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S. Maselli

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DOI: 10.1016/0550-3213(90)90221-x
1990
Cited 135 times
Measurements of the nucleon structure function in the range 0.002 < x < 0.17 and 00.2 < Q2 < 8 GeV2 in deuterium, carbon and calcium
Small angle scattering of 280 GeV positive muons by deuterium, carbon and calcium has been measured at scattering angles down to 2 mrad. The nucleon structure function F2 extracted from deuterium does not show a significant x dependence in the measured range of Q2 and its Q2 dependence is linear in logQ2. For calcium, a depletion of F2 is observed at low x by 30% as compared with the values at x = 0.1 where F2(Ca) and F2 (D) are not significantly different. This depletion is attributed to shadowing. The carbon structure function exhibits a similar, but less pronounced, x dependence. Such behaviour is observed to be independent of Q2. The data are consistent with those obtained from other charged lepton experiments both at similar and higher values of x and Q2 and considerably extend the range of the measurements down to the low values of x to be measured in forthcoming experiments at HERA.
DOI: 10.1007/bf01548808
1987
Cited 81 times
Measurement of hadron azimuthal distributions in deep inelastic muon proton scattering
A study of the distribution of the azimuthal angle ϕ of charged hadrons in deep inelastic μ−p scattering is presented. The dependence of the moments of this distribution on the Feynmanx variable and the momentum transverse to the virtual photon indicates that non-zero moments arise mainly from the effects of the intrinsicK T of the struck quark with <K 2 >>≳(0.44 GeV)2, and to a lesser extent from QCD processes. No significant variation withQ 2 orW 2 is observed.
DOI: 10.1016/0550-3213(89)90261-7
1989
Cited 67 times
Measurements of the u valence quark distribution function in the proton and u quark fragmentation functions
A new determination of the u valence quark distribution function in the proton is obtained from the analysis of identified charged pions, kaons, protons and antiprotons produced in muon-proton and muon-deuteron scattering. The comparison with results obtained in inclusive deep inelastic lepton-nucleon scattering provides a further test of the quark-parton model. The u quark fragmentation functions into positive and negative pions, kaons, protons and antiprotons are also measured.
DOI: 10.1007/bf01570769
1987
Cited 50 times
Comparison of multiplicity distributions to the negative binomial distribution in muon-proton scattering
The multiplicity distributions of charged hadrons produced in the deep inelastic muon-proton scattering at 280 GeV are analysed in various rapidity intervals, as a function of the total hadronic centre of mass energy W ranging from 4–20 GeV. Multiplicity distributions for the backward and forward hemispheres are also analysed separately. The data can be well parameterized by binomial distributions, extending their range of applicability to the case of lepton-proton scattering. The energy and the rapidity dependence of the parameters is presented and a smooth transition from the negative binomial distribution via Poissonian to the ordinary binomial is observed.
DOI: 10.1007/bf01573951
1987
Cited 37 times
Comparison of multiplicity distributions to the negative binomial distribution in muon-proton scattering
The multiplicity distributions of charged hadrons produced in the deep inelastic muon-proton scattering at 280 GeV are analysed in various rapidity intervals, as a function of the total hadronic centre of mass energy W ranging from 4–20 GeV. Multiplicity distributions for the backward and forward hemispheres are also analysed separately. The data can be well parameterized by binomial distributions, extending their range of applicability to the case of lepton-proton scattering. The energy and the rapidity dependence of the parameters is presented and a smooth transition from the negative binomial distribution via Poissonian to the ordinary binomial is observed.
