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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 1 24-25/01/05 GSI Silicon Tracking at WA97 and NA57 introduction to WA97/NA57 : setup & physics silicon pixels – hardware aspects alignment pattern recognition & track fit vertex finding summary & final remarks
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 2 24-25/01/05 GSI The NA57 Experiment Study of the dependence of hyperon enhancements on: WA97 p-Be sample used as reference data at 158 A GeV. Data samples: Interaction volume - centrality down to N wound ~ 50 Collision energy - data at two beam momenta - 158 and 40 A GeV/c INTRODUCTION(1) 3-4 Tb in CASTOR (mass storage) SystemBeam energySample sizeData taking year Pb-Pb158 A GeV230+230 x 10 6 evts1998+2000 Pb-Pb40 A GeV240 x 10 6 evts1999 p-Be*40 A GeV60+110 x 10 6 evts1999+2001 (continuation and extension of WA97)
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 3 24-25/01/05 GSI INTRODUCTION Example: INCREASES WITH STRANGENESS CONTENT ! systematic error NA57 – example of the enhancement study result: for more see G. Bruno plenary talk at QM2004 INTRODUCTION(2) Enhancement def. central rapidity (one unit) yield statistical error
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 4 24-25/01/05 GSI WA97 (predecessor of NA57) set-up in the OMEGA magnet Target: Be, Pb; Beam: p, Pb, 158 A GeV/c momentum Magnetic field: 1.8 T Silicon telescope: tracking device (7 pixel and 10 microstrip planes, 5cm x 5cm) Pad chambers: lever arm Scintillation petals: lead run centrality trigger (40% inel ) Multiplicity detectors: off-line event centrality analysis d L L = 30 cm d = 60 cm (Pb-Pb), 90 cm (p-A) = 40 mrad (Pb-Pb), 48 mrad (p-A) (~ 0.5 M pixels)
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 5 24-25/01/05 GSI B=0 event
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 6 24-25/01/05 GSI NA57 SETUP (Pb - Pb run) 1.4 T Target: 1% Pb Scintillator Petals: centrality trigger MSD: multiplicity silicon detector Tracking device: silicon pixel planes (5 x 5 cm 2 cross section) Lever arm: double side strips 5 cm X (~ 1.0 M pixels)
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 7 24-25/01/05 GSI
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 8 24-25/01/05 GSI
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 9 24-25/01/05 GSI Ω3 pixel (single) card Ω2 pixel plane (box) 5 cm
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 10 24-25/01/05 GSI Single pixel cell of the LHC1/Ω3 chip LHC1: A semiconductor pixel detector readout chip with internal, tunable delay providing a binary pattern of selected events Erik H. M. Heijne et al Nucl. Instr. & Methods A 383 (1996) 55 ( RD19 & WA97 collaboration)
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 11 24-25/01/05 GSI Pixel Maps (full planes) 1 as seen by the beam (along X) (98256 pixel cells) Z Y Ω3Y double length pixels (chip border) 10 000 events
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 12 24-25/01/05 GSI Pixel Maps (full planes) 2 (73656 pixel cells) only one card switched ON Ω2Z 10 000 events
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 13 24-25/01/05 GSI Dead Time (1) LDC – Local Data Collector (group of pixel cards) ms DT – proportional to amount of fired pixels (hits + noise)
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 14 24-25/01/05 GSI Dead Time (2) Risk of saturating DAQ in case of high level of noise, but exaggerated noise suppression lowering planes efficiency compromise Importance of masking noisy pixels and (chips) efficiency monitoring Data Base
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 15 24-25/01/05 GSI MAIN ANALYSIS STEPS ALIGNMENT and CALIBRATION DATA BASE GEOMETRICAL RECONSTRUCTION clusters, tracks V0 FINDING Λ and K0 candidates CASCADE RECONSTRUCTION (V0s + tracks) PARTICLE SIGNALS EXTRACTION (selection cuts) Gold-Plated ntuples CORRECTING for ACCEPTANCE and LOSSES EVENT-BY- EVENT WEIGHTING (and/or de-convolution) EXTRAPOLATION TO FULL Pt AND ONE UNIT OF rapidity NORMALIZATION (beam flux,target) YIELDS MULTIPLICITY RECONSTRUCTION CENTRALITY
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 16 24-25/01/05 GSI ALIGNMENT(1) Starting point – optical bench survey measurements + internal pixel ladder positions (known from construction) Internal pixel alignment cross checks using strips tracks (WA97) and exploiting ladder overlaps Transverse & longitudinal alignment using straight tracks (special B=0 and telescope in proton beam runs) Small correction tilt angles relative to the telescope axis Cross-alignment of the Z and Y planes Alignment data taken periodically and/or after each intervention on the optical bench ( results stored in the DB)
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 17 24-25/01/05 GSI Alignment (2) Single Y (vertical) ladder Y-plane tilt test mm Z Z Y microns
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 18 24-25/01/05 GSI Parabolic Approximation (used in Pat. Rec.) circle parabola Y X 31 cm Example: p = 2 GeV/c φ = 0. ρ = 5m Sagitta = L 2 /8ρ= ¼ cm (50 pixels) 10 μ diff.
