Slow control and data acquisition software interfaces in the Mu2e experiment

14 Jul 2021, 15:45
15m
Track C (Zoom)

Track C

Zoom

talk Particle Detectors Particle Detectors

Speaker

Antonio Gioiosa (Università & INFN Pisa)

Description

The muon campus program at Fermilab includes the Mu2e experiment that will search for a charged-lepton flavor violating processes where a negative muon converts into an electron in the field of an aluminum nucleus, improving by four orders of magnitude the search sensitivity reached so far.
Mu2e’s Trigger and Data Acquisition System (TDAQ) uses {\it otsdaq} as its solution. Developed at Fermilab, {\it otsdaq} uses the {\it artdaq} DAQ framework and {\it art} analysis framework, under-the-hood, for event transfer, filtering, and processing.
{\it otsdaq} is an online DAQ software suite with a focus on flexibility and scalability, while providing a multi-user, web-based, interface accessible through a web browser.
A Detector Control System (DCS) for monitoring, controlling, alarming, and archiving has been developed using the Experimental Physics and Industrial Control System (EPICS) open source Platform. The DCS System has also been integrated into {\it otsdaq}, providing a GUI multi-user, web-based control, and monitoring dashboard.

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Primary authors

Antonio Gioiosa (Università & INFN Pisa) Richard Bonventre (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory) Simone Donati (University of Pisa and Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare) Eric Flumerfelt (Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory) Glenn Horton-Smith (Kansas State University) Luca Morescalchi (INFN - Pisa) Vivian O'Dell Elena Pedreschi (Universita & INFN Pisa (IT)) Gianantonio Pezzullo (Yale University) Franco Spinella (Universita & INFN Pisa (IT)) Lorenzo Uplegger (Fermilab) Ryan Allen Rivera (Fermi National Accelerator Lab. (US))

Presentation materials