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Performance of the CMS Silicon Tracker at LHC

The CMS all-silicon Tracker, comprising 16588 modules covering an area of more than $200 \mathrm{m}^2$, needs to be precisely calibrated and aligned in order to correctly interpret and reconstruct the events recorded from the detector, ensuring that the performance fully meets the physics research p...

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Autor principal: Benelli, Gabriele
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2011
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/1453397
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author Benelli, Gabriele
author_facet Benelli, Gabriele
author_sort Benelli, Gabriele
collection CERN
description The CMS all-silicon Tracker, comprising 16588 modules covering an area of more than $200 \mathrm{m}^2$, needs to be precisely calibrated and aligned in order to correctly interpret and reconstruct the events recorded from the detector, ensuring that the performance fully meets the physics research program of the CMS experiment. The performance have been carefully studied since the start of data taking: the noise of the detector, the data integrity, the S/N ratio, the hit resolution and efficiency have been all investigated with time. In 2010 it has been successfully aligned using tracks from cosmic rays and pp-collisions, following the time dependent movements of its innermost pixel layers. Ultimate local precision is now achieved by the determination of sensor curvatures, challenging the algorithms to determine about 200000 parameters. Remaining alignment uncertainties are dominated by systematic effects that are controlled by adding further information, such as constraints from resonance decays.
id cern-1453397
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2011
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spelling cern-14533972019-09-30T06:29:59Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/1453397engBenelli, GabrielePerformance of the CMS Silicon Tracker at LHCDetectors and Experimental TechniquesThe CMS all-silicon Tracker, comprising 16588 modules covering an area of more than $200 \mathrm{m}^2$, needs to be precisely calibrated and aligned in order to correctly interpret and reconstruct the events recorded from the detector, ensuring that the performance fully meets the physics research program of the CMS experiment. The performance have been carefully studied since the start of data taking: the noise of the detector, the data integrity, the S/N ratio, the hit resolution and efficiency have been all investigated with time. In 2010 it has been successfully aligned using tracks from cosmic rays and pp-collisions, following the time dependent movements of its innermost pixel layers. Ultimate local precision is now achieved by the determination of sensor curvatures, challenging the algorithms to determine about 200000 parameters. Remaining alignment uncertainties are dominated by systematic effects that are controlled by adding further information, such as constraints from resonance decays.CMS-CR-2011-346oai:cds.cern.ch:14533972011-12-03
spellingShingle Detectors and Experimental Techniques
Benelli, Gabriele
Performance of the CMS Silicon Tracker at LHC
title Performance of the CMS Silicon Tracker at LHC
title_full Performance of the CMS Silicon Tracker at LHC
title_fullStr Performance of the CMS Silicon Tracker at LHC
title_full_unstemmed Performance of the CMS Silicon Tracker at LHC
title_short Performance of the CMS Silicon Tracker at LHC
title_sort performance of the cms silicon tracker at lhc
topic Detectors and Experimental Techniques
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/1453397
work_keys_str_mv AT benelligabriele performanceofthecmssilicontrackeratlhc