77 research outputs found
Commissioning and Performance of the ATLAS Liquid Argon Calorimeters
The ATLAS liquid argon (LAr) calorimeter system consists of an
electromagnetic barrel calorimeter and two end-caps with electromagnetic,
hadronic and forward calorimeters. The construction of the full calorimeter
system is completed since mid-2004. The detector has been operated with LAr at
nominal high voltage and fully equipped with readout electronics. Online
software, monitoring tools and offline signal reconstruction have been
developed for data collection and processing. Extensive tests with calibration
pulses have been carried out, and the electronics calibration scheme for all
182468 channels has been exercised. Since Augst 2006, cosmic muon data have
been collected together with the rest of the ATLAS detector system as part of
the ATLAS commissioning program. The reconstructed LAr signals from energy
deposited by cosmic rays are compared to the prediction derived from measured
detector parameters and calibration pulses. The uniformity of the detector
response within regions that have sufficient cosmic muons are examined. The
expected performance of the LAr calorimeter for ATLAS physics, based on
previous beam tests and Monte Carlo simulation, is also summarised.Comment: Parallel talk at ICHEP08, Philadelphia, USA, July 2008. 5 pages,
LaTeX, 4 eps figures; v2: resubmitted article with updated style file
provided by the ICHEP proceedings team. No other change
Vertex-Detector R&D for CLIC
A detector concept based on hybrid planar pixel-detector technology is under
development for the CLIC vertex detector. It comprises fast, low-power and
small-pitch readout ASICs implemented in 65 nm CMOS technology (CLICpix)
coupled to ultra-thin sensors via low-mass interconnects. The power dissipation
of the readout chips is reduced by means of power pulsing, allowing for a
cooling system based on forced gas flow. In this paper the CLIC vertex-detector
requirements are reviewed and the current status of R&D on sensors, readout and
detector integration is presented.Comment: 12 pages, 7 figures. Talk presented at the 13th Topical Seminar on
Innovative Particle and Radiation Detectors (IPRD13), 7 - 10 October 2013,
Siena, Ital
Probing Extra Dimensions with ATLAS
In the late nineties several authors suggested that the extra dimensions
predicted by string theory might lead to observable effects at high energy
colliders. The ATLAS experiment which will start taking data at the LHC in 2007
will be an excellent place to search for such effects. The sensitivity of ATLAS
to signatures of Extra Dimensions will be presented.Comment: 4 pages, 1 figure, to appear in Proceedings of SUSY06, the 14th
International Conference on Supersymmetry and the Unification of Fundamental
Interactions, UC Irvine, California, 12-17 June 200
CLIC e+e- Linear Collider Studies - Input to the Snowmass process 2013
This paper addresses the issues in question for Energy Frontier Lepton and
Gamma Colliders by the Frontier Capabilities group of the Snowmass 2013 process
and is structured accordingly. It will be accompanied by a paper describing the
Detector and Physics studies for the CLIC project currently in preparation for
submission to the Energy Frontier group.Comment: Submitted to the Snowmass process 2013. arXiv admin note: substantial
text overlap with arXiv:1208.140
CLIC e+e- Linear Collider Studies
This document provides input from the CLIC e+e- linear collider studies to
the update process of the European Strategy for Particle Physics. It is
submitted on behalf of the CLIC/CTF3 collaboration and the CLIC physics and
detector study. It describes the exploration of fundamental questions in
particle physics at the energy frontier with a future TeV-scale e+e- linear
collider based on the Compact Linear Collider (CLIC) two-beam acceleration
technique. A high-luminosity high-energy e+e- collider allows for the
exploration of Standard Model physics, such as precise measurements of the
Higgs, top and gauge sectors, as well as for a multitude of searches for New
Physics, either through direct discovery or indirectly, via high-precision
observables. Given the current state of knowledge, following the observation of
a \sim125 GeV Higgs-like particle at the LHC, and pending further LHC results
at 8 TeV and 14 TeV, a linear e+e- collider built and operated in
centre-of-mass energy stages from a few-hundred GeV up to a few TeV will be an
ideal physics exploration tool, complementing the LHC. Two example scenarios
are presented for a CLIC accelerator built in three main stages of 500 GeV, 1.4
(1.5) TeV, and 3 TeV, together with the layout and performance of the
experiments and accompanied by cost estimates. The resulting CLIC physics
potential and measurement precisions are illustrated through detector
simulations under realistic beam conditions.Comment: Submitted to the European Strategy Preparatory Grou
Simulations of CMOS pixel sensors with a small collection electrode, improved for a faster charge collection and increased radiation tolerance
CMOS pixel sensors with a small collection electrode combine the advantages
of a small sensor capacitance with the advantages of a fully monolithic design.
The small sensor capacitance results in a large ratio of signal-to-noise and a
low analogue power consumption, while the monolithic design reduces the
material budget, cost and production effort. However, the low electric field in
the pixel corners of such sensors results in an increased charge collection
time, that makes a fully efficient operation after irradiation and a timing
resolution in the order of nanoseconds challenging for pixel sizes larger than
approximately forty micrometers. This paper presents the development of
concepts of CMOS sensors with a small collection electrode to overcome these
limitations, using three-dimensional Technology Computer Aided Design
simulations. The studied design uses a 0.18 micrometer process implemented on a
high-resistivity epitaxial layer.Comment: Proceedings of the PIXEL 2018 Worksho
PDE-Foam - a probability-density estimation method using self-adapting phase-space binning
Probability Density Estimation (PDE) is a multivariate discrimination
technique based on sampling signal and background densities defined by event
samples from data or Monte-Carlo (MC) simulations in a multi-dimensional phase
space. In this paper, we present a modification of the PDE method that uses a
self-adapting binning method to divide the multi-dimensional phase space in a
finite number of hyper-rectangles (cells). The binning algorithm adjusts the
size and position of a predefined number of cells inside the multi-dimensional
phase space, minimising the variance of the signal and background densities
inside the cells. The implementation of the binning algorithm PDE-Foam is based
on the MC event-generation package Foam. We present performance results for
representative examples (toy models) and discuss the dependence of the obtained
results on the choice of parameters. The new PDE-Foam shows improved
classification capability for small training samples and reduced classification
time compared to the original PDE method based on range searching.Comment: 19 pages, 11 figures; replaced with revised version accepted for
publication in NIM A and corrected typos in description of Fig. 7 and
- …