Detector performance at SHiP for cascade-produced long-lived particles

Abstract

Previous studies have shown that cascade production in the thick target of the SHiP experiment may substantially enhance the number of light long-lived particles (LLPs) decaying in the fiducial volume. However, cascade-produced LLPs are typically soft, so daughter-level acceptance and reconstruction effects can strongly suppress the observable event rate. We quantify this suppression for two representative cases: photophilic axion-like particles produced in electromagnetic cascades, and heavy neutral leptons produced in decays of secondary kaons. We combine a semi-analytic event-rate calculation with a detector-level study of ALP reconstruction in the electromagnetic calorimeter. For the nominal SHiP detector design, cascade ALPs give at most a moderate enhancement over primary production, and only at the lightest masses; at higher masses, the cascade contribution becomes subdominant or negligible. For HNLs from secondary kaons, the cascade contribution is already subdominant after imposing daughter-level geometric acceptance. We also identify possible ways to recover part of the cascade event rate, including relaxed event-selection criteria and an active-target subdetector.

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