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CARIOCA Dead-time & inefficiency - UPDATE M2 station has been reanalysed from the Davide measurements at 20 MHz BC of counting rates on the bi-gap physical channel counters at 4 luminosities ~ (0.4 - 0.6 - 0.8 - 1) x 10 33 PROCEDURE 1)Measure inefficiency of particle counting 2)Extract the inefficiency fraction due to CARIOCA dead-time δ 3)Evaluate (by MC) the δ value generating such inefficiency 4)From this δ, evaluate the inefficiency we will have at 40 MHz All this per region/readout separately G. Martellotti, G. Penso, D. Pinci

CARIOCA Dead-time & inefficiency - UPDATE

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CARIOCA Dead-time & inefficiency - UPDATE. M2 station has been reanalysed from the Davide measurements at 20 MHz BC of counting rates on the bi-gap physical channel counters at 4 luminosities ~ (0.4 - 0.6 - 0.8 - 1) x 10 33 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: CARIOCA  Dead-time & inefficiency  - UPDATE

CARIOCA Dead-time & inefficiency - UPDATEM2 station has been reanalysedfrom the Davide measurements at 20 MHz BC of counting rates on the bi-gap physical channel countersat 4 luminosities ~ (0.4 - 0.6 - 0.8 - 1) x 1033

PROCEDURE 1) Measure inefficiency of particle counting 2) Extract the inefficiency fraction due to CARIOCA dead-time δ3) Evaluate (by MC) the δ value generating such inefficiency 4) From this δ, evaluate the inefficiency we will have at 40 MHz All this per region/readout separately

G. Martellotti, G. Penso, D. Pinci

Page 2: CARIOCA  Dead-time & inefficiency  - UPDATE

DEFINITIONS:Ro = BC rate = 20MHz (in a 0.7 fraction of time - 1262 BC/orbit)Rpart = rate of particles hitting each Pad (not known)R*= rate of Pad counting (Pad not in dead-time) Note that the rates RD* measured per second by Davide have to be rescaled to R*=RD*/0.7 when compared to Ro=20 MHz

The inefficiency of the FE channel as particle counter is measured by the difference between the measured rate R* and the rate of hitting particles Rpart.Rpart is not known but it scales with luminosity L2 measurements are made at L1 and L2 > L1 The ratio ρ = (R2*/ R1*) (L1/ L2) as a function of R2*- R1* measures with good approximation the inefficiency of a channel when the channel counting rate is R* = R2*- R1 *

Inefficiency of particle counting

Page 3: CARIOCA  Dead-time & inefficiency  - UPDATE

The counting inefficiecy is due to 2 effects :# Non null probability of >1 particle hitting the same pad in the same BC (granularity effect) rate of pad hit R < Rpart this is not a detector inefficiency# When the pad is hit (rate R) it has a probability to be in the CARIOCA dead-time δ R*=R(1-δR*) this is a detector inefficiencyIf we want to evaluate the detector inefficiency (due to CARIOCA dead-time) from the counting rate, we have to ‘’subtract’’ the granularity effect calculating R starting from Rpart

Coun

ting

effici

ency

Inefficiency of particle counting

R* = R2* -R1* (GHz)

Page 4: CARIOCA  Dead-time & inefficiency  - UPDATE

k = number of interactions in the BC m = average number of interactions per BCPoissonian of k Pk = exp(-m) mk/ k!

  n = number of particles on the Pad w = average pad occupancy for 1 interaction when occurring k interactions in the BC <n>= k wPoissonian of n Pn = exp(-kw) (kw)n/n! Probability of pad hit in the case of k interactions = 1-exp(-kw)

Overall probability of Pad-on (1 – Po) = S

k=1… exp(-m) mk/ k! (1-exp(-kw)) = 1 - exp{-m[1-exp(-w)]}

A channel hit in average by mw particles/BC will have a particle rate Rpart = mw Ro and a lower rate of Pad-on R = (1–Po) Ro

GRANULARITY EFFECT can be calculated in terms of m and w

Page 5: CARIOCA  Dead-time & inefficiency  - UPDATE

• Ro = 20 MHz, Rpart = μωRo ω = Rpart/Roμ. • We don’t know ω but it can be quite well approximated by ω ≈ R*/Roμ • With this ω we calculate R = Ro (1-Po) and write the dead-time formula R*/R = (1 - δR*)Given two measurements at different luminosity we can calculate the ratio

ρ = (R2*/R1*) (R1/ R2) = (1 - δR2*)/(1 - δR1*)

where R1 and R2 are calculated with the same ω and the two different μ1, μ2

Neglecting quadratic terms ρ ≈ 1 – δ(R2* - R1*) Plotting ρ versus (R2* - R1*) we can directly measure δ

• Eventually, using this δ value, we can recalculate ω and make an iteration to improve the δ value

Page 6: CARIOCA  Dead-time & inefficiency  - UPDATE

R1* measured at L1 = 0.6 x 1033

R2* measured at L2 = 0.4 x 1033If we express the rate in GeV, the slope is expressed in nano seconds effective dead-time δeff

due to the CARIOCA dead-time folded with the time BC sequence and the detector time response (bigap time response and dead-time variance)

R* = R2* -R1* (GHz)

inefficiency due to CARIOCA dead-time

R* = R (1- δeffR*) The inefficiency at R* is δeff R*

effici

ency

L1-L2

Page 7: CARIOCA  Dead-time & inefficiency  - UPDATE

# Channels not having a meaningfull measurements for all the luminosities are eliminated# A few measurements too far from the mean value are eliminated# The average in bins of R2* – R1* can be performed Linear Fit

