APS April Meeting 2020
Volume 65, Number 2
Saturday–Tuesday, April 18–21, 2020;
Washington D.C.
Session K01: Poster Session II (14:00-17:00)
2:00 PM,
Sunday, April 19, 2020
Room: Exhibit Hall A
Abstract: K01.00091 : ECAL trigger performance in Run 2 and improvements for Run 3
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Abstract
Author:
Pampa Ghose
(Florida State Univ)
Collaboration:
CMS Experiment
The CMS electromagnetic calorimeter (ECAL) is a high resolution crystal
calorimeter operating at the CERN LHC. It is responsible for the
identification and precise reconstruction of electrons and photons in CMS,
which were crucial in the discovery and subsequent characterization of the
Higgs boson. It also contributes to the reconstruction of tau leptons, jets,
and calorimeter energy sums, which are are vital components of many CMS
physics analyses.
The ECAL trigger system employs fast digital signal processing algorithms to
precisely measure the energy and timing information of ECAL energy deposits
recorded during LHC collisions. These trigger primitives are transmitted to
the Level-1 trigger system at the LHC collision rate of 40 MHz. These energy
deposits are then combined with information from other CMS sub-detectors to
determine whether the event should trigger the readout of the data from CMS
to permanent storage. This presentation will summarize the ECAL trigger performance achieved
during LHC Run 2 (2015-2018). More frequent updates of the ECAL trigger
primitives have been required relative to LHC Run 1 (2009-2012), due to the
higher luminosities experienced in Run 2, and these will also be described.
These updates are needed to account for radiation-induced changes in crystal
and photodetector response and to maintain stable trigger rates and
efficiencies up to \textbar eta\textbar $=$3.0.
Further improvements in the energy and time reconstruction of the CMS ECAL
trigger primitives are being explored for LHC Run 3 (2021-23). These are
particularly focused on improving the performance at the highest
instantaneous luminosities, and in the most forward regions of the
calorimeter (\textbar eta\textbar \textgreater 2.5), where the effects of
detector aging will be the greatest. The main features of these improvements
will be described, and preliminary estimates of the expected performance
gains will be presented.