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 19 24-25/01/05 GSI Polynomial Parameterization Fit (example)
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 20 24-25/01/05 GSI TRACK RECONSTRUCTION PRECISION (3 points parabolic approximation) B in kGs, p in GeV/c, L in cm σ 0 = pitch/sqrt(12) R.L. GLUCKSTERN Nucl. Instr. & Methods 24(1963) 381
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 21 24-25/01/05 GSI NA57 case : λ ≈ 0, L ≈ 30cm, B ≈ 14kGs, X 0 ≈ 30cm/(9x 0.012) = 277cm, pitch = 50μm Δp/p meas and msc errors equal at p ≈ 12.2 GeV/c (4.5%) p = 12.2 Δφ = 0.25 & 0.17mrad → 0.3 mrad measmsc.
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 22 24-25/01/05 GSI Pattern Recognition(1) Parabolic track model (very good approximation!) in the bending plane Starting from 3 points (e.g. in the first and the last plane + in one of the intermediate planes) then adding other points lying within the predetermined limits relatively to the predictions Constraints: N points ≥ N min (for example 6-7 out of 9-11 possible) with a requirement of a minimum number of points in each type of pixels (Z or Y-like) Semi-combinatorial, using predefined plane configurations of the compact part only
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 23 24-25/01/05 GSI - ) Pattern Recognition(2) x x x
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 24 24-25/01/05 GSI Pattern Recognition (3) 2D - PR+ matching in WA97, 3D - PR in NA57 Hit sharing level controlled according to the chosen tolerance: ambiguities resolved on the basis of χ 2 Track finding efficiency bigger than 95%, while Kalman Filter ε ≈ 50% ! ( sparse points + multiple scattering) Ghosts kept at a negligible level (below 1% ) PR optimization - multiplicity dependent (different in Pb-Pb and p-Be)
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 25 24-25/01/05 GSI Track Fit (Quintic Spline) H. Wind Nucl. Instr. & Methods 115 (1974) 431
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 26 24-25/01/05 GSI ORHION – reconstruction programme Fortran code developed under Patchy: new versions kept backward compatible (useful for reprocessing !) Working both on real and simulated (GEANT MC) data Internally split into different (main) sub processes: OR – steering ST – pattern recognition TF – track fit XC – lever arm track improvement V0 – secondary vertices finder DST-output files of different formats input for the analysis programs
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 27 24-25/01/05 GSI p-Be 40 GeV/c Ξ event [cm] Y X Ω3YΩ3ZΩ2YΩ2ZΩ3YΩ2YΩ2ZΩ2Y Ω2Z Ω3YΩ3Y planes sequence aspect ratio ≈ 9 !
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 28 24-25/01/05 GSI p-Be 40 GeV/c Ξ event [cm] Z X Ω3YΩ3ZΩ2YΩ2ZΩ3YΩ2YΩ2ZΩ2Y Ω2Z Ω3YΩ3Y planes sequence aspect ratio ≈ 9 !
