Robert P. Johnson

Professor of Physics

University of California at Santa Cruz

B.S., University of Kansas, 1981

Ph.D., Stanford University, 1986

Contents

·        Contact Information

·        Teaching

·        Research Projects

·        Research Interests

·        Links

·        Selected Recent Publications

Contact Information

Office: 323 Natural Sciences II

Mailing address:

Santa Cruz Institute for Particle Physics

University of California at Santa Cruz

1156 High St.

Santa Cruz, CA  95064

Electronic mail address: rjohnson@scipp.ucsc.edu

Office phone: (831) 459-2125

Fax: (831) 459-5777

Back to top

Teaching

·        Physics 6A (Winter 2001)

·        Physics 6B (Winter 2003)

·        Physics 6C (Autumn 2006)

·        Physics 101A (Winter 1999)

·        Physics 101B (Spring 1999)

·        Physics 105 (Autumn 2008)

·        Physics 110A (Winter 2007)

·        Physics 110B (Spring 2000)

·        Physics 116B (Spring 2005)

·        Physics 139A (Spring 2007)

·        Physics 160 (Spring 2008)

·        Physics 210 (Autumn 2003)

Back to top

Research Projects

·         Gamma Large Area Space Telescope (GLAST)

1.      SLAC GLAST LAT Home Page

2.      SCIPP GLAST Page

Back to top

Research Interests

    Johnson's work is in the areas of experimental particle physics and, recently, high-energy astrophysics. Before coming to UCSC he spent five years working at the CERN laboratory in Geneva, Switzerland on the ALEPH experiment at the Large Electron-Positron collider (LEP). After coming to UCSC he continued working on that experiment in collaboration with Prof. Alan Litke. The ALEPH experiment collected data from 1989 to 1995 at the energy of the Z resonance and since then has been collecting data above the threshold for production of W pairs. Members of the SCIPP group made important contributions to the installation, debugging, and operation of the Aleph silicon-strip vertex detector. They also contributed to the exploitation of that state-of-the-art device for physics analysis, both for studies of the production and decays of B hadrons at the Z resonance and for searches for new phenomena, such as the Higgs boson and supersymmetry, in the LEP-II high-energy operation.

    A more recent project concerns the design and construction of an experiment (BaBar) at the B-Factory accelerator of the Stanford Linear Accelerator Center (SLAC). The B-Factory, which began running in 1999, has made detailed studies of CP violation in decays of B hadrons. Johnson was responsible for the design, prototyping, and testing of part of the fast, radiation-hard readout electronics of a silicon-strip vertex detector that is at the heart of this new detector. He worked in a collaboration of physicists and engineers from UCSC, LBNL, and INFN institutes in Pavia and Pisa to design a 128-channel CMOS VLSI chip to perform the amplification, discrimination, buffering, and data acquisition functions necessary for readout of the 150,000 channel detector. The SCIPP group was also responsible for the data transmission electronics of the BaBar vertex detector and for much of the software development needed for analysis of the data.  This experiment operated into 2008 and has published many measurements, including parameters of CP violation in the B system.

    Johnson's principal current interest is a NASA/D.O.E. project, named GLAST, to build and operate an orbiting gamma-ray telescope based on the silicon-strip technology in which SCIPP specializes. This second-generation device (the GLAST Large-Area Telescope, or LAT) promises to deliver a two-order-of-magnitude improvement in sensitivity to astrophysical sources of high-energy gamma rays, compared with the current highly successful EGRET experiment on the Compton Gamma Ray Observatory. The project calls for almost 900,000 silicon-strip channels operating on a power budget of less than two hundred watts. Johnson has concentrated on development of the low-power, low-noise readout electronics needed for this application. A CMOS VLSI chip set similar in concept to what was developed for the B-Factory was designed in the SCIPP lab, together with the necessary supporting electronics.  Prototypes were extensively tested in a full-scale tracker module assembled in the SCIPP lab and operated in December 1999 and January 2000 in the SLAC test beam and in 2001 on a high-altitude balloon flight.  Other SCIPP faculty who contributed to the GLAST-LAT design and fabrication are Bill Atwood (the originator of the LAT conceptual design, on which he began detailed Monte-Carlo simulations in 1992), Hartmut Sadrozinski, most notable for leading the effort to design and procure the silicon-strip detectors, and Terry Schalk, who helped manage the flight software development.

   GLAST will provide a vast amount of data on gamma ray sources in our galaxy, such as pulsars, as well as on extra-galactic sources such as active galactic nuclei and the even more mysterious gamma-ray bursts.  It will also enable us to search for signals from massive particles hypothesized to constitute the dark matter of the universe.  The GLAST mission includes both the Large-Area Telescope (LAT) and a smaller Gamma-Ray Burst Monitor.  The silicon-strip based instrument design was selected by NASA for the LAT instrument in March of 2000.  Johnson is the manager for the design and fabrication of the silicon-strip tracker subsystem of the LAT, which also includes a CsI crystal calorimeter and a plastic-scintillator veto shield.  The Critical Design Review for the Tracker subsystem was held in March of 2003, after which the collaboration (USA, Italy, Japan) engaged in manufacturing and assembly of the flight hardware.  In addition to the management responsibilities, Johnson’s UCSC group was responsible for delivering the Tracker readout electronics, including 648 multi-chip modules, each with 1536 amplifier channels, and the flexible-circuit readout cables.  The first tracker tower module was completed in Italy in January of 2005, and in October of 2005 the last of the 18 Tracker tower modules (including 2 spares) was completed and tested.  Here you can find a view of the 16 flight Tracker modules mounted in the LAT at SLAC, along with 16 calorimeter modules (not visible).  The remainder of the instrument was completed in the winter of 2006, and in September of 2006 the LAT successfully completed its environmental testing at the Naval Research Laboratory and was ready to be integrated with the spacecraft (photo of the completed, tested instrument).  The instrument was integrated with the spacecraft at General Dynamics in Arizona (photo of the LAT and GBM NaI detectors on the spacecraft).  The integrated observatory completed thermal-vacuum testing at the Naval Research Laboratory in early 2008 and was then transported to Florida (photo of completed observatory, photo of observatory on rocket).  The spacecraft was successfully launched on a ULA Delta-II rocket at 12:05 EDT on June 11, 2008 (photo1, photo2, photo3,video).

 

Back to top

Links

·        SCIPP Home Page

·        Physics Home Page

·        Astronomy and Astrophysics

Back to top

Selected Recent Publications

·        M. Ziegler, B.M. Baughman, R.P. Johnson, W.B. Atwood,  A Search for Radio Quiet Gamma-Ray Pulsars in EGRET Data Using a Time Differencing Technique,  Ap.J. 679, 2008.

·        W. Atwood et al., Design and Initial Tests of the Tracker-Converter of the Gamma-ray Large Area Space Telescope, Astroparticle Physics 28, 422-434, 2007.

·        W.B. Atwood, M. Ziegler, R.P. Johnson, B.M. Baughman, A Time Differencing Technique for Detecting Radio-Quiet Gamma-Ray Pulsars, Ap.J. 652, L49-L52, 2006.

·        L. Baldini et al., Fabrication of the GLAST Silicon Tracker Readout Electronics, IEEE Trans. Nucl. Sci. 53, 3013-3020, 2006.

·        L. Baldini et al., The Silicon Tracker Readout Electronics of the Gamma-Ray Large Area Space Telescope, IEEE Trans. Nucl. Sci. 53, 466, 2006.

Back to top

Last Revised: September 2, 2008