The selection will be implemented using an event display based analysis with data from the ATLAS experiment at LHC.

Tutor’s Biography

Chiara Arcangeletti
Chiara Arcangeletti works as a researcher at the National Laboratories of Frascati, where she has been a member of the ATLAS (A Toroidal LHC ApparatuS) experiment at the CERN Large Hadron Collider since 2017. Her research work has primarily focused on the measurement of Higgs boson properties, specifically in the H->ZZ*->4l decay channel, while also contributing to the construction of the MicroMegas detectors for the ATLAS upgrade, which were installed in 2020.
Giada Mancini
Giada Mancini is a researcher of the Frascati National Laboratories (LNF) and she took part of the ATLAS Collaboration in 2012. ATLAS (A Toroidal LHC ApparatuS) is one of the experiments installed at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC). During her research activity, she gave fundamental contributions to the measurements of the Higgs boson properties in the H->ZZ*->4l decay channel. She has also strongly contributed to the ATLAS upgrade of the Muon Spectrometer in view of the future High Luminosity LHC Runs: her contribution has been recognized with national and international responsibilities to the construction and test of the MicroMegas detectors.

Tools needed for this activity

No tools needed for this activity

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