2–7 Sept 2012
Hotel Listel Inawashiro, Inawashiro, Japan
Japan timezone

Status of the ATLAS Pixel Detector at the LHC and its performance after three years of operation.

3 Sept 2012, 10:00
30m
Hotel Listel Inawashiro, Inawashiro, Japan

Hotel Listel Inawashiro, Inawashiro, Japan

Kawageta, Inawashiro, Fukushima 969-2696
ORAL Particle physics applications - High Energy Physics Session1

Speaker

Attilio Andreazza (Università degli Studi e INFN Milano (IT))

Description

The ATLAS Pixel Detector is the innermost detector of the ATLAS experiment at the Large Hadron Collider at CERN, providing high-resolution measurements of charged particle tracks in the high radiation environment close to the collision region. This capability is vital for the identification and measurement of proper decay times of long-lived particles such as b-hadrons, and thus vital for the ATLAS physics program. The detector provides hermetic coverage with three cylindrical layers and three layers of forward and backward pixel detectors. It consists of approximately 80 million pixels that are individually read out via chips bump-bonded to 1744 n-in-n silicon substrates. In this talk, results from the successful operation of the Pixel Detector at the LHC and its status after three years of operation will be presented, including monitoring, calibration procedures, timing optimization and detector performance. The detector performance is excellent: ~96 % of the pixels are operational, noise occupancy and hit efficiency exceed the design specification, and a good alignment allows high quality track resolution.

Primary author

Attilio Andreazza (Università degli Studi e INFN Milano (IT))

Presentation materials