752 research outputs found
Intrinsic timing properties of ideal 3D-trench silicon sensor with fast front-end electronics
This paper describes the fundamental timing properties of a single-pixel
sensor for charged particle detection based on the 3D-trench silicon structure.
We derive the results both analytically and numerically by considering a simple
ideal sensor and the corresponding fast front-end electronics in two different
case scenarios: ideal integrator and real fast electronics (trans-impedance
amplifier). The particular shape of the Time of Arrival (TOA) distribution is
examined and the relation between the time resolution and the spread of
intrinsic charge collection time is discussed, by varying electronics
parameters and discrimination thresholds. The results are obtained with and
without simulated electronics noise. We show that the 3D-trench sensors are
characterized by a , i.e. a portion of the active volume
which leads to the same TOA values when charged particles cross it. The
synchronous region size is dependent on the front-end electronics and
discrimination threshold, and the phenomenon represents an intrinsic physical
effect that leads to the excellent time resolution of these sensors. Moreover,
we show that the TOA distribution is characterized by an intrinsic asymmetry,
due to the 3D geometry only, that becomes negligible in case of significant
electronics jitter
Atmospheric Newtonian noise modeling for third-generation gravitational wave detectors
The sensitivity and the frequency bandwidth of third-generation
gravitational-wave (GW) detectors are such that the Newtonian noise (NN)
signals produced by atmospheric turbulence could become relevant. We build
models for atmospheric NN that take into account finite correlation times and
inhomogeneity along the vertical direction, and are therefore accurate enough
to represent a reliable reference tool for evaluating this kind of noise. We
compute the NN spectral density from our models and compare it with the
expected sensitivity curve of the Einstein Telescope (ET) with the xylophone
design. The noise signal decays exponentially for small values of the frequency
and the detector's depth, followed by a power-law for large values of the
parameters. We find that, when the detector is built at the earth's surface,
the NN contribution in the low-frequency band is above the ET sensitivity curve
for strong wind. Building the detector underground is sufficient to push the
noise signal under the ET sensitivity curve, but the decrement is close to
marginal for strong wind. In light of the slow decay with depth of the NN,
building the detector underground could be only partially effective as passive
noise mitigation.Comment: 17 pages, 8 figure
Medusa, a multithread 4-body decay fitting and simulation software
We present a new C++14 compliant application to perform physics data analyses of generic 4-body decays in massively parallel platforms. Medusa is highly based on Hydra, a header-only library which hides most of the complexities of writing parallel code for different architectures. Medusa has been tested through the measurement of the CP-violating phase ϕsin b-hadron decays exploiting the data collected by the LHCb experiment. Medusa executes the optimization of the full model, running over 500000 events, until 330 times faster than a non-parallelized program. Medusa is freely available on GitHub under GPL v.3.0 license
Notulae to the Italian alien vascular flora: 11
In this contribution, new data concerning the distribution of vascular flora alien to Italy are presented. It includes new records, confirmations, exclusions, and status changes for Italy or for Italian administrative regions. Nomenclatural and distribution updates published elsewhere are provided as Suppl. material 1
Notulae to the Italian alien vascular flora: 12
In this contribution, new data concerning the distribution of vascular flora alien to Italy are presented. It includes new records, confirmations, exclusions, and status changes for Italy or for Italian administrative regions. Nomenclatural and distribution updates published elsewhere are provided as Suppl. material 1
Notulae to the Italian alien vascular flora: 14
In this contribution, new data concerning the distribution of vascular flora alien to Italy are presented. It includes new records, confirmations, and status changes for Italy or for Italian administrative regions. Nomenclatural and distribution updates, published elsewhere, and corrections are provided as Suppl. material
Notulae to the Italian alien vascular flora: 14
In this contribution, new data concerning the distribution of vascular flora alien to Italy are presented. It includes new records, confirmations, and status changes for Italy or for Italian administrative regions. Nomenclatural and distribution updates, published elsewhere, and corrections are provided as Suppl. materia
Physics case for an LHCb Upgrade II - Opportunities in flavour physics, and beyond, in the HL-LHC era
The LHCb Upgrade II will fully exploit the flavour-physics opportunities of the HL-LHC, and study additional physics topics that take advantage of the forward acceptance of the LHCb spectrometer. The LHCb Upgrade I will begin operation in 2020. Consolidation will occur, and modest enhancements of the Upgrade I detector will be installed, in Long Shutdown 3 of the LHC (2025) and these are discussed here. The main Upgrade II detector will be installed in long shutdown 4 of the LHC (2030) and will build on the strengths of the current LHCb experiment and the Upgrade I. It will operate at a luminosity up to 2×1034
cm−2s−1, ten times that of the Upgrade I detector. New detector components will improve the intrinsic performance of the experiment in certain key areas. An Expression Of Interest proposing Upgrade II was submitted in February 2017. The physics case for the Upgrade II is presented here in more depth. CP-violating phases will be measured with precisions unattainable at any other envisaged facility. The experiment will probe b → sl+l−and b → dl+l− transitions in both muon and electron decays in modes not accessible at Upgrade I. Minimal flavour violation will be tested with a precision measurement of the ratio of B(B0 → μ+μ−)/B(Bs → μ+μ−). Probing charm CP violation at the 10−5 level may result in its long sought discovery. Major advances in hadron spectroscopy will be possible, which will be powerful probes of low energy QCD. Upgrade II potentially will have the highest sensitivity of all the LHC experiments on the Higgs to charm-quark couplings. Generically, the new physics mass scale probed, for fixed couplings, will almost double compared with the pre-HL-LHC era; this extended reach for flavour physics is similar to that which would be achieved by the HE-LHC proposal for the energy frontier
Measurement of the ratios of branching fractions and
The ratios of branching fractions
and are measured, assuming isospin symmetry, using a
sample of proton-proton collision data corresponding to 3.0 fb of
integrated luminosity recorded by the LHCb experiment during 2011 and 2012. The
tau lepton is identified in the decay mode
. The measured values are
and
, where the first uncertainty is
statistical and the second is systematic. The correlation between these
measurements is . Results are consistent with the current average
of these quantities and are at a combined 1.9 standard deviations from the
predictions based on lepton flavor universality in the Standard Model.Comment: All figures and tables, along with any supplementary material and
additional information, are available at
https://cern.ch/lhcbproject/Publications/p/LHCb-PAPER-2022-039.html (LHCb
public pages
LHCb upgrade software and computing : technical design report
This document reports the Research and Development activities that are carried out in the software and computing domains in view of the upgrade of the LHCb experiment. The implementation of a full software trigger implies major changes in the core software framework, in the event data model, and in the reconstruction algorithms. The increase of the data volumes for both real and simulated datasets requires a corresponding scaling of the distributed computing infrastructure. An implementation plan in both domains is presented, together with a risk assessment analysis
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