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Richard Jones Radphi collaboration meeting, Williamsburg, September 6-7, 2002 The LGD Trigger and its correlation with the other detectors
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Richard Jones Radphi collaboration meeting, Williamsburg, September 6-7, 2002 The problem: To measure the cluster shape distribution for showers using real events we need a sample of isolated showers of all energies. This has been created (ref. Mihajlo’s presentation) The energy distribution of these clusters is very sharply peaked at low energy (below 300 MeV) which are probably dominated by charged particles that leave a little energy in 2-3 blocks. We can get rid of these using the cpv. The caveat: To do that we need to assume that what happened in the LGD is in time with the trigger. Is this valid? 2
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Richard Jones Radphi collaboration meeting, Williamsburg, September 6-7, 2002 The trigger: BSDand800 kHz Level 1600 kHz Level 3500 Hz The reduction from 600 kHz to 500 Hz involves the requirement of coincidence between something in the LGD: a LGD event and something in the other detectors: a Level-1 event +What fraction of the time do the LGD event and the Level-1 event come from the same beam particle? 3
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Richard Jones Radphi collaboration meeting, Williamsburg, September 6-7, 2002 Description: 4 Level-1 events (raw rate S) LGD events (raw rate L) stolen coincidence (D) true coincidence (T) accidental coincidence (A) time where is the fraction of LGD events that come with causally-associated Level-1 triggers, and g is the LGD/Level-1 coincidence gate width, about 100ns.
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Richard Jones Radphi collaboration meeting, Williamsburg, September 6-7, 2002 5 Can these three terms be separated? The sum T+D+A is measured by the DAQ event rate (after correction for dead time) S is measured by Level-1 (raw) scaler We need to measure one more quantity: tdc(BSD-and) g trues randoms stolens
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Richard Jones Radphi collaboration meeting, Williamsburg, September 6-7, 2002 6 Try it: Runs 7900-8000 S = 570 kHz Let g = 50 ns (±20%?) L = 0.014 S = 0.068 Uncertainty on g leads to 100% errors on 100 ns
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Richard Jones Radphi collaboration meeting, Williamsburg, September 6-7, 2002 7 Another way: Use scalers taken at different beam currents linear in beam currentleading-order quadratic in beam current 1.Assume that L is linear in beam current I: L = bI 2.Measure rates (T+D+A) and S using scalers 3.Use fit to obtain unknowns b, ,g
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Richard Jones Radphi collaboration meeting, Williamsburg, September 6-7, 2002 8 Another way: Runs 8195-6 L = (0.029 ±.002) S = (7.2 ± 0.8) %
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Richard Jones Radphi collaboration meeting, Williamsburg, September 6-7, 2002 9 Elsewhere: Runs 7724-5 L = (0.023 ±.005) S = (3.0 ± 1.3) %
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Richard Jones Radphi collaboration meeting, Williamsburg, September 6-7, 2002 10 Conclusions: For = 7%: T62% D 3% A35% For = 3%: T41% D 2% A57% This would say the roughly half of our events have LGD information and BSD+Tagger information that are uncorrelated. Energy-momentum conservation (kinematic fit) may be our only handle to select events with a good association. Pile-up in LGD may contribute to nonlinearity in MAM rate, not taken into account in this scaler analysis. For = 15%: T78% D 3% A19%
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