1 / 21

Tracking in the High Rate Environment of the HERA-B Detector

TIME 05 Zurich. Tracking in the High Rate Environment of the HERA-B Detector. A. Spiridonov. DESY Zeuthen / ITEP Moscow. HERA-B tracking detectors Tracking algorithms Performance in commissioning phase Final tracking performance Matching Tracks fitting

Download Presentation

Tracking in the High Rate Environment of the HERA-B Detector

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. TIME 05 Zurich Tracking in the High Rate Environment of the HERA-B Detector A. Spiridonov DESY Zeuthen / ITEP Moscow HERA-B tracking detectors Tracking algorithms Performance in commissioning phase Final tracking performance Matching Tracks fitting Momentum/mass resolution Summary

  2. HERA-B Detector Fixed target experiment at 920 GeV p beam at HERA Trigger Chambers (TC) Pattern Chambers (PC) Magnet Vertex Detector System (VDS) A. Spiridonov

  3. Recorded Data and Physics  HERA-B was designed to study CP violation with B-mesons  Achieved rejection factor for dilepton trigger of order 104  Dilepton trigger: 3×105 reconstructed J/Y (ee,mm modes)  Minimum bias trigger: 210×106 events acquired  Goals for physics study: B physics (cross sections); QCD studies; Charmonium spectroscopy; D physics. A. Spiridonov

  4. Track Reconstruction Challenges  Large track density  Combination of different detector technologies with complicated geometry: double sided silicon micro-strip detectors; honeycomb drift tubes (5 and 10 mm); Micro-strip gaseous chambers (MSGC-GEM).  Detector imperfections during the commissioning and first period of data taking A. Spiridonov

  5. Track Reconstruction Strategy Trigger Chambers Pattern Chambers Magnet Chambers Vertex Detector ECAL & MUON  Vertex Detector: track finding  Pattern Chambers: track finding  Magnet Chambers: track propagation  Trigger Chambers: track propagation  Matching of VDS and PC track segments  Tracks fitting A. Spiridonov

  6. Vertex Detector System of HERA-B  double-sided Si detectors  50 mm pitch  12 mm resolution  5% peak occupancy  64 detectors, 8 superlayers  150,000 channels A. Spiridonov

  7. CATS: Cellular Automation for Tracking  Track finding in VDS, NIM A489 p.389  Track finding in OTR PC (data processing), NIM A490 p.546  See also TIME05 talk: I.Kisel on cellular automation in CBM  Semi-global method using local formation of spacepoints in neighbored detector planes  Cell (spacepoint): 3D track segment inside a superlayer  Model of cellular automation for tracking can be regarded as local discrete form of the Denby-Peterson neural net  Tracking efficiency 98% for VDS on real data A. Spiridonov

  8. Main Tracker of HERA-B Outer Tracker (OTR) Honeycomb drift tubes 115,000 TDC channels 5 and 10 mm cells 0°,+5°,-5° stereo layers peak occupancy 5% Inner Tracker (ITR) Micro-Strip Gaseous Chambers (MSGS-GEM) 140,000 analog readout channels pitch 300 mm 0°,+5°,-5° stereo layers peak occupancy 30% A. Spiridonov

  9. Performance of the Main Tracker Design Data before 2001 Data after 2001 Outer Tracker Resolution 400-500mm Efficiency 85-90% 10-18% channels turned off Resolution 360mm Efficiency 94-97% 3% channels turned off Resolution 200mm Efficiency 98% Inner Tracker Resolution 80mm Efficiency 95% Resolution 150mm Efficiency 85% Resolution 150mm Efficiency 85% Drastic improvement of the Outer Tracker after 2001 A. Spiridonov

  10. Ranger: Track Following Algorithm  NIM A395, p.169  Track candidates seeding in the Pattern Tracker  Hit triplets are used as seeds  Both left/right assignments for drift distances  Propagate all branches in parallel, but reject inferior  Maximize quality estimator Q = #step - #fault - w c2  Kalman Filter A. Spiridonov

