267 research outputs found
“ROC” Chips Readout
International audienceThe OMEGA group at LAL has designed 3 chips for ILC calorimeters: one analog (SPIROC) and one digital (HARDROC) for the hadronic one and also one for the electromagnetic one (SKIROC). The readout and the management of these different chips will be explained. To minimize the lines between the ASICs and the DAQ, the readout is made thanks to 2 lines which are common for all the chips: Data and TransmitOn. As the chips are daisy chained, each chip is talking to the DAQ one after the other. When one chip has finished its readout, it starts the readout of the chip just after. Moreover, during this readout, only the chip which is talking to the DAQ is powered: this is made thanks to the POD (Power On Digital) module in the ASIC. In the ILC mode, readout sequence is active during inter bunch crossing (like ADC conversion). Another chip designed for PMM2 R&D program (PARISROC) integrates a new selective readout: that's mean only hit channels are sent to the DAQ in a complete autonomous mode
PARISROC, a Photomultiplier Array Integrated Read Out Chip
PARISROC is a complete read out chip, in AMS SiGe 0.35 !m technology, for
photomultipliers array. It allows triggerless acquisition for next generation
neutrino experiments and it belongs to an R&D program funded by the French
national agency for research (ANR) called PMm2: ?Innovative electronics for
photodetectors array used in High Energy Physics and Astroparticles?
(ref.ANR-06-BLAN-0186). The ASIC (Application Specific Integrated Circuit)
integrates 16 independent and auto triggered channels with variable gain and
provides charge and time measurement by a Wilkinson ADC (Analog to Digital
Converter) and a 24-bit Counter. The charge measurement should be performed
from 1 up to 300 photo- electrons (p.e.) with a good linearity. The time
measurement allowed to a coarse time with a 24-bit counter at 10 MHz and a fine
time on a 100ns ramp to achieve a resolution of 1 ns. The ASIC sends out only
the relevant data through network cables to the central data storage. This
paper describes the front-end electronics ASIC called PARISROC.Comment: IEEE Nuclear Science Symposium an Medical Imaging Conference (2009
NSS/MIC
A Characterization of Bispecial Sturmian Words
A finite Sturmian word w over the alphabet {a,b} is left special (resp. right
special) if aw and bw (resp. wa and wb) are both Sturmian words. A bispecial
Sturmian word is a Sturmian word that is both left and right special. We show
as a main result that bispecial Sturmian words are exactly the maximal internal
factors of Christoffel words, that are words coding the digital approximations
of segments in the Euclidean plane. This result is an extension of the known
relation between central words and primitive Christoffel words. Our
characterization allows us to give an enumerative formula for bispecial
Sturmian words. We also investigate the minimal forbidden words for the set of
Sturmian words.Comment: Accepted to MFCS 201
HARDROC, Readout chip of the Digital Hadronic Calorimeter of ILC
HARDROC (HAdronic Rpc Detector ReadOut Chip) [1] is the very front end chip designed for the readout of the RPC or Micromegas foreseen for the Digital HAdronic CALorimeter (DHCAL) of the future International Linear Collider. The very fine granularity of the ILC hadronic calorimeters (1cm2 pads) implies a huge number of electronics channels (4 105 /m3) which is a new feature of “imaging” calorimetry. Moreover, for compactness, the chips must be embedded inside the detector making crucial the reduction of the power consumption to 10 μW per channel. This is achieved using power pulsing, made possible by the ILC bunch pattern (1 ms of data acquisition for 199 ms of dead time). HARDROC readout is a semi-digital readout with three thresholds which allows both good tracking and coarse energy measurement, and also integrates on chip data storage. The overall performance of HARDROC will be described with detailed measurements of all the characteristics. Hundreds of chips have indeed been produced and tested before being mounted on printed boards developed for the readout of large scale (1m2) RPC and Micromegas prototypes. These prototypes have been tested with cosmics and also in testbeam at CERN in 2008 and 2009 to evaluate the performance of different kinds of GRPCs and to validate the semi-digital electronics readout system in beam conditions
Digital part of SiPM Integrated Read-Out Chip ASIC for ILC hadronic calorimeter
SPIROC is the Silicium Photo-multiplier (SiPM) Integrated Read-Out Chip designed for the future ILC hadronic calorimeter. It reads 36 SiPMs and has an autotrigger on its 36 channels. Its main requirements are a 100% trigger rate for signal over 1/2 photoelectron, a charge measurement up to 2000 photoelectrons and a time measurement with an accuracy better than 1ns. In order to perform all these functions, SPIROC integrates a complex digital part to manage all the different steps of normal working (acquisition, measure and read-out). This ASIC was submitted in June 2007 (technology AMS SiGe 0.35ÎĽm). In this paper, section I describes the general architecture of the ASIC and the main interactions between analogue and digital parts. Section II is dedicated to the different module of the digital part that manages the ASIC
SPIROC (SiPM Integrated Read-Out Chip): Dedicated very front-end electronics for an ILC prototype hadronic calorimeter with SiPM read-out.
