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The International Linear Collider will produce
more powerful
electron-positron collisions than any machine in the past. There is
global consensus in
the high energy physics community that the detector requirements for a
collider
detector at the International Linear Collider far exceed present day
technology.
The physics program of the ILC requires further advances in detector
technology to access the spectrum of physics processes anticipated at
the energy
frontier. The primary challenges for detectors at the linear collider
are vertex
resolution, flavor identification for bottom and charm jets, track
momentum
resolution, jet energy resolution, establishing particle flow
algorithms, and
unprecedented hermiticity.
From large-scale silicon detectors to digital
calorimetry, Fermilab
scientists and scientists around the world are studying the feasibility
of different
detector systems. At Fermilab, in collaboration with other laboratories
and universities,
detector research and development is carried out in areas critical to
the linear
collider detector concepts. Forefront studies are progressing in the
areas of sensor
technology for monolithic active pixel detectors, hybrid pixel
detectors, design of low
mass vertex detectors and silicon trackers, high field solenoids, muon
detectors and
particle flow calorimetry. All design studies are guided by physics
simulations. The primary goal is to establish the proof of principle of
each
technology on a timescale compatible with the start of construction of
the
accelerator.
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