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OKA (experiment)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

OKA (Russian: ОКА — Опыты с КАонами, literal translation "Observations of KAons") is a particle physics detector experiment at the U-70 accelerator in the Institute for High Energy Physics located in Protvino near Moscow (Russia). OKA is specialized experiment with separated charge kaons beam.

Superconducting high radio-frequency separator produces a beam of charged kaons intensity (4 ÷ 6) · 106 K for a cycle with momenta 12.5 and 18 GeV.[1] Experimental complex includes the decay volume with veto system, the wide-aperture magnetic spectrometer consists of a set of proportional chambers, straw tubes, drift tubes and hodoscope, the Cherenkov counters for charged particle identification, the electromagnetic calorimeter known as GAMS-2000 detector, the total absorption hadron calorimeter and the muon counters.[2]

The research program of the experiment has the following items:[3]

The sensitivity of the OKA experiment will enable to observe decays with branching fractions of about 10−8.

References

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  1. ^ CERN Courier article
  2. ^ Kurshetsov (2009). "Status of "OKA" experiment". Proceedings of 2009 KAON International Conference: 3–4. Bibcode:2009kaon.confE..51K.
  3. ^ Obraztsov; Landsberg (2001). "Prospects for CP-violation searches in the future experiment with RF separated K± beam at U-70". Nucl. Phys. B Proc. Suppl. 99B (3): 257–264. arXiv:hep-ex/0011033. Bibcode:2001NuPhS..99..257O. doi:10.1016/S0920-5632(01)01385-8.
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