DocumentCode :
3213
Title :
A z -Vertex Trigger for Belle II
Author :
Skambraks, S. ; Abudinen, F. ; Chen, Y. ; Feindt, M. ; Fruhwirth, R. ; Heck, M. ; Kiesling, C. ; Knoll, A. ; Neuhaus, S. ; Paul, S. ; Schieck, J.
Author_Institution :
Phys. Dept., Tech. Univ. Munchen, Garching, Germany
Volume :
62
Issue :
4
fYear :
2015
fDate :
Aug. 2015
Firstpage :
1732
Lastpage :
1740
Abstract :
The Belle II experiment will go into operation at the upgraded SuperKEKB collider in 2016. SuperKEKB is designed to deliver an instantaneous luminosity L = 8 ×1035 cm - 2 s - 1. The experiment will therefore have to cope with a much larger machine background than its predecessor Belle, in particular from events outside of the interaction region. We present the concept of a track trigger, based on a neural network approach, that is able to suppress a large fraction of this background by reconstructing the z (longitudinal) position of the event vertex within the latency of the first level trigger. The trigger uses the hit information from the Central Drift Chamber (CDC) of Belle II within narrow cones in polar and azimuthal angle as well as in transverse momentum (“sectors”), and estimates the z-vertex without explicit track reconstruction. The preprocessing for the track trigger is based on the track information provided by the standard CDC trigger. It takes input from the 2D track finder, adds information from the stereo wires of the CDC, and finds the appropriate sectors in the CDC for each track. Within the sector, the z-vertex is estimated by a specialized neural network, with the drift times from the CDC as input and a continuous output corresponding to the scaled z-vertex. The neural algorithm will be implemented in programmable hardware. To this end a Virtex 7 FPGA board will be used, which provides at present the most promising solution for a fully parallelized implementation of neural networks or alternative multivariate methods. A high speed interface for external memory will be integrated into the platform, to be able to store the O(109) parameters required. The contribution presents the results of our feasibility studies and discusses the details of the envisaged hardware solution.
Keywords :
nuclear electronics; trigger circuits; Belle II experiment; SuperKEKB collider; Virtex 7 FPGA board; central drift chamber; explicit track reconstruction; instantaneous luminosity; neural network approach; programmable hardware; standard CDC trigger; track trigger; z-vertex trigger; Detectors; Hardware; Neural networks; Physics; Three-dimensional displays; Training; Wires; Belle II; CDC; L1; MLP; neural networks; superKEKB; trigger;
fLanguage :
English
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
Publisher :
ieee
ISSN :
0018-9499
Type :
jour
DOI :
10.1109/TNS.2015.2439617
Filename :
7147844
Link To Document :
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