The ATLAS Inner Detector commissioning and calibration
Abstract
The ATLAS Inner Detector is a composite tracking system consisting of silicon pixels, silicon strips and straw tubes in a 2 T magnetic field. Its installation was completed in August 2008 and the detector took part in data-taking with single LHC beams and cosmic rays. The initial detector operation, hardware commissioning and in-situ calibrations are described. Tracking performance has been measured with 7.6 million cosmic-ray events, collected using a tracking trigger and reconstructed with modular pattern-recognition and fitting software. The intrinsic hit efficiency and tracking trigger efficiencies are close to 100%. Lorentz angle measurements for both electrons and holes, specific energy-loss calibration and transition radiation turn-on measurements have been performed. Different alignment techniques have been used to reconstruct the detector geometry. After the initial alignment, a transverse impact parameter resolution of 22.1±0.9 μm and a relative momentum resolution σ p / p=(4.83±0.16)×10-4 GeV-1× p T have been measured for high momentum tracks.
- Publication:
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European Physical Journal C
- Pub Date:
- December 2010
- DOI:
- arXiv:
- arXiv:1004.5293
- Bibcode:
- 2010EPJC...70..787A
- Keywords:
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- Physics - Instrumentation and Detectors;
- High Energy Physics - Experiment
- E-Print:
- 34 pages, 25 figures