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Effects of Endcap Staging/Descoping D.Acosta University of Florida
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CMS Week, September 2001Darin Acosta2 Effects of Endcap Staging/Descoping Staged Muon scenarios: 1. No ME 4/2 (CSC) è No fourth CSC station for < 1.8 2. No RPC for stations 2,3,4 è No endcap RPC trigger, but station 1 there to cancel CSC ghosts if needed 3. ME1/1 strips put into “OR” è Reduce channel cost by not segmenting ME1/1 in
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CMS Week, September 2001Darin Acosta3 ME4/2 Staging With RPC trigger in place, CSC trigger runs in “loose” mode for high efficiency: è Only 2 CSC stations are required: one must be ME1 and one must be ME2 or ME3 (relax ME1 condition for DT/CSC overlap) è In principle, ME4 cannot affect efficiency or rate by design è But P T assignment is slightly better for 3-station tracks than for 2-station tracks, so might expect some changes to CSC rate and efficiency above certain P T threshold without ME4 è GMT requires match between CSC and RPC for low quality CSC muons, and optimizes the P T assignment, so any effect is reduced after GMT Without RPC trigger in place, the CSC trigger must run in “tight” mode for improved rate reduction è Three CSC stations are required, including ME1 è No redundancy without ME4 means efficiency loss
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CMS Week, September 2001Darin Acosta4 B.Scurlock ME4/2 Staging – Efficiency “tight”, ME4/2 out, =73% “tight” ME4/2 in, =79% “loose” (unchanged) = 97% ME4/1 in/out Single muons: 3< P T <100 GeV
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CMS Week, September 2001Darin Acosta5 ME4/2 Staging – Rates GMT is unchanged CSC loose CSC loose, no ME4/2 U.Gasparini L=2 10 33 5X CSC loose, no ME4/2 CSC loose CSC tight L=10 34 CSC tight without RPC achieves about same rate as CSC loose with RPC in GMT
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CMS Week, September 2001Darin Acosta6 ME4/1 Needed at High Eta GMT as in ORCA 5.1.2 è rate at 20 GeV/c: 3.1 kHz è L1 efficiency (*) : 96.6 % re-tuned GMT selection: è Only three-station CSC tracks used without RPC confirmation è rate at 20 GeV/c: 1.4 kHz è L1 efficiency (*) : 96.3 % (*) efficiency to find muon of any p T in flat p T sample Rate from unconfirmed 2-station CSC tracks, since no RPC coverage GMT single muon trigger rates (p T > 16 GeV/c) ORCA 5.1.2 re-tuned GMT H.Sakulin L=2 10 33
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CMS Week, September 2001Darin Acosta7 Mixed Mode CSC Trigger è Without RPC trigger and without ME 4/2, still allow “loose” CSC trigger for 1.2 < < 1.8 (but “tight” everywhere else) è Gains efficiency here è Still want ME 4/1 at high è DT/CSC overlap still a problem Rate from “mixed-mode” close to that from “tight” ~ 85% L=10 34 loose
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CMS Week, September 2001Darin Acosta8 ME1/1 Staging Recall that ME1/1 has split strips è Motivation was to reduce occupancy è Can we avoid it to reduce channel cost? From muon TDR: è Charged particle occupancies in either half of ME1/1 are about 0.5% per chamber per BX è Neutron hit occupancies are no more than about 2%, but as they are uncorrelated through the chamber, a much smaller fraction actually give trigger primitives. p So these numbers are not large, and in fact are smaller by about 50% than the numbers for the other CSC chambers (ME2/1, ME3/1, and especially ME4/1) p In principle there should not be any problem if we can OR the strips from top to bottom of ME1/1 High Lumi: L=10 34
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CMS Week, September 2001Darin Acosta9 CSC LCT Rates in ORCA5 J.Mumford High Lumi: L=10 34 min bias pile-up only no neutrons ME 1/1: 7 MHz ME 1/A: 10 MHz For 72 chambers of each type, occupancy per BX is: ME 1/A: 0.35% ME 1/1: 0.24%
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CMS Week, September 2001Darin Acosta10 CSC LCT Occupancy with Neutrons Similar study performed with min bias pile-up and neutrons at L = 10 34 using ORCA5 Chamber LCT occupancies: Anode+CathodeCathode only è ME 1/A: 0.46%ME 1/A: 0.61% è ME 1/1: 0.44%ME 1/1: 1.50% è ME 1/2: 0.05%ME 1/2: 0.10% è ME 1/3: 0.05%ME 1/3: 0.14% è ME 2/1: 0.29% è ME 2/2: 0.34% è ME 3/1: 0.21% è ME 3/2: 0.25% è ME 4/1: 0.25%ME 4/1: 0.81% è ME 4/2: 0.86%ME 4/2: 2.54% B.Scurlock
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CMS Week, September 2001Darin Acosta11 Discussion of ME 1/1 Strip “OR” è Combining the two halves of ME 1/1 can’t increase the trigger rate if the track segments come from real muons (i.e. correlated hits) è Extra trigger rate can only come from random combinations forming ghost track segments, which in turn form additional triggers è If the current LCT occupancies are dominated by real correlated hits, expect ME 1/1 and ME 1/A occupancies to add è If neutron-induced random hits dominate, expect occupancy to scale non-linearly p “Guestimate”: order of magnitude increase è How to tell without detailed simulation of strip OR? è Study dependence of occupancy with background level è ORCA4 study with pile-up and neutrons: Occupancy for L = 10 34 L = 3 10 34 ME 1/A:0.3%0.9% ME 1/1: 0.3%0.9% è Therefore, occupancies scale linearly
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CMS Week, September 2001Darin Acosta12 Summary ME 4/2 staging è With RPC: No change in GMT rate or efficiency è Without RPC: Approximately no change in rate requiring 3 CSC stations, but 25% acceptance loss in endcaps for “tight” trigger (12% loss for mixed-mode trigger) è In any case, ME 4/1 is useful to reduce rate by factor of two if efficient triggering at >2.1 is desired ME 1/1 Staging è At high luminosity, the ME 1/1 and ME 1/A track segment occupancies are about 0.5 – 1.0% per BX è Combining the two, the occupancies add and would be of order 1–2% è At low luminosity, occupancies would be 5X lower è Therefore, expect no change in efficiency or rate if strips in ME 1/1 and ME 1/A are put into an “OR” è Exactly how to do this is up to chamber designers p Different strip pitch in ME 1/1 and ME 1/A in current simulation è Perhaps it could be possible to segment HV so that high wires can be turned off if occupancies turn out to be higher than expected (as is possible in other CSC chambers) p Complicated by wire tilt, however
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