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Intelligent trigger processor for the crystal box

A large solid angle angular modular NaI(Tl) detector with 432 phototubes and 88 trigger scintillators is being used to search simultaneously for three lepton flavor-changing decays of the muon. A beam of up to 10/sup 6/ muons stopping per second with a 6% duty factor would yield up to 1000 triggers...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Sanders, G H, Butler, H S, Cooper, M D, Hart, G W, Hoffman, C M, Hogan, G E, Hughes, E B, Matis, H S, Rolfe, J, Sandberg, V D, Williams, R A, Wilson, S, Zeman, H
Lenguaje:eng
Publicado: CERN 1981
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://dx.doi.org/10.5170/CERN-1981-007.214
http://cds.cern.ch/record/862901
Descripción
Sumario:A large solid angle angular modular NaI(Tl) detector with 432 phototubes and 88 trigger scintillators is being used to search simultaneously for three lepton flavor-changing decays of the muon. A beam of up to 10/sup 6/ muons stopping per second with a 6% duty factor would yield up to 1000 triggers per second from random triple coincidences. A reduction of the trigger rate to 10 Hz is required from a hardwired primary trigger processor. Further reduction to <1 Hz is achieved by a microprocessor-based secondary trigger processor. The primary trigger hardware imposes voter coincidence logic, stringent timing requirements, and a non-adjacency requirement in the trigger scintillators defined by hardwired circuits. Sophisticated geometric requirements are imposed by a PROM-based matrix logic, and energy and vector-momentum cuts are imposed by a hardwired processor using LSI flash ADC's and digital arithmetic logic. The secondary trigger employs four satellite microprocessors to do a sparse data scan, multiplex the data acquisition channels and apply additional event filtering. (9 refs).