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Instrumentation of a Track Trigger with Double Buffer Front-End Architecture

The planned high luminosity upgrade for the LHC (SLHC), will increase the collision rate in the ATLAS detector by approximately a factor 5 beyond the present LHC design goal, while also increasing the number of pile-up collisions in each event by a similar factor. This means that the level-1 trigger...

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Autor principal: Wardrope, DR
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2012
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/1448623
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author Wardrope, DR
author_facet Wardrope, DR
author_sort Wardrope, DR
collection CERN
description The planned high luminosity upgrade for the LHC (SLHC), will increase the collision rate in the ATLAS detector by approximately a factor 5 beyond the present LHC design goal, while also increasing the number of pile-up collisions in each event by a similar factor. This means that the level-1 trigger must achieve a higher rejection factor in a more difficult environment. We describe a possible design which splits the level-1 trigger into a two-level system, where the first level, using only calorimetry and muon chambers, defines regions of interest in the tracker from which to extract information for a second, refined trigger. The use of a two-buffer front-end architecture will allow a significantly longer decision time to move data off the detector keeping the data bandwidth and buffer sizes moderate. We will describe the implementation of the scheme in the ATLAS tracker front-end electronics and the simulated performance of the system. Results on thresholds, rejection, bandwidth and trigger latency will be shown and compared with the present requirements for SLHC upgrade in ATLAS.
id cern-1448623
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2012
record_format invenio
spelling cern-14486232019-09-30T06:29:59Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1448623engWardrope, DRInstrumentation of a Track Trigger with Double Buffer Front-End ArchitectureDetectors and Experimental TechniquesThe planned high luminosity upgrade for the LHC (SLHC), will increase the collision rate in the ATLAS detector by approximately a factor 5 beyond the present LHC design goal, while also increasing the number of pile-up collisions in each event by a similar factor. This means that the level-1 trigger must achieve a higher rejection factor in a more difficult environment. We describe a possible design which splits the level-1 trigger into a two-level system, where the first level, using only calorimetry and muon chambers, defines regions of interest in the tracker from which to extract information for a second, refined trigger. The use of a two-buffer front-end architecture will allow a significantly longer decision time to move data off the detector keeping the data bandwidth and buffer sizes moderate. We will describe the implementation of the scheme in the ATLAS tracker front-end electronics and the simulated performance of the system. Results on thresholds, rejection, bandwidth and trigger latency will be shown and compared with the present requirements for SLHC upgrade in ATLAS.ATL-DAQ-SLIDE-2012-214oai:cds.cern.ch:14486232012-05-15
spellingShingle Detectors and Experimental Techniques
Wardrope, DR
Instrumentation of a Track Trigger with Double Buffer Front-End Architecture
title Instrumentation of a Track Trigger with Double Buffer Front-End Architecture
title_full Instrumentation of a Track Trigger with Double Buffer Front-End Architecture
title_fullStr Instrumentation of a Track Trigger with Double Buffer Front-End Architecture
title_full_unstemmed Instrumentation of a Track Trigger with Double Buffer Front-End Architecture
title_short Instrumentation of a Track Trigger with Double Buffer Front-End Architecture
title_sort instrumentation of a track trigger with double buffer front-end architecture
topic Detectors and Experimental Techniques
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/1448623
work_keys_str_mv AT wardropedr instrumentationofatracktriggerwithdoublebufferfrontendarchitecture