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Energy Reconstruction Performance in the ATLAS Tile Calorimeter Operating at High Event Rate Conditions Using LHC Collision Data

The discovery of particles that shape our universe pushes the scientific community to increasingly build sophisticated equipments. Particle accelerators are one of these complex machines that put known particle beams on a collision course at speeds close to that of light. The Large Hadron Collider (...

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Autores principales: Lieber Marin, Juan, Furtado De Simas Filho, Eduardo, Sotto-Maior Peralva, Bernardo, Seixas, Jose
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2020
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2710180
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author Lieber Marin, Juan
Furtado De Simas Filho, Eduardo
Sotto-Maior Peralva, Bernardo
Seixas, Jose
author_facet Lieber Marin, Juan
Furtado De Simas Filho, Eduardo
Sotto-Maior Peralva, Bernardo
Seixas, Jose
author_sort Lieber Marin, Juan
collection CERN
description The discovery of particles that shape our universe pushes the scientific community to increasingly build sophisticated equipments. Particle accelerators are one of these complex machines that put known particle beams on a collision course at speeds close to that of light. The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is the world's largest and more powerful beam collider, operating with 13~TeV of energy collision and 25~ns of bunch-crossing interval. A Toroidal LHC AparatuS (ATLAS) is the largest LHC experiment, composed by several subsystems that merge their information to reconstruct each collision. When collisions occur, subproducts are produced and measured by complex devices such as the calorimeter system that absorbs and samples the energy from these subproducts. Typically, a high-energy calorimeter is highly segmented, comprising thousands of dedicated readout channels. The present work evaluates the performance of two algorithms that operate in the ATLAS Tile Calorimeter (TileCal): the OF2 (Optimal Filter) and COF (Constrained Optimal Filter), which was recently proposed to deal with the signal superposition (pile-up) that is present in LHC operation at high subparticle generation rates (high-luminosity). In order to evaluate the energy estimation efficiency, real data acquired during the nominal LHC operation at high luminosity condition were used. The statistics from the estimation error is employed to compare the performance achieved by each method. The results show that the COF method presents a better performance than the OF2 method, which is currently employed in the TileCal system.
id cern-2710180
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2020
record_format invenio
spelling cern-27101802020-04-21T14:56:55Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2710180engLieber Marin, JuanFurtado De Simas Filho, EduardoSotto-Maior Peralva, BernardoSeixas, JoseEnergy Reconstruction Performance in the ATLAS Tile Calorimeter Operating at High Event Rate Conditions Using LHC Collision DataParticle Physics - ExperimentThe discovery of particles that shape our universe pushes the scientific community to increasingly build sophisticated equipments. Particle accelerators are one of these complex machines that put known particle beams on a collision course at speeds close to that of light. The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) is the world's largest and more powerful beam collider, operating with 13~TeV of energy collision and 25~ns of bunch-crossing interval. A Toroidal LHC AparatuS (ATLAS) is the largest LHC experiment, composed by several subsystems that merge their information to reconstruct each collision. When collisions occur, subproducts are produced and measured by complex devices such as the calorimeter system that absorbs and samples the energy from these subproducts. Typically, a high-energy calorimeter is highly segmented, comprising thousands of dedicated readout channels. The present work evaluates the performance of two algorithms that operate in the ATLAS Tile Calorimeter (TileCal): the OF2 (Optimal Filter) and COF (Constrained Optimal Filter), which was recently proposed to deal with the signal superposition (pile-up) that is present in LHC operation at high subparticle generation rates (high-luminosity). In order to evaluate the energy estimation efficiency, real data acquired during the nominal LHC operation at high luminosity condition were used. The statistics from the estimation error is employed to compare the performance achieved by each method. The results show that the COF method presents a better performance than the OF2 method, which is currently employed in the TileCal system.ATL-TILECAL-PROC-2020-007oai:cds.cern.ch:27101802020-02-18
spellingShingle Particle Physics - Experiment
Lieber Marin, Juan
Furtado De Simas Filho, Eduardo
Sotto-Maior Peralva, Bernardo
Seixas, Jose
Energy Reconstruction Performance in the ATLAS Tile Calorimeter Operating at High Event Rate Conditions Using LHC Collision Data
title Energy Reconstruction Performance in the ATLAS Tile Calorimeter Operating at High Event Rate Conditions Using LHC Collision Data
title_full Energy Reconstruction Performance in the ATLAS Tile Calorimeter Operating at High Event Rate Conditions Using LHC Collision Data
title_fullStr Energy Reconstruction Performance in the ATLAS Tile Calorimeter Operating at High Event Rate Conditions Using LHC Collision Data
title_full_unstemmed Energy Reconstruction Performance in the ATLAS Tile Calorimeter Operating at High Event Rate Conditions Using LHC Collision Data
title_short Energy Reconstruction Performance in the ATLAS Tile Calorimeter Operating at High Event Rate Conditions Using LHC Collision Data
title_sort energy reconstruction performance in the atlas tile calorimeter operating at high event rate conditions using lhc collision data
topic Particle Physics - Experiment
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/2710180
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AT furtadodesimasfilhoeduardo energyreconstructionperformanceintheatlastilecalorimeteroperatingathigheventrateconditionsusinglhccollisiondata
AT sottomaiorperalvabernardo energyreconstructionperformanceintheatlastilecalorimeteroperatingathigheventrateconditionsusinglhccollisiondata
AT seixasjose energyreconstructionperformanceintheatlastilecalorimeteroperatingathigheventrateconditionsusinglhccollisiondata