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The ATLAS Trigger System: Recent Experience and Future Plans
Proceedings for EPS09. The ATLAS detector at the LHC will experience unprecedented rates of hadron hadron collisions. The trigger system needs to efficiently reject a large rate of background events and still select potentially interesting events with high efficiency. After a first level trigger imp...
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Lenguaje: | eng |
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2009
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Acceso en línea: | https://dx.doi.org/10.22323/1.084.0135 http://cds.cern.ch/record/1206482 |
Sumario: | Proceedings for EPS09. The ATLAS detector at the LHC will experience unprecedented rates of hadron hadron collisions. The trigger system needs to efficiently reject a large rate of background events and still select potentially interesting events with high efficiency. After a first level trigger implemented in custom electronics, the trigger event selection is made by the High Level Trigger (HLT) system, implemented in software. To reduce the processing time to manageable levels, the HLT uses seeded, step-wise and fast selection algorithms, aiming at the earliest possible rejection of background events. The ATLAS trigger event selection is based on the reconstruction of potentially interesting physical objects like electrons, muons, jets, etc. The recent LHC startup and short single-beam run provided the first test of the trigger system against real data. Following this period, ATLAS continued to collect cosmic-ray events for detector alignment and calibration purposes. Both running periods provided very important data to commission the trigger reconstruction and selection algorithms. Profiting from this experience and taking into account the ATLAS first year physics goals, we are preparing a trigger selection menu including several tracking, muon-finding and calorimetry algorithms. Using Monte Carlo simulated data, we are evaluating the impact of the trigger menu on physics performance and rate. |
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