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The ATLAS silicon microstrip tracker. Operation and performance

Published 24 December 2010 Published under licence by IOP Publishing Ltd
, , Citation P Haefner 2010 JINST 5 C12050 DOI 10.1088/1748-0221/5/12/C12050

1748-0221/5/12/C12050

Abstract

In December 2009 the ATLAS experiment at the CERN Large Hadron Collider (LHC) recorded the first proton-proton collisions at a centre-of-mass energy of 900 GeV. This was followed by collisions at the unprecedented energy of 7 TeV in March 2010. The SemiConductor Tracker (SCT) is a precision tracking device in ATLAS made up from silicon microstrip detectors processed in the planar p-in-n technology. The signal from the strips is processed in the front-end ASICs working in binary readout mode. Data is transferred to the off-detector readout electronics via optical fibers. The completed SCT has been installed inside the ATLAS experiment. Since then the detector was operated for two years under realistic conditions. Calibration data has been taken and analysed to determine the performance of the system. In addition, extensive commissioning with cosmic ray events has been performed both with and without magnetic field. The sensor behaviour in magnetic field was studied by measurements of the Lorentz angle. After this commissioning phase it arrived to the first LHC pp collision runs in very good shape: 99% of the SCT strips are operational, noise occupancy and hit efficiency exceed the design specifications, the alignment is already close enough to the ideal one to allow online track reconstruction and invariant mass determination.

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