4.7 Article

Performance of electron and photon triggers in ATLAS during LHC Run 2

Journal

EUROPEAN PHYSICAL JOURNAL C
Volume 80, Issue 1, Pages -

Publisher

SPRINGER
DOI: 10.1140/epjc/s10052-019-7500-2

Keywords

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Funding

  1. ANPCyT, Argentina
  2. YerPhI, Armenia
  3. ARC, Australia
  4. BMWFW, Austria
  5. FWF, Austria
  6. ANAS, Azerbaijan
  7. SSTC, Belarus
  8. CNPq, Brazil
  9. FAPESP, Brazil
  10. NSERC, Canada
  11. NRC, Canada
  12. CFI, Canada
  13. CERN
  14. CONICYT, Chile
  15. CAS, China
  16. MOST, China
  17. NSFC, China
  18. COLCIENCIAS, Colombia
  19. MSMT CR, Czech Republic
  20. MPO CR, Czech Republic
  21. VSC CR, Czech Republic
  22. DNRF, Denmark
  23. DNSRC, Denmark
  24. IN2P3-CNRS, CEA-DRF/IRFU, France
  25. SRNSFG, Georgia
  26. BMBF, Germany
  27. HGF, Germany
  28. MPG, Germany
  29. GSRT, Greece
  30. RGC, Hong Kong SAR, China
  31. ISF, Israel
  32. Benoziyo Center, Israel
  33. INFN, Italy
  34. MEXT, Japan
  35. JSPS, Japan
  36. CNRST, Morocco
  37. NWO, Netherlands
  38. RCN, Norway
  39. MNiSW, Poland
  40. NCN, Poland
  41. FCT, Portugal
  42. MNE/IFA, Romania
  43. MES of Russia, Russian Federation
  44. NRC KI, Russian Federation
  45. JINR
  46. MESTD, Serbia
  47. MSSR, Slovakia
  48. ARRS, Slovenia
  49. MIZS, Slovenia
  50. DST/NRF, South Africa
  51. MINECO, Spain
  52. SRC, Sweden
  53. Wallenberg Foundation, Sweden
  54. SERI, Switzerland
  55. SNSF, Switzerland
  56. Canton of Bern, Switzerland
  57. Canton of Geneva, Switzerland
  58. MOST, Taiwan
  59. TAEK, Turkey
  60. STFC, United Kingdom
  61. DOE, United States of America
  62. NSF, United States of America
  63. BCKDF, Canada
  64. CANARIE, Canada
  65. CRC, Canada
  66. Compute Canada, Canada
  67. COST, European Union
  68. ERC, European Union
  69. ERDF, European Union
  70. Horizon 2020, European Union
  71. Marie Sklodowska-Curie Actions, European Union
  72. Investissements d' Avenir Labex and Idex, ANR, France
  73. DFG, Germany
  74. AvH Foundation, Germany
  75. Herakleitos programme
  76. Thales programme
  77. Aristeia programme
  78. EUESF
  79. Greek NSRF, Greece
  80. BSF-NSF, Israel
  81. GIF, Israel
  82. CERCA Programme Generalitat de Catalunya, Spain
  83. Royal Society, United Kingdom
  84. Leverhulme Trust, United Kingdom
  85. STFC [ST/N000463/1, ST/P002439/1, ST/S000860/1, ST/N000277/1, ST/N000234/1, ST/S000747/1, ST/S00095X/1, 2131773, 2025327, 1852475] Funding Source: UKRI

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Electron and photon triggers covering transverse energies from 5 GeV to several TeV are essential for the ATLAS experiment to record signals for a wide variety of physics: from StandardModel processes to searches for new phenomena in both proton-proton and heavy-ion collisions. To cope with a fourfold increase of peak LHC luminosity from 2015 to 2018 (Run 2), to 2.1 x 10(34) cm(-2) s(-1), and a similar increase in the number of interactions per beam-crossing to about 60, trigger algorithms and selections were optimised to control the rates while retaining a high efficiency for physics analyses. For proton-proton collisions, the single-electron trigger efficiency relative to a single-electron offline selection is at least 75% for an offline electron of 31 GeV, and rises to 96% at 60 GeV; the trigger efficiency of a 25GeVleg of the primary diphoton trigger relative to a tight offline photon selection is more than 96% for an offline photon of 30 GeV. For heavy-ion collisions, the primary electron and photon trigger efficiencies relative to the corresponding standard offline selections are at least 84% and 95%, respectively, at 5 GeV above the corresponding trigger threshold.

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