Photon Flux Measurement for PrimEx Using TDC Sampling



February 10, 2003


D. Lawrence, University of Massachusetts





Table of Contents

Introduction 2

Measuring Photon Flux Using Scalers 2

Initial Rate Calculation 3

Extracting Rates from TDCs 3

Trigger Supervisor Scalers 5

Total Detector Hits During Livetime 6

Corrections 6

LIFO Correction 7

TDC Deadtime Correction 8

Detector Efficiency 9

10

Error Estimates 10

Error Due to LIFO Correction 10

Error Due to TDC Deadtime Correction 12

Error Due to Beam Current Oscillation 13

Error Due to Beam Current Drift 14

Summary 15

Derivation of equation 4. 17







Introduction

The main contribution to the error bar in the PrimEx measurement of the decay width comes from measurement of the photon flux. This is quoted in the error budget1 of the proposal as 1%. This document outlines a TDC sampling method for measuring the flux and estimates the associated errors.


The photon flux referred to here is a measurement of the number of tagged photons incident on the physics target. For most experiments, including PrimEx, these photons are produced at a rate far greater than is practical for measuring all of them directly through a data acquisition system(DAQ). It would be possible, however, to measure them all via hardware scalers (excluding a small fraction lost due to deadtime). See the following section for a discussion on how using scalers compares to the TDC sampling method.


The photon flux can be calculated by sampling the number of tagged photons for a small fraction of the time and estimating the rate at which tagged photons occur. This can then be used to extrapolate to all time in order to determine the total number of tagged photons represented by a given data sample.


There are some limitations of this method due to limitations in the DAQ system itself. These limitations are known and can be corrected for. The corrections themselves, however, introduce additional errors which can be non-trivial.


Measuring Photon Flux Using Scalers


A more traditional method used to measure normalization is to count the number of hits in a particular detector using scalers. Scalers have the advantage of being able to count virtually2 all hits from a detector. The counts can be corrected for the livetime using the ratio of a gated scaler to a free running scaler. Providing these scalers count signals from a beam related source, this method automatically accounts for beam trips as well.

The problem with using scalers basically boils down to this: To calculate the cross section, we need to know the fraction of tagged photons which produced a pi0 at a particular energy and angle. The key point being that “tagged photons” in the numerator must be identified using the same criteria as those in the denominator. If we discard events in the numerator in which a photon cannot be fully reconstructed3, we must discard the same type of events in the flux calculation. The only way to guarantee that this is the case is to apply the same software cuts to the “normalization” photons as are being applied to the “signal” ones.



Initial Rate Calculation


Extracting Rates from TDCs

The rate at which a detector fires can be determined via TDC information. The TDC's currently installed in the photon tagger are LRS1877 types. These are multi-hit TDCs with the capability of storing up to 16 hits per channel with a maximum range of 32 usec4. The idea is simply to count the number of hits in a particular channel and divde by the size of the time window. The initial or raw rate can be calculated from equation 1. Several correction factors (described in the following sections) will need to be applied in order to obtain the rate the detector actually fired at. Since even high rate detectors will tend to have only a few hits per event on average, it is necessary to integrate over many events to obtain an accurate value for the rate.


(1)

where:


Figure 2 shows an example of a raw TDC spectrum for a single T-counter in the tagger. This data is from a high intensity run (100 nA) during the PrimEx beam test in August 2002. One obvious effect is how the number of hits trail off to the right side of the spectrum due to the LIFO limit. Since the LRS1877 is used as a common stop TDC, earlier times are to the right and later times to the left in this plot. The LRS1877 will always report the latest hits. Thus, when the LIFO fills up, the earlier hits are overwritten by the later ones. Correcting for this effect is discussed later in the section on LIFO correction.

An important thing to keep in mind when counting hits is to discard hits that could be associated with the trigger. Hits which are correlated with the trigger are biased and will artificially increase the calculated rate. An “Out-Of-Time” window (OOT) should be defined which can include areas both before and after the trigger peak(s)5. Additionally, events which contain a hit in the trigger area of the TDC spectrum or before the lower edge of the OOT should be discarded from the rate calculation. This is because these hits each use one buffer in the LIFO which would mean the LIFO correction should be based on a smaller LIFO size for these events than for others.



Figure 1 TDC spectrum for T-counter 3. Units are in TDC counts. The spike near TDC=600 is due to hits correlated with the trigger. The drop-off at larger TDC values (earlier times) is due to the LIFO limit.



Trigger Supervisor Scalers

PrimEx will use a second generation of the Jlab designed Trigger Supervisor module (TS). This is a VXI module desgined specifically to optimize events rates for Fastbus and VME based DAQ systems like those commonly used in medium and high energy physics experiments. One new feature in the second generation model is the inclusion of two scalers dedicated to measuring the livetime. Both scalers are driven by a 200kHz internal clock. One, however, is livetime gated while the other is free running. The ratio of the two will give the livetime. One consequence of their being driven by a clock rather than a beam related device is that beam trips must be excluded through a software mechanism during replay. Determining trips is outside the scope of this document so it is assumed they have been effectively removed for the purposes of this discussion.

