4.4 Article

The GLUEX beamline and detector

出版社

ELSEVIER
DOI: 10.1016/j.nima.2020.164807

关键词

JLab GlueX photoproduction polarization; Solenoid trigger data-acquisition online offline reconstruction

资金

  1. U.S. Department of Energy
  2. U.S. National Science Foundation
  3. Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada (NSERC)
  4. German Research Foundation
  5. Forschungszentrum Julich GmbH
  6. GSI Helmholtzzentrum fur Schwerionenforschung GmbH
  7. Russian Foundation for Basic Research
  8. UK Science and Technology Facilities Council
  9. Chilean Comision Nacional de Investigacion Cientifica y Tecnologica
  10. National Natural Science Foundation of China
  11. China Scholarship Council
  12. U.S. Department of Energy, Office of Science, Office of Nuclear Physics [DE-AC05-06OR23177]
  13. STFC [ST/P004458/1] Funding Source: UKRI

向作者/读者索取更多资源

The GLUEX experiment at Jefferson Lab is designed to study photoproduction reactions with a 9-GeV linearly polarized photon beam. Various detectors and instruments are used for particle trajectory analysis and electron identification, triggering decisions are made within 3.3 microseconds, and the experiment operates at a stable data processing speed and trigger rate.
The GLUEX experiment at Jefferson Lab has been designed to study photoproduction reactions with a 9-GeV linearly polarized photon beam. The energy and arrival time of beam photons are tagged using a scintillator hodoscope and a scintillating fiber array. The photon flux is determined using a pair spectrometer, while the linear polarization of the photon beam is determined using a polarimeter based on triplet photoproduction. Charged-particle tracks from interactions in the central target are analyzed in a solenoidal field using a central straw-tube drift chamber and six packages of planar chambers with cathode strips and drift wires. Electromagnetic showers are reconstructed in a cylindrical scintillating fiber calorimeter inside the magnet and a lead-glass array downstream. Charged particle identification is achieved by measuring energy loss in the wire chambers and using the flight time of particles between the target and detectors outside the magnet. The signals from all detectors are recorded with flash ADCs and/or pipeline TDCs into memories allowing trigger decisions with a latency of 3.3 mu s. The detector operates routinely at trigger rates of 40 kHz and data rates of 600 megabytes per second. We describe the photon beam, the GLUEX detector components, electronics, data-acquisition and monitoring systems, and the performance of the experiment during the first three years of operation.

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