65 research outputs found
BTeV Level 1 Vertex Trigger
BTeV is a -physics experiment that expects to begin collecting data at the
C0 interaction region of the Fermilab Tevatron in the year 2006. Its primary
goal is to achieve unprecedented levels of sensitivity in the study of CP
violation, mixing, and rare decays in and quark systems. In order to
realize this, it will employ a state-of-the-art first-level vertex trigger
(Level 1) that will look at every beam crossing to identify detached secondary
vertices that provide evidence for heavy quark decays. This talk will briefly
describe the BTeV detector and trigger, focus on the software and hardware
aspects of the Level 1 vertex trigger, and describe work currently being done
in these areas
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Top quark mass measurements at the Tevatron and the standard model fits
New measurements of the top quark mass from the Tevatron are presented. Combined with previous results, they yield a preliminary new world average of m{sub top} = 170.9 {+-} 1.1(stat) {+-} 1.5(syst)GeV/c{sup 2} and impose new constraints on the mass of the Higgs boson
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The BTeV trigger architecture
BTeV is a high-statistics B-physics experiment that will achieve new levels of sensitivity in testing the Standard Model explanation of CP violation, mixing, and rare decays in the b and c quark systems by operating in the unique environment of a hadron collider. In order to achieve its goals, it will make use of a state-of-the-art Si-pixel vertex detector and a novel 3-level hierarchical trigger that will look at every single beam crossing to detect the presence of heavy quark decays. This talk will describe the trigger architecture focusing on key design aspects that allow the use of commercially available technology in a highly feasible and practical solution that meets the demanding physics requirements of the BTeV experiment
Extracting low energy signals from raw LArTPC waveforms using deep learning techniques — A proof of concept
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