DOI: 10.1016/j.nima.2023.168103
2023
The Analytical Method algorithm for trigger primitives generation at the LHC Drift Tubes detector
The Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) experiment prepares its Phase-2 upgrade for the high-luminosity era of the LHC operation (HL-LHC). Due to the increase of occupancy, trigger latency and rates, the full electronics of the CMS Drift Tube (DT) chambers will need to be replaced. In the new design, the time bin for the digitization of the chamber signals will be of around 1 ns, and the totality of the signals will be forwarded asynchronously to the service cavern at full resolution. The new backend system will be in charge of building the trigger primitives of each chamber. These trigger primitives contain the information at chamber level about the muon candidates position, direction, and collision time, and are used as input in the L1 CMS trigger. The added functionalities will improve the robustness of the system against ageing. An algorithm based on analytical solutions for reconstructing the DT trigger primitives, called Analytical Method, has been implemented both as a software C++ emulator and in firmware. Its performance has been estimated using the software emulator with simulated and real data samples, and through hardware implementation tests. Measured efficiencies are 96 to 98% for all qualities and time and spatial resolutions are close to the ultimate performance of the DT chambers. A prototype chain of the HL-LHC electronics using the Analytical Method for trigger primitive generation has been installed during Long Shutdown 2 of the LHC and operated in CMS cosmic data taking campaigns in 2020 and 2021. Results from this validation step, the so-called Slice Test, are presented.
DOI: 10.1016/j.nima.2004.06.169
2004
Cited 27 times
Bunched beam test of the CMS drift tubes local muon trigger
The 40 MHz bunched muon beam set up at CERN was used in May 2003 to make a full test of the drift tubes local muon trigger. The main goal of the test was to prove that the integration of the various devices located on a muon chamber was adequately done both on the hardware and software side of the system. Furthermore the test provided complete information about the general performance of the trigger algorithms in terms of efficiency and noise. Data were collected with the default configuration of the trigger devices and with several alternative configurations at various angles of incidence of the beam. Tests on noise suppression and di-muon trigger capability were performed.
DOI: 10.1007/bf01441344
1986
Cited 25 times
The Bose-Einstein correlations in deep inelastic ?p interactions at 280 GeV
The Bose-Einstein correlation has been observed for pions in deep inelastic μp interactions at 280 GeV. The importance of non-interference correlations in the sample of like charge pion pairs and in the sample used for reference is discussed. The pion emission region is found to be roughly spherical in the pair rest frame with a radius of 0.46–0.84 fm and the chaos factor λ is 0.60–1.08.
DOI: 10.1007/bf01559586
1986
Cited 21 times
Investigation of theW andQ 2 dependence of charged pion distributions inμ p scattering
TheW andQ 2 dependence of the fragmentation functions and of the average multiplicity of charged pions is investigated, using data from the NA9 experiment at the CERN SPS on muon-proton scattering at 280 GeV. A significant increase of pion production with increasingW is observed at fixedQ 2, leading to a rise of the average charged pion multiplicity, linear in lnW 2, and of the pion fragmentation function in the central region, i.e. at small |x F |. This increase can be understood from the kinematic widening of the cms rapidity range proportional to lnW 2 and the observedW independent height of the rapidity distribution. At fixedW, a rise of the average charged pion multiplicity withQ 2 is observed. This rise appears to be weaker than that observed for all charged hadrons implying a stronger rise withQ 2 for kaons and protons.
DOI: 10.1007/bf01411133
1986
Cited 20 times
? 0 and? production in deep inelastic ?-p interactions at 280 GeV/c
Inclusive distributions of ρ0 and ω mesons have been measured in deep inelastic μ-p interactions at 280 GeV/c. A comparison of the ρ0 cross sections with other leptoproduction experiments is presented. The ω results represent the first observation of this inclusive channel in high energy leptoproduction. The ρ0 and ω yields are found to be equal as may be expected from the available density of states in isospin space. This contrasts with spin angular momentum where the vector to pseudoscalar meson ratio is suppressed relative to the available number of spin states.
DOI: 10.1016/s0168-9002(01)01227-x
2002
Cited 18 times
Construction and test of the final CMS Barrel Drift Tube Muon Chamber prototype
A prototype of the CMS Barrel Muon Detector incorporating all the features of the final chambers was built using the mass production assembly procedures and tools. The performance of this prototype was studied in a muon test beam at CERN and the results obtained are presented in this paper.
