The L3+C detector, a unique tool-set to study cosmic rays

2002 
AbstractThe L3 detector at the CERN electron–positron collider, LEP, has been employed for the study of cosmic ray muons.The muon spectrometer of L3 consists of a set of high-precision drift chambers installed inside a magnet with avolume of about 1000 m 3 and a field of 0:5T: Muon momenta are measured with a resolution of a few percentat 50 GeV: The detector is located under 30 m of overburden. A scintillator air shower array of 54 m by 30 mis installed on the roof of the surface hall above L3 in order to estimate the energy and the core position of theshower associated with a sample of detected muons. Thanks to the unique properties of the L3þC detector, muonresearch topics relevant to various current problems in cosmic ray and particle astrophysics can be studied. r 2002Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved. PACS: 95.55.Vj; 98.70.Sa; 96.40.Tv; 95.85.RyKeywords: L3+C detector; Cosmic rays; Muon spectrum; Astroparticle physics 1. IntroductionThe L3þ C experiment (Figs. 1 and 2), installedat the Large Electron Positron collider (LEP) atCERN, Geneva, consists of two major parts:firstly, below ground, the L3 muon spectrometer[1], which is comprised of a large 0:5 T magnetwith a volume of 1000 m
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