A Study to Suppress a Sneaking Cosmic Muon Background in the COMET Experiment

1Department of Physics, Kyushu University, Fukuoka 819-0395, Japan
2Institute of High Energy Physics (IHEP), Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), Beijing 100049, China
JPS Conf. Proc. 45 Proceedings of the 4th J-PARC Symposium 2024
6/12/26

The COMET experiment, conducted at J-PARC, aims to search for muon-to-electron conversion with an unprecedentedly high sensitivity. One of the severest backgrounds in the Phase-I experiment originates from cosmic-ray muons. A cosmic muon sneaks into a detector solenoid magnet from a loophole, scattered and leaving a track in a cylindrical drift chamber. Among them, a positive muon track with reverse direction may mimic a signal electron of 105 MeV/𝑐. In order to suppress the sneaking cosmic positive muon background, we developed a method to discriminate the track direction by using track-fitting quality. We demonstrated that the positive muon background can be reduced by an order of magnitude. In this paper, we will report the methodology, a Monte Carlo simulation and results with prospects.

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