392 research outputs found
ELMB Microcontroller Firmware and SCADA Integration for the LHCb Muon Detector Readout Control System
The LHCb system requires high efficiency muon detection into LHC bunch crossing: 95% into a 25 ns time window. To reach such efficiency many parameters of the detector readout apparatus have to be calibrated and adjusted and its channels must be aligned in time. In addition, essential characteristics must be monitored to guarantee a good working condition of the apparatus (to avoid loss of efficiency and to minimize systematic errors). As the number of the muon readout parameters is extremely high (âŒ700000 registers), a system able to process information in parallel is required: 122000 readout channels will be controlled by about 600 microcontrollers and 6 computers. The complexity of such an apparatus requires the use of a distributed system. For this a Supervisory Control And Data Acquisition (SCADA) based system is being developed to control the entire detector readout equipment. Moreover, a Finite State Machine (FSM) implementation is being developed to integrate the Detector Readout Control (DRC) into the LHC Experiment Control System (ECS)
Experimental results of crystal-assisted slow extraction at the SPS
The possibility of extracting highly energetic particles from the Super
Proton Synchrotron (SPS) by means of silicon bent crystals has been explored
since the 1990's. The channelling effect of a bent crystal can be used to
strongly deflect primary protons and eject them from the synchrotron. Many
studies and experiments have been carried out to investigate crystal
channelling effects. The extraction of 120 and 270 GeV proton beams has already
been demonstrated in the SPS with dedicated experiments located in the ring.
Presently in the SPS, the UA9 experiment is performing studies to evaluate the
possibility to use bent silicon crystals to steer particle beams in high energy
accelerators. Recent studies on the feasibility of extraction from the SPS have
been made using the UA9 infrastructure with a longer-term view of using
crystals to help mitigate slow extraction induced activation of the SPS. In
this paper, the possibility to eject particles into the extraction channel in
LSS2 using the bent crystals already installed in the SPS is presented. Details
of the concept, simulations and measurements carried out with beam are
presented, before the outlook for the future is discussed.Comment: 4 pages, 7 figures, submitted to to International Particle
Accelerator Conference (IPAC) 2017 in Copenhagen, Denmar
Commissioning and operation of the Cherenkov detector for proton Flux Measurement of the UA9 Experiment
The UA9 Experiment at CERN-SPS investigates channeling processes in bent
silicon crystals with the aim to manipulate hadron beams. Monitoring and
characterization of channeled beams in the high energy accelerators environment
ideally requires in-vacuum and radiation hard detectors. For this purpose the
Cherenkov detector for proton Flux Measurement (CpFM) was designed and
developed. It is based on thin fused silica bars in the beam pipe vacuum which
intercept charged particles and generate Cherenkov light. The first version of
the CpFM is installed since 2015 in the crystal-assisted collimation setup of
the UA9 experiment. In this paper the procedures to make the detector
operational and fully integrated in the UA9 setup are described. The most
important standard operations of the detector are presented. They have been
used to commission and characterize the detector, providing moreover the
measurement of the integrated channeled beam profile and several functionality
tests as the determination of the crystal bending angle.
The calibration has been performed with Lead (Pb) and Xenon (Xe) beams and
the results are applied to the flux measurement discussed here in detail.Comment: 25 pages, 14 figure
Results on Multiple Coulomb Scattering from 12 and 20 GeV electrons on Carbon targets
Multiple scattering effects of 12 and 20 GeV electrons on 8 and 20 mm
thickness carbon targets have been studied with high-resolution silicon
microstrip detectors of the UA9 apparatus at the H8 line at CERN. Comparison of
the scattering angle between data and GEANT4 simulation shows excellent
agreement in the core of the distributions leaving some residual disagreement
in the tails.Comment: 14 pages, 16 figures. Updated to match published versio
A 1 m Gas Time Projection Chamber with Optical Readout for Directional Dark Matter Searches: the CYGNO Experiment
The aim of the CYGNO project is the construction and operation of a 1~m
gas TPC for directional dark matter searches and coherent neutrino scattering
measurements, as a prototype toward the 100-1000~m (0.15-1.5 tons) CYGNUS
network of underground experiments. In such a TPC, electrons produced by
dark-matter- or neutrino-induced nuclear recoils will drift toward and will be
multiplied by a three-layer GEM structure, and the light produced in the
avalanche processes will be readout by a sCMOS camera, providing a 2D image of
the event with a resolution of a few hundred micrometers. Photomultipliers will
also provide a simultaneous fast readout of the time profile of the light
production, giving information about the third coordinate and hence allowing a
3D reconstruction of the event, from which the direction of the nuclear recoil
and consequently the direction of the incoming particle can be inferred. Such a
detailed reconstruction of the event topology will also allow a pure and
efficient signal to background discrimination. These two features are the key
to reach and overcome the solar neutrino background that will ultimately limit
non-directional dark matter searches.Comment: 5 page, 7 figures, contribution to the Conference Records of 2018
IEEE NSS/MI
Mapping the CMB Sky: The BOOMERANG experiment
We describe the BOOMERanG experiment, a stratospheric balloon telescope
intended to measure the Cosmic Microwave Background anisotropy at angular
scales between a few degrees and ten arcminutes. The experiment has been
optimized for a long duration (7 to 14 days) flight circumnavigating Antarctica
at the end of 1998. A test flight was performed on Aug.30, 1997 in Texas. The
level of performance achieved in the test flight was satisfactory and
compatible with the requirements for the long duration flight.Comment: 11 pages, 6 figure
Crab Waist Scheme Luminosity and Background Diagnostic at DAFNE
TUPTPF029International audienceTest of the crab waist scheme, undergoing at the Frascati DAFNE accelerator complex, needs a fast and accurate measurement of the luminosity, as well as a full characterization of the background conditions. Three different monitors, a Bhabha calorimeter, a Bhabha GEM tracker and a gamma bremsstrahlung proportional counter have been designed, tested and installed on the accelerator at the end of January 2008. Results from beam-test measurements, comparison with the Monte Carlo simulation and preliminary data collected during the SIDDHARTA run are presented
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