DOI: 10.1007/bf01596893
1987
Cited 16 times
Comparison between hadronic final states produced in μp ande + e − interactions
A comparison is made between the properties of the final state hadrons produced in 280 GeV μp interactions and ine + e − annihilation. The Lund model of hadroproduction is used as an aid in understanding the differences observed. The hadron distributions from μp ande + e − interactions are consistent with the quark parton model assumption of environmental independence, provided that the differences in heavy quark production and hard QCD effects in the two processes are taken into account. A comparison with aK + p experiment is also made. Values are also determined for the Lund model parameters σq = 0.410 ± 0.002 ± 0.020 GeV and σ′ = 0.29 −0.15 −0.13 +0.09+0.10 GeV, controlling the transverse momenta in fragmentation and intrinsic transverse momenta of the struck quark respectively.
DOI: 10.1016/j.nima.2004.01.080
2004
Cited 13 times
Test beam analysis of the first CMS drift tube muon chamber
In October 2001 the first produced CMS Barrel Drift Tube (DT) Muon Chamber was tested at the CERN Gamma Irradiation Facility (GIF) using a muon beam. A Resistive Plate Chamber (RPC) was attached to the top of the DT chamber, and, for the first time, both detectors were operated coupled together. The performance of the DT chamber was studied for several operating conditions, and for gamma rates similar to the ones expected at LHC. In this paper we present the data analysis; the results are considered fully satisfactory.
DOI: 10.1007/bf01588029
1986
Cited 13 times
Charge and transverse momentum correlations in deep inelastic muon-proton scattering
Correlations between charged hadrons are investigated in a 280 GeV muon-proton scattering experiment. Although most of the observed particles are decay products it is shown that the correlations found originate in the fragmentation process and are not due simply to resonance production. Correlations are demonstrated between hadrons close in rapidity with respect to their charges and to the directions of their momentum components perpendicular to the virtual photon axis. Such short range correlations are predicted by the standard hadronization models.
DOI: 10.1016/0370-2693(85)90724-5
1985
Cited 12 times
Hadron multiplicity variation with Q2 and scale breaking of the Hadron distributions in deep inelastic muon-proton scattering
Measurements are presented of the variation with Q2 (scaling violation) of the hadron multiplicity in deep inelastic muon-proton scattering. An increase in the average multiplicity of both the charged hadrons and K0 mesons is observed with increasing Q2 or xBj for fixed centre-of-mass energy W. The study of the shape of the effective fragmentation function Dh (z, W, Q2) shows that the increase of the particle yield with Q2 takes place for low z particles. The variation of the hadron distributions with Q2 is also studied in the current fragmentation region where a decrease in multiplicity is observed. Such effects are expected from QCD.
DOI: 10.1016/j.nima.2007.06.007
2007
Cited 8 times
Results of the first integration test of the CMS drift tubes muon trigger
Two drift tubes (DTs) chambers of the CMS muon barrel system were exposed to a 40 MHz bunched muon beam at the CERN SPS, and for the first time the whole CMS Level-1 DTs-based trigger system chain was tested. Data at different energies and inclination angles of the incident muon beam were collected, as well as data with and without an iron absorber placed between the two chambers, to simulate the electromagnetic shower development in CMS. Special data-taking runs were dedicated to test for the first time the Track Finder system, which reconstructs track trigger candidates by performing a proper matching of the muon segments delivered by the two chambers. The present paper describes the results of these measurements.
DOI: 10.1007/bf01561048
1987
Cited 10 times
Charm production in deep inelastic muon-iron interactions at 200 GeV/c
Dimuon and trimuon events have been studied in deep inelastic muon scattering on an iron target at an incident muon energy of 200 GeV. The events are shown to originate mainly from charm production. Comparison of the measured cross sections with data taken at higher muon energies shows that charm production originates predominantly from transverse virtual photons. Within the framework of the photon gluon fusion model this indicates that the parity of the gluon is odd.
DOI: 10.1016/0550-3213(86)90506-7
1986
Cited 9 times
Inclusive production of the Δ(1232) resonance in muon-proton scattering at 280 GEV/c
Inclusive production of the Δ (1232) resonance has been measured in 280 GeV/c muon-proton interactions. The production of the Δ++ as a function of the variables χBJ, W, Q2, χF and pT2 is investigated. The average Δ++ multiplicity is found to be smaller, by a factor of 6.2 ± 1.2, than the average multiplicity of protons. An upper limit for Δ0 production is obtained. The net hadronic charge distribution for events with a Δ++ is presented. The results are compared to the predictions of the Lund and Fire string models.