R* = R2* -R1*R* = R2* -R1*

effici

ency

GHz

SLOPE =effective dead-time δeff = 48.5 ns

Apparently a change in luminosity of few per mill

Page 8: CARIOCA  Dead-time & inefficiency  - UPDATE

At a first look the slopes obtained for the other luminosity combinations appear to be consistent (a more detailed comparison is in progress)

Luminosity = (4-6, 4-8, 4-10, 6-8, 6-10, 8-10) x 10 32

δeff = (48.5, 50.1, 47.9, 48.6, 49.6, 46.9 )ns

Average value δeff ≈ 48±1.5 ns

Structures are visible – to be interpreted as due to significantly different δ values for different cases (regions – wires – cathodes). We may also have slight changes of luminosity during the measurements of data samples used

Next step is to analyse separately the different ‘’regions’’

Page 9: CARIOCA  Dead-time & inefficiency  - UPDATE

Short lever arm when analysing only one region Analyse the combination L1-L4

Nevertheless we can say thatThe slope δeff is significantly different in different regions. It is higher for cathodes than for wires# This is due to the different capacitance but also to the hit quality (different average charge deposited)

# slightly different extrapolations to zero. Possibly a change in luminosity of few per mill in between the measurements for wires and cathodes

L1-L2 Region R1

δeff 64ns δeff 65ns

δeff 51ns δeff 44ns

effici

ency

Page 10: CARIOCA  Dead-time & inefficiency  - UPDATE

Even shorter lever arm for R2

Certainly too short for R3 R4 to measure a meaningful slope Analyse L1-L4

δeff R1 cathodes 64-65 ns R1 wires 44-51nsR2 cathodes 53 nsR2 wires 46-50ns

L1-L2 Region R2

δeff 53ns

δeff 50ns

δeff 53ns

δeff 46ns

Page 11: CARIOCA  Dead-time & inefficiency  - UPDATE

Toy Monte CarloGiven # a value of CARIOCA dead time δcar (mean value and variance)# the time response of the bi-gap chamber σt

# the BC rate = 20 MHz or 40 MHzInefficiency due to δ is calculated (expressed in terms of effective dead time δeff)

Page 12: CARIOCA  Dead-time & inefficiency  - UPDATE

BCR = 20 MHz ASSUMED : bi-gap gaussian response σt = 5ns δcar = 70 ± 11 ns (gaussian)

Current BC

Previous BCs contributing to dead timeBC structure

Page 13: CARIOCA  Dead-time & inefficiency  - UPDATE

BCR = 20 MHz

σt = 4 nsσ δcar = δcar/10

σt = 0 σ δcar = 0

δeff

(ns)

δcar (ns)

For each <δcar> assumed (with its variance) MC inefficiency Simple gaussian shapes have been assumed for the time fluctuations. The main contribution to the smoothing comes from the δcar variance assumed to increase with the δcar value. From the Riegler measurements I would say that the real behaviour is in between the two last hypoteses (nearer to the last one).

ineffi

cien

cy

DT eletctronics (ns)

σt = 5 nsσ δcar = δcar /6

Page 14: CARIOCA  Dead-time & inefficiency  - UPDATE

BCR = 20 MHz

δcar (ns)

For each ‘’inefficiency’’ δeff measured in a region, δcar is evaluated If δeff ~ 50 ns the δcar is not very well determined.

σt = 5ns σ δcar = δcar/6

δcar (ns)

δeff

(ns)

σt = 4ns σ δcar = δcar/10

Average all regions

R2 cathodes

R1 cathodes

Page 15: CARIOCA  Dead-time & inefficiency  - UPDATE

σ t = 5ns, σ δcar = δcar /6

For BCR = 40 MHz with any reasonable assumption on time fluctuations (in particular for the δcar variance) we will have a sufficient smoothing inefficiency will be ~ proportional to CARIOCA dead-time - δeff ~ δcar -12.5 ns

σ t = 4ns, σ δcar = δcar /10

δcar (ns)

ineffi

cien

cyδe

ff (n

s)

Page 16: CARIOCA  Dead-time & inefficiency  - UPDATE

Station M2 δeff (20 MHz) δcarioca δeff (40MHz)

Average on all regions 48ns 67-73ns 54-61ns• R1 cathodes 64-65ns 90-95ns 77-83ns

• R1 wires 44-51ns ? 60-80ns 47-68ns• R2 cathodes 53ns 76-85ns 63-73ns • R2 wires 46-50ns ?• R3 ?• R4 ?

Inefficiency at a rate R (measured in GHz) is obtained from the dead-time formula R*= R(1 - δeff R*)

A reliable error estimate is neededFurther analysis is needed of the samples with larger lever arm: L1-L4

‘’PROVISIONAL’’Summary table

Page 17: CARIOCA  Dead-time & inefficiency  - UPDATE

Summary# Inefficiency of physical channels due to CARIOCA dead time is measured from counting rates in terms of an effective δeff# preliminary results indicate that :1) The average δeff is of the order of 50ns2) δeff is significantly different for different regions/readouts. It is higher in R1 (and for cathodes is higher than for wires) – Assuming an average δcar seems to be a crude approximation (optimistic for the inner region)3) From the δeff, the (larger) CARIOCA dead time (δcar) is evaluated with a toy MC making simple assumptions on its variance and on the bi-gap time response.4) When going at 40 MHz BCR, we will have a (larger) inefficiency well approximated by a δeff ≈ δcar – 12.5 ns The inefficiency of R1 cathodes is very high. At the high rates foreseen for future, it seems that inefficiency will be too high to work with the END of wires and cathodes # With the muon FE counters, carefull measurements would allow to monitor relative luminosities with very high precision