3,909 research outputs found
The CMS Silicon Strip Tracker
With over 200 square meters of sensitive Silicon and almost 10 million
readout channels, the Silicon Strip Tracker of the CMS experiment at the LHC
will be the largest Silicon strip detector ever built. The design, construction
and expected performance of the CMS Tracker is reviewed in the following.Comment: 8 pages, 8 figures, talk given at XIX EPS NPDC Conference on "New
Trends in Nuclear Physics Applications and Technology", September 5-9, 2005
Pavia, Ital
Vertex reconstruction framework and its implementation for CMS
The class framework developed for vertex reconstruction in CMS is described.
We emphasize how we proceed to develop a flexible, efficient and reliable piece
of reconstruction software. We describe the decomposition of the algorithms
into logical parts, the mathematical toolkit, and the way vertex reconstruction
integrates into the CMS reconstruction project ORCA. We discuss the tools that
we have developed for algorithm evaluation and optimization and for code
release.Comment: Talk from the 2003 Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics
(CHEP03), La Jolla, Ca, USA, March 2003, 4 pages, LaTeX, no figures. PSN
TULT01
New vertex reconstruction algorithms for CMS
The reconstruction of interaction vertices can be decomposed into a pattern
recognition problem (``vertex finding'') and a statistical problem (``vertex
fitting''). We briefly review classical methods. We introduce novel approaches
and motivate them in the framework of high-luminosity experiments like at the
LHC. We then show comparisons with the classical methods in relevant physics
channelsComment: Talk from the 2003 Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics
(CHEP03), La Jolla, Ca, USA, March 2003, 5 pages, LaTeX, 3 eps figures. PSN
TULT01
Supersymmetric Yang-Mills-Chern-Simons theory
We prove that three-dimensional N=1 supersymmetric Yang-Mills-Chern-Simons
theory is finite to all loops. This leaves open the possibility that different
regularization methods give different finite effective actions. We show that
for this model dimensional regularization and regularization by dimensional
reduction yield the same effective action.Comment: 6 pages, 1 figure, latex, espcrc2. Contribution to the Proceedings of
the 30th Ahrenshoop Symposium on the Theory of Elementary Particles, edited
by D. Lust, H.-J. Otto and G. Weigt, to appear in Nuclear Physics B,
Proceedings Supplemen
An off-shell I.R. regularization strategy in the analysis of collinear divergences
We present a method for the analysis of singularities of Feynman amplitudes
based on the Speer sector decomposition of the Schwinger parametric integrals
combined with the Mellin-Barnes transform. The sector decomposition method is
described in some details. We suggest the idea of applying the method to the
analysis of collinear singularities in inclusive QCD cross sections in the
mass-less limit regularizing the forward amplitudes by an off-shell choice of
the initial particle momenta. It is shown how the suggested strategy works in
the well known case of the one loop corrections to Deep Inelastic Scattering.Comment: 25 pages, 3 figure
BIOMECHANICAL ANALYSIS OF THE DEADLIFT DURING THE 1999 SPECIAL OLYMPICS WORLD GAMES
Sumo and conventional deadlifts and high and low skilled lifters were compared during the 1999 Special Olympics World Games. Two video cameras collected 60 Hz data from 40 subjects, and parameters were quantified at barbell liftoff (LO) and barbell knee passing (KP). The sumo group had a more vertical trunk and horizontal thigh at LO, a less vertical shank at KP, and greater forefoot abduction. The sumo group generated ankle dorsiflexor, knee extensor, and hip extensor moments, while the conventional group produced ankle plantar flexor, knee flexor & extensor, and hip extensor moments. High skilled lifters had a 40% greater barbell load, greater knee flexion at LO and greater knee extension at KP, 15% less vertical bar distance, smaller plantar flexor and hip extensor moment arms at LO and KP, and greater knee extensor moment arms at LO
Position Dependence of Charge Collection in Prototype Sensors for the CMS Pixel Detector
This paper reports on the sensor R&D activity for the CMS pixel detector.
Devices featuring several design and technology options have been irradiated up
to a proton fluencec of 1E15 n_eq/cm**2 at the CERN PS. Afterward they were
bump bonded to unirradiated readout chips and tested using high energy pions in
the H2 beam line of the CERN SPS. The readout chip allows a non zero suppressed
full analogue readout and therefore a good characterization of the sensors in
terms of noise and charge collection properties. The position dependence of
signal is presented and the differences between the two sensor options are
discussed.Comment: Contribution to the IEEE-NSS Oct. 2003, Portland, OR, USA, submitted
to IEEE-TNS 7 pages, 8 figures, 1 table. Revised, title change
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