DOI: 10.1007/bf01630590
1987
Cited 9 times
Jet production and fragmentation properties in deep inelastic muon scattering
Results are presented from a study of deep inelastic 280 GeV muon-nucleon interactions on the transverse momenta and jet properties of the final state hadrons. The results are analysed in a way which attempts to separate the contributions of hard and soft QCD effects from those that arise from the fragmentation process. The fragmentation models with which the data are compared are the Lund string model, the independent jet model, the QCD parton shower model including soft gluon interference effects, and the firestring model. The discrimination between these models is discussed. Various methods of analysis of the data in terms of hard QCD processes are presented. From a study of the properties of the jet profiles a value of α s , to leading order, is determined using the Lund string model, namely α s =0.29±0.01 (stat.) ±0.02 (syst.), forQ 2∼20 GeV2.
DOI: 10.1088/1748-0221/4/05/p05002
2009
Cited 4 times
Offline calibration procedure of the CMS Drift Tube detectors
The barrel region of the Compact Muon Solenoid (CMS) experiment at the Large Hadron Collider is instrumented with Drift Tube (DT) detectors. This paper describes in full details the calibration of the DT hit reconstruction algorithm. After inter-channel synchronization has been verified through the appropriate hardware procedure, the time pedestals are extracted directly from the distribution of the recorded times. Further corrections for time-of-flight and time of signal propagation are applied as soon as the three-dimensional hit position within the DT chamber is known. The different effects of the time pedestal miscalibration on the two main hit reconstruction algorithms are shown. The drift velocity calibration algorithm is based on the meantimer technique. Different meantimer relations for different track angles and patterns of hit cells are used. This algorithm can also be used to determine the uncertainty on the reconstructed hit position.
DOI: 10.1088/1748-0221/14/12/c12010
2019
Cited 3 times
Study of the effects of radiation on the CMS Drift Tubes Muon Detector for the HL-LHC
The CMS drift tubes (DT) muon detector, built for withstanding the LHC expected integrated and instantaneous luminosities, will be used also in the High Luminosity LHC (HL-LHC) at a 5 times larger instantaneous luminosity and, consequently, much higher levels of radiation, reaching about 10 times the LHC integrated luminosity. Initial irradiation tests of a spare DT chamber at the CERN gamma irradiation facility (GIF++), at large (∼ O(100)) acceleration factor, showed ageing effects resulting in a degradation of the DT cell performance. However, full CMS simulations have shown almost no impact in the muon reconstruction efficiency over the full barrel acceptance and for the full integrated luminosity. A second spare DT chamber was moved inside the GIF++ bunker in October 2017. The chamber was being irradiated at lower acceleration factors, and only 2 out of the 12 layers of the chamber were switched at working voltage when the radioactive source was active, being the other layers in standby. In this way the other non-aged layers are used as reference and as a precise and unbiased telescope of muon tracks for the efficiency computation of the aged layers of the chamber, when set at working voltage for measurements. An integrated dose equivalent to two times the expected integrated luminosity of the HL-LHC run has been absorbed by this second spare DT chamber and the final impact on the muon reconstruction efficiency is under study. Direct inspection of some extracted aged anode wires presented a melted resistive deposition of materials. Investigation on the outgassing of cell materials and of the gas components used at the GIF++ are underway. Strategies to mitigate the ageing effects are also being developed. From the long irradiation measurements of the second spare DT chamber, the effects of radiation in the performance of the DTs expected during the HL-LHC run will be presented.
DOI: 10.1016/s0168-9002(98)00681-0
1998
Cited 8 times
Study of magnetic field effects in drift tubes for the barrel muon chambers of the CMS detector at the LHC
The drift chambers in the barrel region of the CMS detector are exposed to magnetic stray fields. To study the performance of the muon reconstruction and the drift time-based muon trigger, prototypes were tested under the expected magnetic field conditions at the H2 test facility at CERN. The results indicate that the overall chamber performance will not be affected. Only the bunch crossing identification capability in the small region near η=1.1, corresponding to the border of the solid angle region covered by the barrel, will be weakened.