Ultimately, one is really only interested in the final number of hits a detector saw during the livetime of the data sample. This can be obtained using only the live-time-gated scaler to calculate the actual livetime as is shown in Equation 2. Note that the free running scaler is not needed.


(2)

where:


It is neccesary that the clock be very very stable with a constant frequency. The absolute frequency itself is not important as will be shown in the next section.


Total Detector Hits During Livetime

The total number of hits a detector sees during the livetime of the data sample is given by Equation 3.


(3)


All terms in Equation 3 are simply counted with the exception of the ratio. This ratio represents the factor for converting the TS's internal clock period into TDC counts. This ratio can be determined from specifications for the hardware involved. It can also be explicitly measured using a trival setup with an external pulser. The error on the ratio will be negligibly small. In fact, onlywill contribute any significant error to.


Corrections


The number of hits seen by the mutli-hit TDCs for a given channel will be systematically undermeasured due to multiple conditions existing in the DAQ system and detectors themselves. This section describes those conditions and how the rates measured via Equation 1 can be corrected. The TDC related corrections are based on the rate at which a detector fires. Since the total number of hits scales with the rate, the correction factors derived for the rates can also be applied directly to the number of hits.


LIFO Correction


The LRS1877 Fastbus TDC has a programmable LIFO of up to 16 hits per event per channel. If a channel gets more hits in a single event than the LIFO can hold, the oldest hits are replaced with the newest ones. This means that the number of hits in a given channel will be systematically undercounted due to the LIFO limit. This effect can be reduced by setting the size of the TDC window small and the LIFO size big. However, there is a trade-off in that more events will be required to reduce the statistical error. This also means integrating over a long period of time which can increase the systematic error due to beam drift (see the section on Beam Drift). Here, the correction required for missed hits due to LIFO size is calculated as a function of rate. Figure 2 shows the correction generated from a Monte Carlo calculation. The correction is plotted versus the product of detector rate and OOT size over LIFO size. The X-axis can be thought of as the average fraction of LIFO buffers filled per event. The curve in this plot comes from a 4th order polynomial fit to the points. The Monte Carlo will need to be run again with more statistics and more points to better define the curve.

The beam current presented in the proposal ofequivalent photons per second corresponds to a T-counter rate of 1MHz per T-counter. The T-counters will be firing at higher rates than any other detector in the PrimEx experiment and so, will require the largest corrections.



Figure 2 Multiplicative correction factor to account for hits missed due to the LIFO limit from Monte Carlo calculation. The x-axis can be thought of as the average fraction of the LIFO buffers filled per event. For the August 2002 beam test, a LIFO of 8 was used with a maximum TDC window of 10 usec.


TDC Deadtime Correction


The LRS1877 TDC module has a deadtime associated with each hit. Hits that occur too close in time with the previous hit will be missed and the rate will be, again, undercounted. For low rate detectors, this effect is negligible. For detectors firing at 1 MHz, however, this can be significant for a precision experiment such as PrimEx.

The time between adjacent hits in a detector firing at a given rate from unrelated events is governed by an exponential probability function. The measured rate will be proportional to the probability that the detector does NOT fire during the deadtime. To obtain the actual rate, this must be divided out as shown in Equation 4.

(4)


Equation 4 can be solved forin terms ofandby expanding the exponential and keeping only the first few terms. Expanding to just two terms results in Equation 5.

(5)


Figure 3 shows a plot of the deadtime correction factor given by Equation 5.





Detector Efficiency

The detector efficiency of the tagger should not affect the final cross-section. This is due to the efficiency appearing in both the numerator and denominator of the cross-section calculation such that it cancels out. This does not neccesarily include inefficiencies which can be introduced through the reconstruction software itself. For example, pi0 events will always occur at later times (close to the beginning of the TDC spectrum) while normalization events will come from the entire TDC spectrum. Should an inefficiency develop for events reconstructed at earlier times due to LIFO limits, this could effect the normalization calculated. Correcting for software coincidence inefficiencies due to hardware limits requires a significant extension to the details presented here and so will be covered by a separate note.



Frame3


Error Estimates


Error Due to LIFO Correction

Application of a correction factor to a rate will itself induce an additional error in the measurement. The LIFO correction factor is a function of the raw, measured rate. The error oncan be propagated through the correction formula to determine this error as a function of the adjusted rate parameter plotted on the X-axis. This has been done and the result is shown in figure 4. One would not expect the curve to bend back over as it does and this likely due to a limitation on how the Monte Carlo was performed. The curve is believed to be accurate up to to X=2 however.

It is important to note that the error due to the LIFO correction will be perfectly correlated with the error onitself. Since these errors will always have the same sign, they must be added linearly as opposed to adding them in quadrature. This increases the error bar from what it would be for uncorrelated errors.

