DocumentCode :
451502
Title :
The muon spectrometer barrel level-1 trigger of the ATLAS experiment at LHC
Author :
Aloisio, A. ; Carlino, G. ; Ciapetti, G. ; Conventi, F. ; De Asmundis, R. ; Di Matti, A. ; Izzo, V. ; Luci, C. ; Luminari, L. ; Migliaccio, A. ; Nisati, A. ; Pastore, F. ; Petrolo, E. ; Salamon, A. ; Vari, R. ; Veneziano, S.
Author_Institution :
Naples Univ.
Volume :
1
fYear :
2005
fDate :
23-29 Oct. 2005
Firstpage :
584
Lastpage :
588
Abstract :
The proton-proton collisions at the LHC accelerator at CERN will have a rate of 40 MHz at the designed luminosity. The ATLAS trigger system has been designed in three levels in order to select only interesting physics events reducing the interaction rate of about 1 GHz to the foreseen storage rate of about 200 Hz. The first level reduces the output rate to about 100 KHz. The ATLAS muon spectrometer has been designed to perform stand-alone triggering and measurement of muon transverse momentum up to 1 TeV with good resolution (from 3% up to 10% at 1 TeV). In the barrel of the muon spectrometer the level-1 trigger is given by means of three layers of resistive plate detectors (RPC): a gaseous detectors working in avalanche mode composed by two plates of high-resistivity bakelite and two orthogonal planes of read-out strips. The logic of the level-1 barrel muon trigger is based on the search of patterns of RPC hits in the three layers consistent with a high transverse momentum muon track originated from the interaction vertex. The associated trigger electronics is based on dedicated processors, the coincidence matrix boards, performing space coincidences and time gates and providing the RPC readout as well. A detailed simulation of the ATLAS experiment and of both the hardware components and the logic of the level-1 muon trigger in the barrel of the muon spectrometer has been performed. This simulation has been used not only to evaluate the performances of the system but also to define the hardware set-up such as the cabling of both the trigger detectors and the trigger electronics modules. A description of both the level-1 muon trigger system in the barrel and the RPC detectors, with their cosmic rays quality tests, will be presented together with the trigger performances and rates calculations evaluated for muons over a wide range of pT and preliminary studies on the impact of accidental triggers due to low energy background particles in the experimental a- - rea
Keywords :
coincidence techniques; nuclear electronics; particle spectrometers; position sensitive particle detectors; proton accelerators; readout electronics; ATLAS experiment; ATLAS trigger system; LHC accelerator; RPC detectors; RPC readout; avalanche mode; coincidence matrix boards; cosmic rays quality tests; gaseous detectors; high transverse momentum muon track; high-resistivity bakelite; interaction vertex; low energy background particles; muon spectrometer barrel level-1 trigger; proton+proton collisions; read-out strips; resistive plate detectors; stand-alone triggering; time gates; trigger detectors; trigger electronic modules; trigger electronics; Detectors; Hardware; Large Hadron Collider; Logic; Mesons; Performance evaluation; Physics; Proton accelerators; Spectroscopy; Strips;
fLanguage :
English
Publisher :
ieee
Conference_Titel :
Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record, 2005 IEEE
Conference_Location :
Fajardo
ISSN :
1095-7863
Print_ISBN :
0-7803-9221-3
Type :
conf
DOI :
10.1109/NSSMIC.2005.1596319
Filename :
1596319
Link To Document :
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