• DocumentCode
    3528048
  • Title

    First results from the LHCb VELO

  • Author

    Rinnert, Kurt

  • Author_Institution
    Dept. of Phys., Univ. of Liverpool, Liverpool, UK
  • fYear
    2010
  • fDate
    Oct. 30 2010-Nov. 6 2010
  • Firstpage
    931
  • Lastpage
    934
  • Abstract
    LHCb is a dedicated experiment to study new physics in the decays of beauty and charm hadrons at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN. The beauty and charm hadrons are identified through their flight distance in the Vertex Locator (VELO), and hence the detector is critical for both the trigger and offline physics analyses. The VELO is the silicon detector surrounding the interaction point, and is the closest LHC vertex detector to the interaction point, located only 7 mm from the LHC beam during normal operation. The detector operates in an extreme and highly non-uniform radiation environment. The VELO consists of two retractable detector halves with 21 silicon micro-strip tracking modules each. A module is composed of two n+-on-n 300 micron thick half disc sensors with R-measuring and Phi-measuring micro-strip geometry, mounted on a carbon fiber support paddle. The minimum pitch is approximately 40 mm. The detector is also equipped with one n-on-p module. The detectors are operated in vacuum and a bi-phase CO2 cooling system used. The detectors are readout with an analogue front-end chip and the signals processed by a set of algorithms in FPGA processing boards. The performance of the algorithms is tuned for each individual strip using a bit-perfect emulation of the FPGA code run in the full software framework of the experiment. The VELO has been successfully operated during the initial running period of the LHC. The detector has been time aligned to the LHC beam to within 2 ns, and spatially aligned to 4 mm. The halves are inserted for each fill of the LHC once stable beams are obtained. The detector is centered around the LHC beam through the online reconstruction on the primary vertex position. Preliminary operational results show a signal to noise ratio of 20:1 and a cluster finding efficiency of 99.6%. The small pitch and analogue readout, result in a best single hit precision of 4 μm having been achieved at the optimal track angle.
  • Keywords
    field programmable gate arrays; high energy physics instrumentation computing; nuclear electronics; position sensitive particle detectors; readout electronics; signal processing; silicon radiation detectors; CERN; FPGA processing board; LHC vertex detector; LHCb experiment; Large Hadron Collider; analogue front-end chip; analogue readout system; beauty hadron detection; biphase CO2 cooling system; carbon fiber; charm hadron detection; full software framework; high nonuniform an radiation environment; offline physics analyses; optimal track angle; phi-measuring microstrip geometry; signal processing; signal-to-noise ratio; silicon detector; silicon microstrip tracking module; vertex locator system; Detectors; Large Hadron Collider; Particle beams; Silicon; Strips; LHC; LHCb; Silicon; Vertex Detector;
  • fLanguage
    English
  • Publisher
    ieee
  • Conference_Titel
    Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record (NSS/MIC), 2010 IEEE
  • Conference_Location
    Knoxville, TN
  • ISSN
    1095-7863
  • Print_ISBN
    978-1-4244-9106-3
  • Type

    conf

  • DOI
    10.1109/NSSMIC.2010.5873898
  • Filename
    5873898