Experimental Techniques in High-Energy Nuclear and Particle Physics is a compilation of outstanding technical papers and reviews of the ingenious methods developed for experimentation in modern nuclear and particle physics. This book, a second edition, provides a balanced view of the major tools and technical concepts currently in use, and elucidates the basic principles that underly the detection devices. Several of the articles in this volume have never been published, or have appeared in relatively inaccessible journals. Although the emphasis is on charged-particle tracking and calorimetry, general reviews of ionization detectors and Monte Carlo techniques are also included.This book serves as a compact source of reference for graduate students and experimenters in the fields of nuclear and particle physics, seeking information on some of the major ideas and techniques developed for modern experiments in these fields.
Particle detectors, K.Kleinknecht; principles of operation of multiwire proportional and drill chambers, F.Sauli; high-resolution electronic particle detectors, G.Charpak and F.Sauli; calorimetry in high-energy physics, C.Fabjan; fluctuations in calorimetry measurements, U.Amaldi; the physics of charged particle identification d/E/dx, Cherenkov and transition radiation, W.W.M.Allison and P.R.S.Wright; a two-dimensional, single-photoelectron drift detector for Cherenkov ring imaging, E.Barrelet et al; development of proportional counters using photosensitive gases and liquids, D.F.Anderson; liquid-argon ionization chambers as total absorption detectors, W.J.Willis and V.Radeka; fundamental properties of liquid argon, krypton and xenon as radiation detector media, T.Doke; signal, noise and resolution in position-sensitive detectors, V.Radeka; Monte Carlo theory and practice, F.James; high resolution hadron calorimetry, R.Wigmans.
"... this book is well suited for active experimenters in the field who will appreciate very much the exhaustive reference ... the book may well serve as a basis for graduate students courses, particularly in view of the reasonable price of the volume." R Santo J. Phys. G: Nucl. Part. Phys., 1992