Omega et Calice collaborationsInternational audienceThe SPIROC chip is a dedicated very front-end electronics for an ILC prototype hadronic calorimeter with Silicon photomultiplier (or MPPC) readout. This ASIC is due to equip a 10,000-channel demonstrator in 2009. SPIROC is an evolution of FLC_SiPM used for the ILC AHCAL physics prototype [1]. SPIROC was submitted in June 2007 and will be tested in September 2007. It embeds cutting edge features that fulfil ILC final detector requirements. It has been realized in 0.35m SiGe technology. It has been developed to match the requirements of large dynamic range, low noise, low consumption, high precision and large number of readout channels needed. SPIROC is an auto-triggered, bi-gain, 36-channel ASIC which allows to measure on each channel the charge from one photoelectron to 2000 and the time with a 100ps accurate TDC. An analogue memory array with a depth of 16 for each channel is used to store the time information and the charge measurement. A 12-bit Wilkinson ADC has been embedded to digitize the analogue memory content (time and charge on 2 gains). The data are then stored in a 4kbytes RAM. A very complex digital part has been integrated to manage all theses features and to transfer the data to the DAQ which is described on [2]. After an exhaustive description, the extensive measurement results of that new front-end chip will be presented
PARISROC, a photomultiplier array readout chip
PARISROC is a complete read out chip, in AMS SiGe 0.35 micron technology, for
photomultipliers array. It is a front-end electronics ASIC which allows
triggerless acquisition for the next generation of neutrino experiments. These
detectors have place in megaton size water tanks and will require very large
surface of photo-detection. An R & D program, funded by French national agency
for research and called PMm2, proposes to segment the very large surface of
photo-detection in macro pixels made of 16 photomultiplier tubes connected to
an autonomous front-end electronics. The ASIC allows triggerless acquisition
and only send out the relevant data by network to the central data storage.
This data management reduces considerably the cost of these detectors. This
paper describes the front-end electronics ASIC called PARISROC which integrates
totally independents 16 channels with a variable gain and provides charge and
time measurement with a 12-bit ADC and a 24-bits Counter.Comment: 1st international conference on Technology and Instrumentation in
Particle Physics (TIPP09), Tsukuba, Japan (2009
SPIROC (SiPM Integrated Read-Out Chip): Dedicated very front-end electronics for an ILC prototype hadronic calorimeter with SiPM read-out
The SPIROC chip is a dedicated very front-end electronics for an ILC prototype hadronic calorimeter with Silicon photomultiplier (or MPPC) readout. This ASIC is due to equip a 10,000-channel demonstrator in 2009. SPIROC is an evolution of FLC_SiPM used for the ILC AHCAL physics prototype [1]. SPIROC was submitted in June 2007 and will be tested in September 2007. It embeds cutting edge features that fulfil ILC final detector requirements. It has been realized in 0.35m SiGe technology. It has been developed to match the requirements of large dynamic range, low noise, low consumption, high precision and large number of readout channels needed. SPIROC is an auto-triggered, bi-gain, 36-channel ASIC which allows to measure on each channel the charge from one photoelectron to 2000 and the time with a 100ps accurate TDC. An analogue memory array with a depth of 16 for each channel is used to store the time information and the charge measurement. A 12-bit Wilkinson ADC has been embedded to digitize the analogue memory content (time and charge on 2 gains). The data are then stored in a 4kbytes RAM. A very complex digital part has been integrated to manage all theses features and to transfer the data to the DAQ which is described on [2]
SPIROC (SiPM Integrated Read-Out Chip): Dedicated very front-end electronics for an ILC prototype hadronic calorimeter with SiPM read-out
The SPIROC chip is a dedicated very front-end electronics for an ILC prototype hadronic calorimeter with Silicon photomultiplier (or MPPC) readout. This ASIC is due to equip a 10,000-channel demonstrator in 2009. SPIROC is an evolution of FLC_SiPM used for the ILC AHCAL physics prototype [1]. SPIROC was submitted in June 2007 and will be tested in September 2007. It embeds cutting edge features that fulfil ILC final detector requirements. It has been realized in 0.35m SiGe technology. It has been developed to match the requirements of large dynamic range, low noise, low consumption, high precision and large number of readout channels needed. SPIROC is an auto-triggered, bi-gain, 36-channel ASIC which allows to measure on each channel the charge from one photoelectron to 2000 and the time with a 100ps accurate TDC. An analogue memory array with a depth of 16 for each channel is used to store the time information and the charge measurement. A 12-bit Wilkinson ADC has been embedded to digitize the analogue memory content (time and charge on 2 gains). The data are then stored in a 4kbytes RAM. A very complex digital part has been integrated to manage all theses features and to transfer the data to the DAQ which is described on [2]. After an exhaustive description, the extensive measurement results of that new front-end chip will be presented
How to compare arc-annotated sequences: The alignment hierarchy
International audienceWe describe a new unifying framework to express comparison of arc-annotated sequences, which we call alignment of arc-annotated sequences. We first prove that this framework encompasses main existing models, which allows us to deduce complexity results for several cases from the literature. We also show that this framework gives rise to new relevant problems that have not been studied yet. We provide a thorough analysis of these novel cases by proposing two polynomial time algorithms and an NP-completeness proof. This leads to an almost exhaustive study of alignment of arc-annotated sequences
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