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Performance and Improvements of the ATLAS Level-1 Muon Trigger for Run 3

The LHC is restarting the Run-3 operation with keeping longer time with an instantaneous luminosity of about $2.0×10^{34} cm^{-2}s^{-1}$ from this year to 2025. In order to cope with the high event rate, upgrades of the ATLAS Level-1 Muon trigger system were required. The Level-1 Muon trigger system...

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Autores principales: Hayashi, Yuichiro, ATLAS Collaboration
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2022
Materias:
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2835554
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author Hayashi, Yuichiro
ATLAS Collaboration
author_facet Hayashi, Yuichiro
ATLAS Collaboration
author_sort Hayashi, Yuichiro
collection CERN
description The LHC is restarting the Run-3 operation with keeping longer time with an instantaneous luminosity of about $2.0×10^{34} cm^{-2}s^{-1}$ from this year to 2025. In order to cope with the high event rate, upgrades of the ATLAS Level-1 Muon trigger system were required. The Level-1 Muon trigger system identifies muons with high transverse momentum by combining data from a fast muon trigger detector, Resistive-Plate Chamber (RPC) and Thin Gap Chamber (TGC). Since Run 3, the system introduces improves the trigger logic using the new detectors called the New-Small-Wheel (NSW) and RPC-BIS78, which will be installed in the inner station region for the endcap muon trigger. Finer track information from the NSW and RPC-BIS78 can be used as part of the muon trigger logic to enhance performance significantly. In order to handle data from both TGC and NSW, some new electronics have been developed, including the trigger processor board known as Sector Logic (SL). The SL board has a modern FPGA to make use of Multi-Gigabit transceiver technology, which will be used to receive data from the new detectors. The readout system for trigger data has also been re-designed, with the data transfer implemented with TCP/IP instead of a dedicated ASIC. This makes it possible to minimize the use of custom readout electronics and instead use some commercial PCs and network switches to collect, format, and send the data. This readout data is useful for performance validations and further improvements. This presentation describes the aforementioned upgrades of the level-1 Muon trigger system. Particular emphasis will be placed on the first results from the early phase of commissioning in 2022. The newest status about coming improvements and the expected performance will also be presented.
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institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2022
record_format invenio
spelling cern-28355542022-10-05T21:41:36Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2835554engHayashi, YuichiroATLAS CollaborationPerformance and Improvements of the ATLAS Level-1 Muon Trigger for Run 3Particle Physics - ExperimentThe LHC is restarting the Run-3 operation with keeping longer time with an instantaneous luminosity of about $2.0×10^{34} cm^{-2}s^{-1}$ from this year to 2025. In order to cope with the high event rate, upgrades of the ATLAS Level-1 Muon trigger system were required. The Level-1 Muon trigger system identifies muons with high transverse momentum by combining data from a fast muon trigger detector, Resistive-Plate Chamber (RPC) and Thin Gap Chamber (TGC). Since Run 3, the system introduces improves the trigger logic using the new detectors called the New-Small-Wheel (NSW) and RPC-BIS78, which will be installed in the inner station region for the endcap muon trigger. Finer track information from the NSW and RPC-BIS78 can be used as part of the muon trigger logic to enhance performance significantly. In order to handle data from both TGC and NSW, some new electronics have been developed, including the trigger processor board known as Sector Logic (SL). The SL board has a modern FPGA to make use of Multi-Gigabit transceiver technology, which will be used to receive data from the new detectors. The readout system for trigger data has also been re-designed, with the data transfer implemented with TCP/IP instead of a dedicated ASIC. This makes it possible to minimize the use of custom readout electronics and instead use some commercial PCs and network switches to collect, format, and send the data. This readout data is useful for performance validations and further improvements. This presentation describes the aforementioned upgrades of the level-1 Muon trigger system. Particular emphasis will be placed on the first results from the early phase of commissioning in 2022. The newest status about coming improvements and the expected performance will also be presented.ATL-DAQ-SLIDE-2022-520oai:cds.cern.ch:28355542022-10-04
spellingShingle Particle Physics - Experiment
Hayashi, Yuichiro
ATLAS Collaboration
Performance and Improvements of the ATLAS Level-1 Muon Trigger for Run 3
title Performance and Improvements of the ATLAS Level-1 Muon Trigger for Run 3
title_full Performance and Improvements of the ATLAS Level-1 Muon Trigger for Run 3
title_fullStr Performance and Improvements of the ATLAS Level-1 Muon Trigger for Run 3
title_full_unstemmed Performance and Improvements of the ATLAS Level-1 Muon Trigger for Run 3
title_short Performance and Improvements of the ATLAS Level-1 Muon Trigger for Run 3
title_sort performance and improvements of the atlas level-1 muon trigger for run 3
topic Particle Physics - Experiment
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/2835554
work_keys_str_mv AT hayashiyuichiro performanceandimprovementsoftheatlaslevel1muontriggerforrun3
AT atlascollaboration performanceandimprovementsoftheatlaslevel1muontriggerforrun3