DOI: 10.1007/bf01596894
1987
Cited 5 times
Proton and antiproton production in deep inelastic muon-nucleon scattering at 280 GeV
New results on proton and antiproton production in the target and current fragmentation regions of high energy muon-nucleon scattering are presented. Proton and antiproton production is investigated as a function of Feynmanx and rapidity. No significant difference is observed between production on hydrogen and deuterium targets. Correlations betweenpp, $$p\bar p$$ and $$\bar p\bar p$$ pairs are analysed and the results are compared with the predictions of the Lund fragmentation model.
DOI: 10.1088/1748-0221/9/02/c02020
2014
The CUOF optical link for the electronic system upgrade of the CMS Muon DT
The upgrade of the acquisition for the muon Drift Tube foresees the relocation of the Sector Collector electronics, from the cavern towards the counting room. The project requires an electrical to optical conversion by the Copper to Optical Fibre (CUOF) board, developed and tested in a radiation environment for components qualification. More tests were performed inserting the prototype in the actual acquisition system, with such a good result that a substantial production is in progress. The installation for a large number of channels is planned for the 2013 autumn, with the new system that will be active beside the actual one.
DOI: 10.1007/bf01548849
1988
Cited 4 times
Charge structure of the hadronic final state in deep-inelastic muon-nucleon scattering
The general charge properties of the hadronic final state produced inμ + p andμ + d interactions at 280 GeV are investigated. Quark charge retention and local charge compensation is observed. The ratioF 2 /F 2 of the neutron to proton structure function is derived from the measurement of the average hadronic charge in μd interactions.
DOI: 10.1016/j.nima.2008.08.100
2009
The CMS muon barrel drift tubes system commissioning
The CMS muon barrel drift tubes system has been recently fully installed and commissioned in the experiment. The performance and the current status of the detector are briefly presented and discussed.
DOI: 10.1016/0168-9002(94)91436-2
1994
Cited 4 times
Testing and installation of ZEUS Leading Proton Spectrometer detector planes
Abstract The assembly and testing of the components which make up a detector plane for the Leading Proton Spectrometer is described. The spectrometer, a part of the ZEUS detector, utilizes single-sided DC-coupled silicon strip detectors and custom VLSI front-end electronics for readout.
DOI: 10.22323/1.343.0035
2019
Electronics Developments for Phase-2 Upgrade of CMS Drift Tubes
The Electronics for the Drift Tube Chambers (DT) of CMS will be significantly upgraded during the LHC Long Shutdown 3 (LS3).DTs are responsible for the tracking and triggering of muons in the central region of CMS.As a consequence of the higher L1A rate set by HL-LHC, the new CMS Trigger requirements will exceed the present capabilities of the DT on-detector electronics (so called MiniCrate, MiC).For this reason, having also in mind easier electronics maintainability and chamber aging mitigation arguments, DTs will replace all their MiCs during LS3.The phase-2 on detector electronics for DT will consist of a single type of board called OBDT (On Board electronics for Drift Tubes).A full description of the OBDT will be given along with the status of the prototype production and validation tests on the firmware.
DOI: 10.1016/j.radphyschem.2020.108747
2020
Irradiation aging of the CMS Drift Tube muon detector
During the High Luminosity LHC, the Drift Tube chambers installed in the CMS detector need to operate with an integrated dose ten times higher than expected at the LHC due to the increase in integrated luminosity from 300 fb-1 to 3000 fb-1. Irradiations have been performed to assess the performance of the detector under such conditions and to characterize the radiation aging of the detector. The presented analysis focuses on the behaviour of the high voltage currents and the dose measurements needed to extrapolate the results to High Luminosity conditions, using data from the photon irradiation campaign at GIF++ in 2016 as well as the efficiency analysis from the irradiation campaign started in 2017. Although the single-wire loss of high voltage gain observed of 70% is very high, the muon reconstruction efficiency is expected to decrease less than 20% during the full duration of High Luminosity LHC in the areas under highest irradiation.
