Cargando…

Online Determination of the LHC Luminous Region with the ATLAS High-Level Trigger

During stable-beams operations of the LHC, the ATLAS High Level Trigger (HLT) offers the fastest and most precise online measurement available of the position, size and orientation of the luminous region at the interaction point. Taking advantage of the high rate of triggered events, a dedicated alg...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autor principal: Bartoldus, R
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/1357303
_version_ 1780922507659837440
author Bartoldus, R
author_facet Bartoldus, R
author_sort Bartoldus, R
collection CERN
description During stable-beams operations of the LHC, the ATLAS High Level Trigger (HLT) offers the fastest and most precise online measurement available of the position, size and orientation of the luminous region at the interaction point. Taking advantage of the high rate of triggered events, a dedicated algorithm is executed on the HLT processor farm of several hundred nodes that uses tracks registered in the silicon detectors to reconstruct event vertices. The distribution of these vertices is aggregated across the farm and its shape is extracted through fits every 60 seconds. A correction is applied online to adjust for the intrinsic vertex resolution by examining the displacement of split vertices. The location, widths and tilts of the luminosity distribution are fed back to the LHC operators in real time. The transverse luminous centroid mirrors variations in the IP orbit, while its position along the beam axis is sensitive to the relative RF phase of the two beams. The time evolution of the luminous width tracks the emittance growth over the course of a fill. The HLT measurements can be correlated with data from machine instrumentation such as beam-position monitors, wire scanners and synchrotron-light monitors. Beginning in 2011, the HLT beam spot measurement also started reconstructing the parameters of each individual filled bunch. This gives rise to a study of single-bunch distributions and opens a window to understanding dynamical features such as electron-cloud effects. We will briefly describe how the measurement is performed and discuss the results and observations of the luminous region parameters and their time evolution during the high luminosity running in 2011.
id cern-1357303
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2011
record_format invenio
spelling cern-13573032019-09-30T06:29:59Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1357303engBartoldus, ROnline Determination of the LHC Luminous Region with the ATLAS High-Level TriggerDetectors and Experimental TechniquesDuring stable-beams operations of the LHC, the ATLAS High Level Trigger (HLT) offers the fastest and most precise online measurement available of the position, size and orientation of the luminous region at the interaction point. Taking advantage of the high rate of triggered events, a dedicated algorithm is executed on the HLT processor farm of several hundred nodes that uses tracks registered in the silicon detectors to reconstruct event vertices. The distribution of these vertices is aggregated across the farm and its shape is extracted through fits every 60 seconds. A correction is applied online to adjust for the intrinsic vertex resolution by examining the displacement of split vertices. The location, widths and tilts of the luminosity distribution are fed back to the LHC operators in real time. The transverse luminous centroid mirrors variations in the IP orbit, while its position along the beam axis is sensitive to the relative RF phase of the two beams. The time evolution of the luminous width tracks the emittance growth over the course of a fill. The HLT measurements can be correlated with data from machine instrumentation such as beam-position monitors, wire scanners and synchrotron-light monitors. Beginning in 2011, the HLT beam spot measurement also started reconstructing the parameters of each individual filled bunch. This gives rise to a study of single-bunch distributions and opens a window to understanding dynamical features such as electron-cloud effects. We will briefly describe how the measurement is performed and discuss the results and observations of the luminous region parameters and their time evolution during the high luminosity running in 2011.ATL-DAQ-SLIDE-2011-255oai:cds.cern.ch:13573032011-06-09
spellingShingle Detectors and Experimental Techniques
Bartoldus, R
Online Determination of the LHC Luminous Region with the ATLAS High-Level Trigger
title Online Determination of the LHC Luminous Region with the ATLAS High-Level Trigger
title_full Online Determination of the LHC Luminous Region with the ATLAS High-Level Trigger
title_fullStr Online Determination of the LHC Luminous Region with the ATLAS High-Level Trigger
title_full_unstemmed Online Determination of the LHC Luminous Region with the ATLAS High-Level Trigger
title_short Online Determination of the LHC Luminous Region with the ATLAS High-Level Trigger
title_sort online determination of the lhc luminous region with the atlas high-level trigger
topic Detectors and Experimental Techniques
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/1357303
work_keys_str_mv AT bartoldusr onlinedeterminationofthelhcluminousregionwiththeatlashighleveltrigger