9–11 Oct 2023
Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)
Europe/Berlin timezone

Data Acquisition System of the PANDA Micro-Vertex Detector

Not scheduled
2h 30m
Gaede Lecture Hall (Bldg 30.22) (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT))

Gaede Lecture Hall (Bldg 30.22)

Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT)

Kaiserstr. 12 76131 Karlsruhe
Poster without speed talk Detector Technologies and Systems Poster session

Speaker

Ms Olena Manzhura

Description

The PANDA (antiProton ANnihilation at DArmstadt) experiment will study the strong interaction in annihilation reactions between an antiproton beam and a stationary cluster jet target. The detector will comprise of different sub-detectors for tracking, particle identification and calorimetry. The Micro-Vertex Detector (MVD) is the innermost part of the tracking system and is designed for precise tracking and detection of secondary vertices. It is equipped with silicon pixel, strip sensors and custom front-end electronics. For the readout of the double-sided silicon strip sensors an ASIC called ToASt (Torino Asic for Strip readout) is being developed in 0.11µm CMOS technology by INFN Turin. The ASIC employs the Time-over-Threshold (ToT) technique for digitization and provides the Time of Arrival (ToA) of the crossing particle with a time resolution given by the clock frequency. To sustain the readout of the double-sided microstrip detector a Module Data Concentrator (MDC) ASIC is under development at KIT. It will multiplex and process the data stream from the ToASt front-end and send it to back-end electronics, so called MVD Multiplexer Board (MMB). Up to 8 ToASt front-end chips of one detector module are controlled and read out by one MDC . The MMB board is under development at KIT, it will collect and process the data coming from several MDC chips and transfer the results via multiple optical links to the computing nodes for global event building. The second prototype of the ToASt ASIC with 64 active channels has been produced by UMC. This ToASt chip has been integrated with the FPGA implementation of the MDC to form the first fully functional detector module. Beam tests have been performed at COSY (Cooler Synchrotron) facility located at Jülich. This contribution focuses on the design of MDC ASIC and MMB board, the integration with the ToASt and sensor and the first preliminary test results.

Speed Talks I am unable/unwilling to give a speedtalk.

Primary authors

Michele Caselle (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology) Ms Olena Manzhura

Co-authors

Andreas Kopmann (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology) Prof. Brinkmann Thomas (JLU Giessen) Daniela Calvo (Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare, Sezione di Torino) Fabio Cossio (INFN Torino) Francesca Lenta (Politecnico di Torino and Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare, Sezione di Torino) Gianni Mazza (Universita e INFN Torino) Hans-Georg Zaunick (JLU Giessen) Prof. Jürgen Becker (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology) Kai Lukas Unger (Karlsruhe Institute of Technology) Lukáš Tomášek (Czech Technical University in Prague) Marvin Peter (JLU Giessen) Nils Tröll (JLU Giessen) Pavel Staněk (Czech Technical University in Prague) Suren Chilingaryan (IPE, KIT) Timo Dritschler (Karlsruhe Institue of Technology) Tobias Stockmanns (Jülich Forschungszentrum) Vladimir Sidorenko

Presentation materials

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