Commissioning of the CMS experiment and the cosmic run at four tesla

Journal of Instrumentation 5:3 (2010)

Authors:

S Chatrchyan, V Khachatryan, AM Sirunyan, W Adam, B Arnold, H Bergauer, T Bergauer, M Dragicevic, M Eichberger, J Erö, M Friedl, R Frühwirth, VM Ghete, J Hammer, S Hansel, M Hoch, N Hörmann, J Hrubec, M Jeitler, G Kasieczka, K Kastner, M Krammer, D Liko, I De Magrans Abril, I Mikulec, F Mittermayr, B Neuherz, M Oberegger, M Padrta, M Pernicka, H Rohringer, S Schmid, R Schöfbeck, T Schreiner, R Stark, H Steininger, J Strauss, A Taurok, F Teischinger, T Themel, D Uhl, P Wagner, W Waltenberger, G Walzel, E Widl, CE Wulz, V Chekhovsky, O Dvornikov, I Emeliantchik, A Litomin, V Makarenko, I Marfin, V Mossolov, N Shumeiko, A Solin, R Stefanovitch, J Suarez Gonzalez, A Tikhonov, A Fedorov, A Karneyeu, M Korzhik, V Panov, R Zuyeuski, P Kuchinsky, W Beaumont, L Benucci, M Cardaci, EA De Wolf, E Delmeire, D Druzhkin, M Hashemi, X Janssen, T Maes, L Mucibello, S Ochesanu, R Rougny, M Selvaggi, H Van Haevermaet, P Van Mechelen, N Van Remortel, V Adler, S Beauceron, S Blyweert, J D'Hondt, S De Weirdt, O Devroede, J Heyninck, A Kalogeropoulos, J Maes, M Maes, MU Mozer, S Tavernier, W Van Doninck, P Van Mulders, I Villella, O Bouhali, EC Chabert, O Charaf, B Clerbaux, G De Lentdecker

Abstract:

The CMS Collaboration conducted a month-long data-taking exercise known as the Cosmic Run At Four Tesla in late 2008 in order to complete the commissioning of the experiment for extended operation. The operational lessons resulting from this exercise were addressed in the subsequent shutdown to better prepare CMS for LHC beams in 2009. The cosmic data collected have been invaluable to study the performance of the detectors, to commission the alignment and calibration techniques, and to make several cosmic ray measurements. The experimental setup, conditions, and principal achievements from this data-taking exercise are described along with a review of the preceding integration activities. © 2010 IOP Publishing Ltd and SISSA.

Commissioning of the CMS High-Level Trigger with cosmic rays

Journal of Instrumentation 5:3 (2010)

Authors:

S Chatrchyan, V Khachatryan, AM Sirunyan, W Adam, B Arnold, H Bergauer, T Bergauer, M Dragicevic, M Eichberger, J Erö, M Friedl, R Frühwirth, VM Ghete, J Hammer, S Hansel, M Hoch, N Hörmann, J Hrubec, M Jeitler, G Kasieczka, K Kastner, M Krammer, D Liko, I De Magrans Abril, I Mikulec, F Mittermayr, B Neuherz, M Oberegger, M Padrta, M Pernicka, H Rohringer, S Schmid, R Schöfbeck, T Schreiner, R Stark, H Steininger, J Strauss, A Taurok, F Teischinger, T Themel, D Uhl, P Wagner, W Waltenberger, G Walzel, E Widl, CE Wulz, V Chekhovsky, O Dvornikov, I Emeliantchik, A Litomin, V Makarenko, I Marfin, V Mossolov, N Shumeiko, A Solin, R Stefanovitch, J Suarez Gonzalez, A Tikhonov, A Fedorov, A Karneyeu, M Korzhik, V Panov, R Zuyeuski, P Kuchinsky, W Beaumont, L Benucci, M Cardaci, EA De Wolf, E Delmeire, D Druzhkin, M Hashemi, X Janssen, T Maes, L Mucibello, S Ochesanu, R Rougny, M Selvaggi, H Van Haevermaet, P Van Mechelen, N Van Remortel, V Adler, S Beauceron, S Blyweert, J D'Hondt, S De Weirdt, O Devroede, J Heyninck, A Kalogeropoulos, J Maes, M Maes, MU Mozer, S Tavernier, W Van Doninck, P Van Mulders, I Villella, O Bouhali, EC Chabert, O Charaf, B Clerbaux, G De Lentdecker

Abstract:

The CMS High-Level Trigger (HLT) is responsible for ensuring that data samples with potentially interesting events are recorded with high efficiency and good quality. This paper gives an overview of the HLT and focuses on its commissioning using cosmic rays. The selection of triggers that were deployed is presented and the online grouping of triggered events into streams and primary datasets is discussed. Tools for online and offline data quality monitoring for the HLT are described, and the operational performance of the muon HLT algorithms is reviewed. The average time taken for the HLT selection and its dependence on detector and operating conditions are presented. The HLT performed reliably and helped provide a large dataset. This dataset has proven to be invaluable for understanding the performance of the trigger and the CMS experiment as a whole. © 2010 IOP Publishing Ltd and SISSA.