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 29 24-25/01/05 GSI Vertex Finding Primary vertex – from secondary tracks extrapolation (the μ- strips beam telescope used only in the WA97 p-Be run ) : - event-by-event (WA97) or - run-by-run (to handle more peripheral collisions in NA57) V0 finding – pairs of oppositely charged tracks extrapolated first to a ref. plane, then search for the point of nearest approach using helix parameterization The nearest approach distance – a crucial parameter in selecting clean signals (removing background): a typical cut value d max /2 (alias close) = 0.04 cm
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 30 24-25/01/05 GSI HYPERON DETECTION 30 cm 5 cm byby byby Plus many other associated tracks Each hyperon (particle) assigned to a centrality class according to MSD N charged X
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 31 24-25/01/05 GSI Mass Resolution: Ξ 158 A GeV/c 40 A GeV/c
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 32 24-25/01/05 GSI Mass Resolution: K 0 s 158 A GeV/c 40 A GeV/c FWHM = 24 MeVFWHM = 16 MeV
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 33 24-25/01/05 GSI Summary WA97 first application of pixel technology (Ω2 then Ω3/LHC1 chips) in conjunction with strips NA57 pattern recognition and tracking entirely based on pixel detectors WA97 and NA57 experience pixel detectors – a powerful tool for high precision tracking (3D)
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 34 24-25/01/05 GSI Technology still in rapid evolution, future CERN LHC experiments/NA60 Final Remarks (1)
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 35 24-25/01/05 GSI Message to CBM Final Remarks (2) PIXEL TECHNOLOGY is a powerful tool for physics once good care is taken of all necessary elements of hardware (calibration) and software (alignment, noise and efficiency control) environment
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 36 24-25/01/05 GSI Physics Department, University of Athens, Greece; Dipartimento IA di Fisica dell'Università e del Politecnico di Bari and INFN, Bari, Italy; Fysisk Institutt, Universitetet i Bergen, Bergen, Norway ; Høgskolen i Bergen, Bergen, Norway; University of Birmingham, Birmingham, UK; Comenius University, Bratislava, Slovakia; University of Catania and INFN, Catania, Italy; CERN, European Laboratory for Particle Physics, Geneva, Switzerland; Institute of Experimental Physics Slovak Academy of Science, Kosice, Slovakia; P.J. Safárik University, Kosice, Slovakia; Fysisk institutt, Universitetet i Oslo, Oslo, Norway; University of Padua and INFN, Padua, Italy; Collège de France, Paris, France; Institute of Physics, Prague, Czech Republic; University “La Sapienza'' and INFN, Rome, Italy; Dipartimento di Scienze Fisiche “E.R. Caianiello'' dell'Università and INFN, Salerno, Italy; State University of St. Petersburg, St. Petersburg, Russia; IReS/ULP, Strasbourg, France; Utrecht University and NIKHEF, Utrecht, The Netherlands. THE NA57 COLLABORATION
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 37 24-25/01/05 GSI CENTRAL RAPIDITY YIELD MEASUREMENT ONE UNIT OF RAPIDITY FULL P t RANGE INTRODUCTION T from Max-Log-Likelihood
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 38 24-25/01/05 GSI Hyperon reconstruction Λ(cowboy) acceptance -- d Δ
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 39 24-25/01/05 GSI Pixel maps (single cards) Importance of masking noisy pixels and (chips) efficiency monitoring Data Base (36828 pixel cells)(49128 pixel cells)
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 40 24-25/01/05 GSI EXAMPLE OF ORHION PROCESSING (Pb-Pb 2000 Background) Background data – representative sample of all data (each 200 th event – 5%), 24 files Parallel running at CERN (Linux Batch) overall 1 day and 1 night human time About 3-4 NCU hours per file 1440-1920 NCU hours of full 2000 data ( 230 Mevts ) ORHION processing (distributed between all labs !!) Slightly less for Pb-Pb at 40 GeV/c, then still less for p-Be (one week)
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 41 24-25/01/05 GSI Selection of Hyperons (and K S 0 ) X-Ξ vertex close Λ impact Cleaning of the signals via geometrical cuts
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 42 24-25/01/05 GSI WEIGHTING PARTICLES A weight is associated with each selected particle to correct for acceptance, efficiencies and cuts ( ~few thousands) 2 different selections (cuts) spread
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 43 24-25/01/05 GSI WEIGHTING PROCEDURE (2) Weights are calculated by Monte Carlo: - generated hyperons (N gen ) are traced through a GEANT simulation of the NA57 apparatus - track hits are merged with true events - resulting events are processed through the reconstruction and analysis chain - reconstructed hyperons are counted (N rec ) Simulation thoroughly checked against real data
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 44 24-25/01/05 GSI WEIGHT STATISTICS at 158 GeV/c Particle weighted collected 3340 2350 2718 6444 936 432 192 x400 x400 x50 x1 x1 x1 x1 Most expensive cascade particles:1-3 NCU hours on LXPLUS, 10000 Λs and 10000 K0s about 40K NCU hours, alias 1 working month (estimate) 2001 p-Be data weighting ( 4000 Λs only) just in one week at CERN
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 45 24-25/01/05 GSI DECONVOLUTION An alternative method to weighting (which is precise but CPU expensive), applicable to high statistics samples F. Antinori et al Transverse mass spectra of strange and multi-strange particles in Pb-Pb collisions at 158 A GeV/c Eur. Phys. J. C 14, 633-641 (2000)
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Adam Jacholkowski Catania & CERN 46 24-25/01/05 GSI Energy multiplicity dependence logarithmic scaling
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