Title :
The data collection modules and ATM-based event builder for the PHENIX experiment at RHIC
Author :
Steinberg, P. ; Chi, C.Y. ; Chiu, M. ; Cole, B. ; Cunitz, H. ; Markacs, S. ; Nagle, J.L. ; Sippach, W. ; Zajc, W.A. ; Zhang, L. ; Fisher, B. ; Fried, J. ; Haggerty, J. ; Lin, S. ; Purschke, M.
Author_Institution :
Nevis Labs., Columbia Univ., Irvington, NY, USA
fDate :
4/1/2000 12:00:00 AM
Abstract :
The PHENIX experiment at RHIC will study 200 AGeV Au+Au collisions as well as pp and pA collisions at higher energies. In order to study hard processes or high-mass vector mesons, which have small cross sections, PHENIX emphasizes measuring charged hadrons, leptons, and photons at a high rate in a limited aperture. At design RHIC luminosity, the minimum-bias interaction rate will be approximately 1000 Hz with an average zero-suppressed event size of 200 kB. We will discuss two major parts of the PHENIX online system: the data collection modules (DCM) and the event builder (EvB). The DCMs use a combination of FPGAs and DSPs to perform online pedestal subtraction, zero-suppression, and data formatting. They have been fully constructed and tested and are able to deliver data at a maximum rate of 160 MB/s. The event builder consists of commercially available PCs and a 10 Gb/s ATM switch. The software for it has been developed using Windows NT, Winsock-2 and Visual C++, allowing a fully object-oriented design. Currently, we are running configurations with up to 4 sources and 3 destinations that can deliver data at ~10 MB/sec/node and performance is improving steadily
Keywords :
data acquisition; field programmable gate arrays; high energy physics instrumentation computing; signal processing; 10 Gbit/s; 160 MB/s; ATM-based event builder; PHENIX experiment; data collection modules; digital signal processing; field programmable gate array; minimum-bias interaction rate; object-oriented; software; Contracts; Control systems; Data processing; Detectors; Digital signal processing; Field programmable gate arrays; Laboratories; Space cooling; Space technology; US Department of Energy;
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on