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LHCb - The VELO Looks for Vertices but Who Looks after the VELO?

The Vertex Locator (VELO) is the innermost part of the LHCb detector, positioned around 3.5mm from the collision region, inside the LHC vacuum. For safety, both halves are held away from the beams during injection. Then, each half reconstructs the position of the primary vertices, allowing the VELO...

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Autor principal: Mohammed, Rizwaan Adeeb
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: 2022
Acceso en línea:http://cds.cern.ch/record/2843524
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author Mohammed, Rizwaan Adeeb
author_facet Mohammed, Rizwaan Adeeb
author_sort Mohammed, Rizwaan Adeeb
collection CERN
description The Vertex Locator (VELO) is the innermost part of the LHCb detector, positioned around 3.5mm from the collision region, inside the LHC vacuum. For safety, both halves are held away from the beams during injection. Then, each half reconstructs the position of the primary vertices, allowing the VELO to close and centre around the colliding beams. The VELO closes in several stages, with safety criteria being automatically checked at each stage. The VELO was closed for the first time in Run 3 in October. Using initial data taken from the first closing, we can study the shape of the RF foil from hadronic interactions with the material. This can be compared to the design position, and can also be used to verify that the VELO is well centred around the beams
id cern-2843524
institution Organización Europea para la Investigación Nuclear
language eng
publishDate 2022
record_format invenio
spelling cern-28435242022-12-10T00:41:50Zhttp://cds.cern.ch/record/2843524engMohammed, Rizwaan AdeebLHCb - The VELO Looks for Vertices but Who Looks after the VELO?The Vertex Locator (VELO) is the innermost part of the LHCb detector, positioned around 3.5mm from the collision region, inside the LHC vacuum. For safety, both halves are held away from the beams during injection. Then, each half reconstructs the position of the primary vertices, allowing the VELO to close and centre around the colliding beams. The VELO closes in several stages, with safety criteria being automatically checked at each stage. The VELO was closed for the first time in Run 3 in October. Using initial data taken from the first closing, we can study the shape of the RF foil from hadronic interactions with the material. This can be compared to the design position, and can also be used to verify that the VELO is well centred around the beamsPoster-2022-1091oai:cds.cern.ch:28435242022-11-29
spellingShingle Mohammed, Rizwaan Adeeb
LHCb - The VELO Looks for Vertices but Who Looks after the VELO?
title LHCb - The VELO Looks for Vertices but Who Looks after the VELO?
title_full LHCb - The VELO Looks for Vertices but Who Looks after the VELO?
title_fullStr LHCb - The VELO Looks for Vertices but Who Looks after the VELO?
title_full_unstemmed LHCb - The VELO Looks for Vertices but Who Looks after the VELO?
title_short LHCb - The VELO Looks for Vertices but Who Looks after the VELO?
title_sort lhcb - the velo looks for vertices but who looks after the velo?
url http://cds.cern.ch/record/2843524
work_keys_str_mv AT mohammedrizwaanadeeb lhcbthevelolooksforverticesbutwholooksafterthevelo