Abstract

To accommodate the increase in energy and luminosity of the upgraded LHC, the CMS Endcap Muon Level 1 Trigger system has to be significantly modified. To provide the best track reconstruction, the Trigger system must now import all available trigger primitives generated by Cathode Strip Chambers and by other regional subsystems, such as Resistive Plate Chambers. In addition to massive input bandwidth, this also requires a significant increase in logic and memory resources.To satisfy these requirements, a new Sector Processor unit for muon track finding is being designed. This unit follows the micro-TCA standard recently adopted by CMS. It consists of three modules. The Core Logic module houses the large FPGA that contains the processing logic and multi-gigabit serial links for data exchange. The Optical module contains optical receivers and transmitters; it communicates with the Core Logic module via a custom backplane section. The Look-Up Table module contains a large amount of low-latency memory that is used to assign the final transverse momentum of the muon candidate tracks. The name of the unit — Modular Track Finder — reflects the modular approach used in the design.Presented here are the details of the hardware design of the prototype unit based on Xilinx's Virtex-6 FPGA family, MTF6, as well as results of the conducted tests. Also presented are plans for the pre-production prototype based on the Virtex-7 FPGA family, MTF7.

Highlights

  • To satisfy these requirements, a new Sector Processor unit for muon track finding is being designed

  • 1.2 Trigger primitive bandwidth and FPGA resources The currently deployed ME trigger system filters the trigger primitives generated by each 60◦ azimuthal Muon Endcap sector

  • We need to import all trigger primitives into the upgraded Sector Processor boards

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Summary

Introduction

A new Sector Processor unit for muon track finding is being designed. This requires implementing a pT assignment LUT with significantly bigger address space to receive more track data. The currently available 22 bits of address are barely enough to supply two φ differences for high-quality tracks that include all four Endcap Muon stations. We need to import all trigger primitives into the upgraded Sector Processor boards.

Results
Conclusion
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