2 research outputs found

    The ALICE Dimuon Spectrometer High Level Trigger

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    The ALICE Dimuon Spectrometer High Level Trigger (dHLT) is an on-line processing stage whose primary function is to select interesting events that contain distinct physics signals from heavy resonance decays such as J/psi and Gamma particles, amidst unwanted background events. It forms part of the High Level Trigger of the ALICE experiment, whose goal is to reduce the large data rate of about 25 GB/s from the ALICE detectors by an order of magnitude, without loosing interesting physics events. The dHLT has been implemented as a software trigger within a high performance and fault tolerant data transportation framework, which is run on a large cluster of commodity compute nodes. To reach the required processing speeds, the system is built as a concurrent system with a hierarchy of processing steps. The main algorithms perform partial event reconstruction, starting with hit reconstruction on the level of the raw data received from the spectrometer. Then a tracking algorithm finds track candidates from the reconstructed hit points. Physical parameters such as momentum are extracted from the track candidates and finally a dHLT decision is made to readout the event based on certain trigger criteria. Various simulations and commissioning tests have shown that the dHLT can expect a background rejection factor of at least 5 compared to hardware triggering alone, with little impact on the signal detection efficiency
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