Abstract

In spring 2018 the SuperKEKB electron-positron collider at High Energy Accelerator Research Organization (KEK, Tsukuba, Japan) will deliver its first collisions to the Belle II experiment. The aim of Belle II is to collect a data sample 50 times larger than the previous generation of BFactories taking advantage of the unprecedented SuperKEKB design luminosity of 8×1035cm-2s-1. The Belle II detector will allow to conduct precise measurements in the harsh collider environment, probing for signs of physics beyond the standard model at the precision frontier. In order to deliver data suitable for physics analysis, the detector has to be properly calibrated on a regular basis. Among other calibrations the detector alignment plays a key role. For example, precise measurements of time dependent CP-violation rely on the accurate alignment of the new vertex detector, as well as on the determination of the beamspot position and size. To automate the calibration procedures and manage the large amount of data and processing power needed for detector calibration, a software framework has been developed which allows to define the complete workflow and to execute it on a computing cluster. The framework integrates the Millepede II algorithm to solve the large minimization problem emerging in the track-based alignment and calibration of the pixel and strip detector, the central drift chamber, and the muon system. The first collision data will allow to test and to further improve and tune the alignment and calibration procedures. Although the vertexing capabilities will be limited due to the installation of only a small slice of the full vertex detector, the commissioning phase will allow to test most of the alignment procedure features and to prepare for the full operation. We will present the results achieved during the first data taking, the experience gained and the plans for the first physics run with the full detector.

Highlights

  • On April 26, 2018 (00:38 JST), the SuperKEKB collider delivered the first collisions for the Belle II experiment [1]

  • Surrounded by a central drift chamber (CDC), particle identification device and an electromagnetic calorimeter, it is in the center of an 1.5 T solenoid superconduncting magnet, which construction is part of the muon and KL detection system (KLM), see Figure 1

  • Inside basf2, we develop a common Calibration and Alignment Framework (CAF) to produce such constants in an automated way

Read more

Summary

Introduction

On April 26, 2018 (00:38 JST), the SuperKEKB collider delivered the first collisions for the Belle II experiment [1]. SuperKEKB is a so called B-Factory: an asymmetric electronpositron collider with center-of-mass energy of the Υ(4S ) resonance Former KEKB accelerator with design instantaneous luminosity of 8 × 1035cm−2s−1 and together with Belle II experiment it aims to collect 50 times larger data sample than the previous generation of B-Factories. This will allow to conduct precise measurements in the field of heavy flavour physics and probe physics beyond standard model at the precision frontier [2]. Procedures for detector alignment and calibration being developed and exercised on the first data are presented in this article, with some emphasis on the vertex detector and the overall software framework common to other sub-detectors

Commissioning Phase 2
Phase 2 VXD
Alignment and Calibration Software
Experience and Results with First Data
Conclusions and Plans
Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call

Disclaimer: All third-party content on this website/platform is and will remain the property of their respective owners and is provided on "as is" basis without any warranties, express or implied. Use of third-party content does not indicate any affiliation, sponsorship with or endorsement by them. Any references to third-party content is to identify the corresponding services and shall be considered fair use under The CopyrightLaw.