Abstract

The Large Hadron Collider (LHC) in 2015 will collide proton beams with increased luminosity from 1034 up to 3 × 1034cm−2s−1. ATLAS is an LHC experiment designed to measure decay properties of high energetic particles produced in the protons collisions. The higher luminosity places stringent operational and physical requirements on the ATLAS Trigger in order to reduce the 40MHz collision rate to a manageable event storage rate of 1kHz while at the same time, selecting those events with valuable physics meaning. The Level-1 Trigger is the first rate-reducing step in the ATLAS Trigger, with an output rate of 100kHz and decision latency of less than 2.5µs. It is composed of the Calorimeter Trigger (L1Calo), the Muon Trigger (L1Muon) and the Central Trigger Processor (CTP). By 2015, there will be a new electronics element in the chain: the Topological Processor System (L1Topo system).The L1Topo system consist of a single AdvancedTCA shelf equipped with three L1Topo processor blades. It will make it possible to use detailed information from L1Calo and L1Muon processed in individual state-of-the-art FPGA processors. This allows the determination of angles between jets and/or leptons and calculates kinematic variables based on lists of selected/sorted objects. The system is designed to receive and process up to 6Tb/s of real time data. The paper reports the relevant upgrades of the Level-1 trigger with focus on the topological processor design and commissioning.

Highlights

  • ATLAS[1] is one of the multi-purpose experiments at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at the European Organization for Nuclear Research CERN in Switzerland

  • With Level-1 chain: the Topological Processor (L1Topo) is possible for the first time to apply topological cuts at Level-1 using detailed information from calorimeters and muon subdetectors

  • L1Topo receives input from new CMX modules which are part of the Level-1 Calo Trigger (L1Calo) upgrade. It uses these inputs to make topological based decisions, allowing much important physics to be saved from the alternative of raising the pT and ET thresholds

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Summary

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This content has been downloaded from IOPscience. Please scroll down to see the full text. Ser. 664 082052 (http://iopscience.iop.org/1742-6596/664/8/082052) View the table of contents for this issue, or go to the journal homepage for more. Download details: IP Address: 137.138.124.206 This content was downloaded on 24/02/2016 at 12:27 Please note that terms and conditions apply. 21st International Conference on Computing in High Energy and Nuclear Physics (CHEP2015) IOP Publishing. Journal of Physics: Conference Series 664 (2015) 082052 doi:10.1088/1742-6596/664/8/082052.

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