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High
Energy Physics experiments are currently entering a new era which
requires the operation of gaseous particle detectors at
unprecedented high rates and integrated particle fluxes. Full
functionality of such detectors over the lifetime of an
experiment in a harsh radiation environment is of large concern
to the involved experimenters.
New classes of gaseous detectors
such as large scale straw-type detectors, Micro-Strip Gas
Chambers, Micro Pattern Gas Detectors, and related detector types with their own specific aging
effects have evolved since the first (and up to now last)
workshop on wire chamber aging was held at LBL, Berkeley in 1986.
In light of these developments and as detector aging is a
notoriously complex field we think it is time again to provide a
forum for interested experimentalists to review the progress in
understanding of aging effects and exchange their recent
experiences. One goal of the workshop will be to work out a set
of recommendations on how to minimize aging effects in
state-of-the-art and future gaseous detectors.
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