Frame4



Error Due to TDC Deadtime Correction

The TDC deadtime correction (Equation 4) is dependent upon two input parameters:and. These are independent, but both may contain errors which must be propagated through to the final error bar. The partial derivatives of Equation 4 with respect to each of these should be added in quadrature to give the total error due to the TDC deadtime correction. The relative error due to the error on is given by Equation 6 while that due to the error onis given by equation 7.

(6)

(7)

Note in Equation 7 that the relative error has been explicitly subtracted out in order to obtain the error induced by the correction factor alone. This is different than how the LIFO error was presented above (i.e. as the combined error due toand the LIFO correction factor). Figure 5 shows the individual and combined contributions of these errors to the flux measurement. The error on is assumed to be 1 ns. The error bar is directly proportional to this value so if this can be measured at the 0.5 ns level, the total error will be nearly half what is plotted.

Frame5


Error Due to Beam Current Oscillation

Use of a sampling technique can lead to overcounting if the times at which the samples are taken tend to be when the rates are higher. This effect can be calculated if we assume a beam current of the form. The frequencyis assumed to be large enough that many oscillations occur over the course of a run yet small enough so the rate is essentially constant over the sampling time (typically around 10 usec).

The PrimEx trigger is dominated by accidentals from Compton scattering in the window of the vacuum box and the helium inside the helium bag. This means the trigger rate will be proportional to the beam current squared:

Assuming hits in the tagger are dominated by good electrons, the tagger rates will increase linearly with the beam current:

The number of hits a detector sees over the course of the run will then be:

whereis the out of time window width andis a proportionality constant.

Integration yields:

The first term gives the number of hits which would be recorded for the case when. The fractional increase in the number of hits recorded is then given by:

Take, for example, the case when is 10% of. The number of hits recorded will be increased by or 1.5%.


Error Due to Beam Current Drift

Occasionally, a very slow drift can be observed in the beam current that becomes significant over time. Assuming a beam current of the form, the above calculation can be repeated for an integration period ofto . The resulting number of hits is:

The fractional increase in the number of hits due to beam drift is then given by:

As an example, consider a period for which the beam drifted down by 20% before it was corrected. The number of recorded hits will be overcounted by or 1%. This can be controlled somewhat during the analysis by reducing the time slices over which the counts are integrated. One might also try and detect such drifts and either remove the affected data, or correct for the effect.



Summary


The photon flux can be measured by sampling the rates of the tagger detectors. Two systematic corrections, however, must be considered when determining the rate via this sampling method. These are due to the TDC deadtime and the LIFO limit. The corrections themselves can be determined precisely given the hardware settings. They do, however, introduce additional components to the measurement error which have been calculated here.

The sampling technique is also susceptible to systematic overcounting due to beam instabilities. Errors due to beam instability cannot be corrected for (unless the nature of the instability is known precisely). It seems imperative that if this technique is used, the beam stability must be accurately measured and closely monitored.

The contributions to the total error on the photon flux measured using this technique is summarized in the following table.


Error Source

Error

Type

Raw Rate/LIFO

1.40%

Statistical*

Deadtime Correction (Rate)

0.05%

Statistical*

Deadtime Correction (Deadtime)

0.10%

Systematic

Beam Current (%)

0.40%

Systematic

Total

~1.46%



Important things to keep in mind:

Appendix A

Derivation of equation 4.


First, we'll derive the exponential probability function. This can be looked up in any of a number of textbooks. Reviewing it here, however, helps sharpen our understanding of these formalisms which we'll use to extend the calculation later.

The problem is to find the probability that a detector firing at an average rate will fire at a time within a period . Start by breaking up time into bins of size. For small, the probability that a hit will occur in a given bin is given by:

(A1)

The probability that the detector will not fire in the same time period is just . We can now write the probability of the detector not firing in the first N bins. It is just:

(A2)

Solving A2 for, the differential of the probability can be written as:

(A3)


Extrapolating to the continuum,becomes arbitraily small such that . This leads to:

(A4)


Dividing byon both sides and integrating gives the form of the probability function:

(A5)

Imposing the limit that the differential probability must integrate to 1 over all time6 reveals that . This yields, finally, the probability that the detector does not fire during a timeas:

(A6)

Thus, the probability of the detector firing at least once during the same time is just . This is actually just a simple form of Poisson's equation. According to Poisson's equation, the probability of havinghits from a detector firing at a rate during a timeis:

(A7)

The probability of having zero hits is obtained by setting r=0 which returns equation A6. The probability of having one or more hits is:


1Primex Note 1, pg. 48

2The scaler will have a deadtime for each hit of at least the discriminator width. A second hit which occurs during this time will be missed.

3Timing and geometric coincidence.

4For the August 2003 beam test, we generally set the LIFO size to 8 hits and the range to 10 usec.

5Since we typically run with multiple triggers (some heavily prescaled), multiple peaks may show up in a detectors TDC spectrum. To make things simpler, it is desirable to use only events from a single trigger.

6Integration from 0 to infinity where 0 is chosen at some arbitrary point, but not at -infinity.