Author/Authors :
Krivda، نويسنده , , M. and Ban، نويسنده , , J. and Burns، نويسنده , , M. and Caselle، نويسنده , , M. and Kluge، نويسنده , , A. and Manzari، نويسنده , , V. and Torcato de Matos، نويسنده , , Jean C. and Morel، نويسنده , , M. and Riedler، نويسنده , , P. and Aglieri Rinella، نويسنده , , George G. S. Sandor، نويسنده , , L. and Stefanini، نويسنده , , G.، نويسنده ,
Abstract :
The ALICE silicon pixel detector (SPD) constitutes the two innermost layers of the ALICE inner tracking system (ALICE Collaboration, 1999) [1]. The SPD is built with 120 detector modules (half-staves) and contains about 10 million pixels in total. The half-staves are connected to the off-detector electronics, housed in a control room 100 m away, via bidirectional optical links. The stream of data from the front-end electronics is processed in 20 VME readout modules, called routers, based on FPGAs. Three 2-channel link-receiver daughter cards, also based on FPGAs, are plugged in each router. Each link-receiver card receives data via the optical link from two half-staves, applies the zero suppression and passes them to the router to be processed and sent to the ALICE–DAQ system through the detector data link (DDL). The SPD control, configuration and data monitoring are performed using the VME interface embedded in the router.