  11. Ranger: Track Propagation in the Magnet  NIM A426, p.268  Inhomogeneous magnetic field  3D concurrent track evolution  Kalman filter  4th, 5th order Runge-Kutta  Timing for 2 interactions + 1 with J/Y  Pattern Chamber track finding 0.4 s  Magnet Chamber propagation 0.2 s  Trigger Chamber propagation 0.04 s A. Spiridonov

  12. Main Tracker Reconstruction before 2001  Real event with 150 tracks  Reconstructed with magnet tracking  Tracking efficiency about 80% A. Spiridonov

  13. Tracking Efficiency before 2001  Monte Carlo: 2 minimum bias + 1 with J/Y(mm)  Stand alone reconstruction in Pattern Tracker Ranger CATS Efficiency per m track 0.97±0.02 0.94±0.02  Full event reconstruction for real data before 2001 SLT seeds Default algorithms Ranger Ranger CATS 288±23 209±17 190±17 Reconstructed J/Y(mm) 1 0.85±0.04 0.81±0.04 Efficiency per m track  More realistic simulation to obtain MC & data agreement A. Spiridonov

  14. SLT Seeding in off-line Reconstruction  Coarse tracking for dileptons by Second Level Trigger  3D track following of SLT seeds by Ranger off-line  Number of following in parallel branches can be made bigger in the case of few seeds, enhancing efficiency  Efficiency ~95% for tracks being of physical interest  Finally, SLT seeds were implemented for CATS also  Physics results (B, cC etc) were obtained before 2001 A. Spiridonov

  15. Tracking Performance after 2001  Not triggered: efficiency estimation on data using KS(pp) One p made from VDS-ECAL/RICH and OTR is searched Efficiency 95-97% for not triggered tracks on data  Efficiency 96-99% for triggered tracks  CATS Ranger 1.8 106mm triggers 1209±48 1252±44 number of J/Y(mm) S/(S+B) 0.57±0.01 0.64±0.01  Full event reconstruction about 3 s on HERA-B farm  Pattern recognition takes 20-25% only A. Spiridonov

  16. Matching of VDS and PC track segments  Pairs (x,y,tX,tY,1/p) for VDS and PC given (p not defined)  One Kalman Filter step to estimate p and c2  Use the c2 as a quality estimator Wrong match Proper match  Tail: Moliere scattering and pattern recognition fails A. Spiridonov

  17. Performance of Matching on Real Data  KS(pp) and J/Y(mm) were used to evaluate efficiency  Event number in signals and background vs matching c2 J/Y(mm) KS(pp)  For c2 < 200: 98% p and 100% m were matched  Selected pairs (ambiguities also) stored as tracks, superior flagged A. Spiridonov

  18. Track Fit in HERA-B  Use of the Kalman Filter technique  The system state vector (x,y,tX,tY,1/p)  4th, 5th order Runge-Kutta  3 filter/smoother iterations with outliers removal at last J/Y(mm) Mass 3093 MeV/c2 Width 38 MeV/c2 A. Spiridonov

  19. Track Fit Performance on Real Data  Was investigated on the sample of J/Y(mm)  The sample was divided into a 4×4 grid  Binning in muon momentum: 14, 26, 44, 72 GeV/c Relative deviations smaller then 3·10-3 A. Spiridonov

  20. Momentum Resolution on Real Data  The sample of J/Y(mm) divided into a 4×4 grid  D(m) = m/2 ( D(p1)/p1 + D(p2)/p2 ) O  Muons momenta p1, p2 4 values of D(p)/p fitted to 4×4 D(m) A. Spiridonov

  21. S U M M A R Y  Performances of VDS and OTR detectors close to designed were achieved  Tracking efficiency 98% in VDS  Tracking efficiency 98% for triggered and 96% for not triggered tracks in OTR  Matching efficiency about 98% for VDS and OTR track segments  For J/Y(mm) small relative mass bias about 10-3 and mass resolution 38 MeV/c2  Data taking completed, high statistics recorded  Physics analysis in progress A. Spiridonov

More Related