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[Sphenix-physics-l] QM poster abstract about the sPHENIX DAQ++
- From: Martin Purschke <purschke AT bnl.gov>
- To: sphenix-physics-l AT lists.bnl.gov
- Subject: [Sphenix-physics-l] QM poster abstract about the sPHENIX DAQ++
- Date: Mon, 26 Sep 2016 11:35:40 -0400
Dear all,
I'm planning to submit the attached poster abstract for the QM.
Best,
Martin
--
Martin L. Purschke, Ph.D. ; purschke AT bnl.gov
; http://www.phenix.bnl.gov/~purschke
;
Brookhaven National Laboratory ; phone: +1-631-344-5244
Physics Department Bldg 510 C ; fax: +1-631-344-3253
Upton, NY 11973-5000 ; skype: mpurschke
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The Readout and Data Acquisition Design of the sPHENIX Detector at RHIC
Martin L. Purschke, for the sPHENIX Collaboration
The recently established sPHENIX Collaboration at RHIC is upgrading
the PHENIX detector in a way that will enable a comprehensive
measurement of jets in relativistic heavy ion collisions. The upgrade
will give the experiment full azimuthal coverage within a
pseudorapidity range of $-1.1 < \eta < 1.1$. In addition to measuring
heavy-ion collisions, the new apparatus will provide enhanced physics
capabilities for studying nucleon-nucleus and polarized proton
collisions, and eventually allow a detailed study of electron-nucleus
collisions at an envisioned Electron Ion Collider at Brookhaven.
The upgraded detector will be based on the former BaBar magnet and
will include tracking detectors, a new electromagnetic calorimeter,
and, for the first time at a RHIC experiment, a hadronic
calorimeter. A new technology using a Tungsten-scintillating fiber
design for the electromagnetic calorimeter is what enables the full
azimuthal coverage, as it achieves a radiation length of just about
7mm, which allows for a very compact design of the device.
The calorimeter signals are sampled with silicon photomultipliers and
waveform digitizing electronics. The digitized waveforms are read out
with custom PCIe boards that allow multiple streams with bandwidths of
up to 5GBit/s. The goal is to have a sustained event rate to disk of
about 15KHz. Focusing on the calorimeters, we will describe the goals
and design of the sPHENIX experiment, the design of the digitizers and
other parts of the data acquisition system.
We will detail the design of the FPGA-based readout cards, and how we
implement the so-called "multi-event buffering" in the front-end,
which has traditionally enabled PHENIX to take data at rates rivaling,
or exceeding, the LHC experiments.
-
[Sphenix-physics-l] QM poster abstract about the sPHENIX DAQ++,
Martin Purschke, 09/26/2016
- Re: [Sphenix-physics-l] QM poster abstract about the sPHENIX DAQ++, Edouard Kistenev, 09/26/2016
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