DOI: 10.1088/1748-0221/8/02/c02029
2013
CuOF: an electrical to optical interface for the upgrade of the CMS muon Drift Tubes system
The upgrade of the Drift Tube system of the CMS experiment foresee the relocation of the electronics actually sitting on the racks beside the magnet from the cavern to the counting room. It is thus required to convert the signals from electrical to optical, for a total number of 3500 channels that run at up to 480 Mb/s. A Copper to Optical Fiber board is currently under design. The board is divided into a mother board, which hosts the slow control system based on Field Programmable Gate Array, and four mezzanine cards, each with 8 conversion channels. A prototype of the mezzanine board has been designed and tested under irradiation.
DOI: 10.1088/1742-6596/219/3/032051
2010
Calibration of the barrel muon drift tubes system in CMS
In this report, results on the calibration process of the Drift Tubes (DT) system of the Compact Muon Solenoid experiment are presented. The full commissioning of the calibration procedure has been deployed in year 2008 with the CMS Computing, Software and Analysis challenge (CSA08), which has tested the full work-flow needed for CMS data-taking during the LHC start-up operations. In autumn 2008, the same Calibration work-flow was applied to a high statistics cosmic ray muon data taking period: the Cosmic Run At Four Tesla (CRAFT) period. The accurate measurement of the main calibration conditions corresponding to the Time Pedestals and the Drift Velocity provide the necessary space-time relationship used in the first stage of the muon local reconstruction.
DOI: 10.1016/s0920-5632(97)00095-9
1997
Small angle spectrometer for very forward physics at LHC
The possibility to study elastic and diffractive physics in pp collisions is investigated at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN. For this purpose we consider detectors close to the beam in conjunction with the magnetic elements of the accelerator to provide a high precision spectrometer for very forward final state protons.
DOI: 10.1016/s0168-9002(96)01199-0
1997
Erratum to “Design, testing and performance of the frontend electronics for the LPS silicon microstrip detectors” [Nucl. Instr. and Meth. A 364 (1995) 507–515]
DOI: 10.1109/nss/mic42101.2019.9059698
2019
Study of the Effects of Radiation at the CERN Gamma Irradiation Facility on the CMS Drift Tube Muon Detector for HL-LHC
To sustain and extend its discovery potential, the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) will undergo a major upgrade in the coming years, referred to as High Luminosity LHC (HLLHC), aimed to increase its instantaneous luminosity, 5 times larger than the designed limit, and, consequently leading to high levels of radiation, with the goal to collect 10 times larger the original designed integrated luminosity. The drift tube chambers (DT) of CMS muon detector system is built to proficiently measure and trigger on muons in the harsh radiation environment expected during the HL-LHC era. Ageing studies are performed at the CERNs gamma ray irradiation facility (GIF++) by measuring the muon hit efficiency of these detectors at various LHC operation conditions. One such irradiation campaign was started in October 2017, when a spare MB2 chamber moved inside the bunker and irradiated at lower acceleration factors. Two out of twelve layers of the DT chamber were operated while being irradiated with the radioactive source and then their muon hit efficiency was calculated in coincidence with other ten layers which were kept on the standby. The chamber absorbed an integrated dose equivalent to two times the expected integrated luminosity of the HL-LHC. Investigation on the outgassing of cell materials and of the gas components used at the GIF++ are underway and strategies to mitigate the aging effects are also being developed. The effect of radiation on the performance of DT chamber and its impact on the overall muon reconstruction efficiency expected during the HL-LHC are presented.
2005
La produzione di farmaci sperimentali
DOI: 10.1142/s0217751x98001864
1998
A SPECTROMETER TO STUDY ELASTIC AND DIFFRACTIVE PHYSICS AT LHC
The possibility to study elastic and diffractive physics in pp collisions at LHC is discussed. For this purpose we have considered detectors close to the beam in conjunction with the magnetic elements of the accelerator to provide a high precision spectrometer for very forward final state protons. The geometrical acceptance is given and the momentum resolution is calculated for different spatial resolution detectors.
1986
Investigation of the W-dependence and Q2-dependence of Charged Pion Distributions In Mu-rho-scattering
1986
Rho-0 and Omega-production In Deep Inelastic Mu-p Interactions At 280 Gev/c