85 research outputs found

    The Level-0 Muon Trigger for the LHCb Experiment

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    A very compact architecture has been developed for the first level Muon Trigger of the LHCb experiment that processes 40 millions of proton-proton collisions per second. For each collision, it receives 3.2 kBytes of data and it finds straight tracks within a 1.2 microseconds latency. The trigger implementation is massively parallel, pipelined and fully synchronous with the LHC clock. It relies on 248 high density Field Programable Gate arrays and on the massive use of multigigabit serial link transceivers embedded inside FPGAs.Comment: 33 pages, 16 figures, submitted to NIM

    Background Light in Potential Sites for the ANTARES Undersea Neutrino Telescope

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    The ANTARES collaboration has performed a series of {\em in situ} measurements to study the background light for a planned undersea neutrino telescope. Such background can be caused by 40^{40}K decays or by biological activity. We report on measurements at two sites in the Mediterranean Sea at depths of 2400~m and 2700~m, respectively. Three photomultiplier tubes were used to measure single counting rates and coincidence rates for pairs of tubes at various distances. The background rate is seen to consist of three components: a constant rate due to 40^{40}K decays, a continuum rate that varies on a time scale of several hours simultaneously over distances up to at least 40~m, and random bursts a few seconds long that are only correlated in time over distances of the order of a meter. A trigger requiring coincidences between nearby photomultiplier tubes should reduce the trigger rate for a neutrino telescope to a manageable level with only a small loss in efficiency.Comment: 18 pages, 8 figures, accepted for publication in Astroparticle Physic

    LHCb inner tracker: Technical Design Report

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    LHCb muon system: Technical Design Report

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    Reaction mechanism studies made simple using simulated annealing. Potential energy surface exploration

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    International audienceA new and easy way to study reaction mechanisms by theoretical means is proposed. Simulated annealing is used to explore the potential energy surface of three different systems. This approach enables a facile finding of most stationary points involved in the various possible reaction paths arising from a given molecular system and thus allows one to determine a whole set of competing reactions. Therefore, by a comparison of the activation barriers, we can qualitatively estimate whether a reaction should be stereoselective or if side-products may arise. This paper deals with the [2 + 2] cycloaddition leading to beta-lactones and the thermolysis of thiirane and thiiranium cation
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