Abstract

The Beam Conditions Monitor (BCM) provides fast, relative measurements of particle fluxes for use in the safety systems of CMS. It uses a set of chemical vapor deposited (CVD) diamond diodes. Sudden, order of magnitude changes in the BCM readout issue non-maskable LHC beam aborts. Dangerous irradiation trends on longer timescales translate into automatic detector interlocks and injection inhibit. Operators in the LHC beam and CMS detector control room obtain and display real time (1 Hz) readout of flux measurements from the BCM subsystem. The beam radiation monitoring system also provides an independent measurement of the beam luminosity. The next generation luminosity detector, called the Pixel Luminosity Telescope (PLT), is based on pixelated monocrystalline diamond detectors. They provide a fast occupancy information and allow particle tracking near the interaction point to distinguish trajectories originating from the proton-proton collision point and those parallel to the beam pipe. We present the use case of diamond detectors for beam radiation monitoring in CMS and first measurements of 150 GeV/c ¿ <sup xmlns:mml="http://www.w3.org/1998/Math/MathML" xmlns:xlink="http://www.w3.org/1999/xlink">+</sup> particle tracks in three layers of pixelated diamond detectors. The PLT after installation in 2010 will be the largest utilization of diamond instrumentation in high energy physics.

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