Constraints on star-forming galaxies at z ≥ 6.5 from HAWK-I Y-band imaging of GOODS-South

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 404:1 (2010) 212-223

Authors:

S Hickey, A Bunker, MJ Jarvis, K Chiu, D Bonfield

Abstract:

We present the results of our search for high-redshift Lyman-break galaxies over the GOODS-South field. We use Hubble Space Telescope (HST)-ACS data in B, V, i′ & z′, Very Large Telescope (VLT)-ISAAC J and Ks, Spitzer-Infrared Array Camera (IRAC) 3.6, 4.5, 5.8 and 8.0 μm data in conjunction with the new HAWK-I Y-band science verification data to search for dropout galaxies in the redshift range 6 < z < 9. We survey ≈119 arcmin2 to YAB = 25.7 (5σ), of which 37.5 arcmin2 reaches YAB = 25.9. Candidate z′ and Y dropouts were selected on the basis of a colour cut of (Y - J)AB > 0.75 mag and (z′ - Y)AB > 1.0 mag, respectively. We find no robust Y-drops (z ≈ 9) brighter than JAB < 25.4. In our search for z′-band dropouts (z ≈ 6.5-7.5), we identify four possible candidates, two with z′-drop colours and clear Spitzer-IRAC detections and two less likely candidates. We also identify two previously known Galactic T-dwarf stellar contaminants with these colours, and two likely transient objects seen in the Y-band data. The implications if all or none of our candidates is real on the ultraviolet galaxy luminosity functions at z > 6.5 are explored. We find our number of z′-drop candidates to be insufficient based on the expected number of z′ drops in a simple no-evolution scenario from the z = 3 Lyman-break galaxy luminosity function but we are consistent with the observed luminosity function at z ≈ 6 (if all our candidates are real). However, if one or both of our best z′-drop candidates are not z > 6.5 galaxies, this would demand evolution of the luminosity function at early epochs, in the sense that the number density of ultraviolet luminous star- forming galaxies at z > 7 is less than at z ~ 6. We show that the future surveys to be conducted with the European Southern Observatory VISTA telescope over the next 5 yr will be able to measure the bulk of the luminosity function for both z′ and Y dropouts and thus provide the strongest constraints on the level of star-formation within the epoch of reionization. © 2010 The Authors. Journal compilation. © 2010 RAS.

EVN e-VLBI observations of galactic transients

Proceedings of Science 112 (2010)

Authors:

V Tudose, R Fender, Z Paragi, M Garrett, A Rushton, R Spencer, J Miller-Jones

Abstract:

E-VLBI (electronic very long baseline interferometry) is a new implementation of the VLBI technique consisting in transferring the data from the radio telescopes to the correlator over the internet and correlating them in real-time. Time-wise this is a major improvement over the traditional method. e-VLBI is thus offering new opportunities for radio transient studies. Its capability of rapid response enables a more efficient decision making process with respect to potential followup observations. The rapid feedback time also permits to quickly modify the observing strategy to best track the development of the transient phenomena. The results summarized here have been obtained with the EVN (European VLBI Network) in the past few years within a transient ToO programme. The targets were XRBs (X-ray binaries) undergoing periods of enhanced activity (outbursts). The EVN observations were performed at 5 GHz and were often complemented by quasi-simultaneous (within one day) data at other wavelengths (X-ray and optical). The findings reveal a complex behaviour of the accretion/ejection phenomena in the systems investigated and offer insights into the extreme physics close to a compact object.

Evidence of different star formation histories for high- and low-luminosity radio galaxies

Monthly Notices of the Royal Astronomical Society 406:3 (2010) 1841-1847

Authors:

PD Herbert, MJ Jarvis, CJ Willott, RJ McLure, E Mitchell, S Rawlings, GJ Hill, JS Dunlop

Abstract:

We present the results of our investigation into the stellar populations of 24 radio galaxies at z ≃ 0.5 drawn from four complete, low-frequency-selected radio surveys. We use the strength of the 4000-Å break as an indicator of recent star formation and compare this with radio luminosity, optical spectral classification and morphological classification. We find evidence of different star formation histories for high- and low-luminosity radio sources; our group of low radio luminosity sources (typically Fanaroff-Riley type I sources) has systematically older stellar populations than the higher radio luminosity group. Our sample is also fairly well divided by optical spectral classification. We find that galaxies classified as having low excitation spectra (LEGs) possess older stellar populations than high excitation line objects (HEGs), with the HEGs showing evidence for recent star formation. We also investigate the link between radio morphology, as used by Owen and Laing, and the stellar populations. We find that there is a preference for the 'fat-double' sources to have older stellar populations than the 'classical double' sources, although this is also linked to these sources lying predominantly in the LEG and HEG categories, respectively. These results are consistent with the hypothesis that HEGs are powered by accretion of cold gas, which could be supplied, for example, by recent mergers, secular instabilities or filamentary cold flows. These processes could also trigger star formation in the host galaxy. The host galaxies of the LEGs do not show evidence for recent star formation and an influx of cold gas and are consistent with being powered by the accretion of the hot phase of the interstellar medium. © 2010 The Authors. Journal compilation © 2010 RAS.