The IFR online detector control at the BaBar experiment

被引:0
|
作者
Paolucci, P
Cavallo, N
Fabozzi, F
Piccolo, D
机构
[1] Stanford Linear Accelerator Ctr, Stanford, CA 94309 USA
[2] Ist Nazl Fis Nucl, Sezione Napoli, Complesso Monte Sant Angelo, I-80126 Naples, Italy
关键词
D O I
10.1109/23.846145
中图分类号
TM [电工技术]; TN [电子技术、通信技术];
学科分类号
0808 ; 0809 ;
摘要
The Instrumented Flux Return (IFR)[I] is one of the five subdetectors of the BaBar[2] experiment on the PEP II accelerator at SLAG. The IFR consists of 774 Resistive Plate Chamber (RPC) detectors, covering an area of about 2,000 m(2) and equipped with 3,000 Front-end Electronic Cards (FEC) reading about 50,000 channels (readout strips). The first aim of a B-factory experiment is to run continuously without any interruption and then the Detector Control system plays a very important role in order to reduce the dead-time due to the hardware problems. The I.N.F.N. group of Naples has designed and built the IFR Online Detector Control system (IODC)[3] in order to control and monitor the operation of this large number of detectors and of all the IFR subsystems: High Voltage, Low Voltage, Gas system, Trigger and DAQ crates. The IODC consists of 8 custom DAQ stations, placed around the detector and one central DAQ station based on VME technology and placed in electronic house. The IODC use VxWorks and EPICS to implement slow control data flow of about 2500 hardware channels and to develop part of the readout module consisting in about 3500 records. EPICS is interfaced with the BaBar Run Control through the Component Proxy and with the BaBar database (Objectivity) through the Archiver and KeyLookup processes.
引用
收藏
页码:192 / 195
页数:4
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] The DIRC, the Particle Identification Detector of BABAR
    Yèche, C
    NUCLEAR PHYSICS B-PROCEEDINGS SUPPLEMENTS, 1999, 75B : 356 - 358
  • [32] The CsI(Tl) calorimeter of the BaBar detector
    Bauer, JM
    PROCEEDINGS OF THE SEVENTH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON CALORIMETRY IN HIGH ENERGY PHYSICS, 1998, : 72 - 81
  • [33] Muon and neutral hadron detector for BaBar
    Anulli, F.
    Asmone, A.
    Ferroli, R.Baldini
    van Bibber, K.
    Bionta, R.M.
    Buzzo, A.
    Calcaterra, A.
    Carlino, G.P.
    Cavallo, N.
    Contri, R.
    Crosetti, G.
    de Sangro, R.
    Fabozzi, F.
    Falciai, D.
    Franchi, T.V.
    Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research, Section A: Accelerators, Spectrometers, Detectors and Associated Equipment, 1998, 409 (1-3): : 542 - 546
  • [34] Detector Control System for JUNO Experiment
    Xie, Xiaochuan
    Liu, Shenghui
    Ye, Mei
    Li, Huang
    Huang, Shengheng
    Liu, Hongbang
    IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON NUCLEAR SCIENCE, 2024, 71 (11) : 2469 - 2474
  • [35] The detector control system of the ATLAS experiment
    Poy, A. Barriuso
    Boterenbrood, H.
    Burckhart, H. J.
    Cook, J.
    Filimonov, V.
    Franz, S.
    Gutzwiller, O.
    Hallgren, B.
    Khomutnikov, V.
    Schlenkera, S.
    Varela, F.
    JOURNAL OF INSTRUMENTATION, 2008, 3 (05)
  • [36] Recent results from the BaBar experiment
    Manoni, E.
    NUOVO CIMENTO C-COLLOQUIA AND COMMUNICATIONS IN PHYSICS, 2011, 34 (06): : 28 - 32
  • [37] Charm mixing and CPV at BABAR experiment
    Milanes, Diego A.
    SUPERSYMMETRY AND THE UNIFICATION OF FUNDAMENTAL INTERACTIONS, 2008, 1078 : 317 - 319
  • [38] Semileptonic and Leptonic decays in the BABAR experiment
    da Costa, Joao Firmino
    DISCRETE 2010: SYMPOSIUM ON PROSPECTS IN THE PHYSICS OF DISCRETE SYMMETRIES, 2011, 335
  • [39] Radiative Penguin decays at the BaBar experiment
    Eugeni Graugés
    The European Physical Journal C - Particles and Fields, 2004, 33 (Suppl 1): : s271 - s273
  • [40] CANbus and microcontroller use in the BaBar detector at SLAC
    Anthony, P.L.
    Crawley, H.B.
    Fischer, P.-A.
    McKay, R.L.
    Meyer, W.T.
    IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science, 2000, 47 (2 I) : 166 - 169