30 June 2024 to 4 July 2024
FMDUL
Europe/Lisbon timezone

Calibration and Performance of the Upgraded ALICE Inner Tracking System

1 Jul 2024, 10:00
20m
Main Auditorium (FMDUL)

Main Auditorium

FMDUL

Main Auditorium of the Faculty of Dental Medicine at the University of Lisbon (Faculdade de Medicina Dentária da Universidade de Lisboa)
Oral Communication Detector Systems

Speaker

Andrea Sofia Triolo (CERN)

Description

The ALICE Experiment at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) underwent a major upgrade during the Long Shutdown 2. Several subsystems have been improved, including the ALICE Inner Tracking System (ITS), which has been entirely replaced. The new pixel-only tracker (ITS2) consists of 7 layers of monolithic active pixel sensors (MAPS) featuring a pixel size of 27×29 µm², with an intrinsic spatial resolution of 5 µm. With 24120 sensors and 12.5 billion pixels, this detector covers an active area of about 10 m2 and represents the largest application of the MAPS technology in a high-energy physics experiment to date. The most significant improvements introduced by the ITS2 to the ALICE experiment include a reduction in the impact parameter resolution to approximately 30 µm in both the r-phi and z coordinates at a transverse momentum of 1 GeV/c. This is a factor of 3 improvement over the previous detector. Additionally, the readout rate has increased from 1 kHz to 100 kHz in Pb-Pb collisions and to 200 kHz in proton-proton collisions. To ensure stable operations and maintain high data quality a regular calibration is performed, which consists in establishing the discriminating threshold and the noisy channels of the detector. The ITS2 has been successfully commissioned for LHC Run3, and already operated during proton-proton and Pb-Pb collisions at LHC with excellent performance. This contribution gives an overview of the operational procedures required to maintain an optimal data quality, along with results obtained from calibration and the performance achieved during the LHC Run 3.

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Presentation materials