G0 Electronics and Data Acquisition (Forward-Angle Measurements)
/ Authors
D. Marchand, J. Arvieux, G. Batigne, L. Bimbot, A. Biselli, J. Bouvier, H. Breuer, R. Clark, J. Cuzon, M. Engrand
and 21 more authors
R. Foglio, C. Furget, X. Grave, B. Guillon, H. Guler, P. M. King, P. M. King, S. Kox, J. Kuhn, Y. Ky, J. Lachniet, J. Lenoble, E. Liatard, Jianglai Liu, E. Muñoz, J. Pouxe, G. Qu'em'ener, B. Quinn, J. Réal, O. Rossetto, R. Sellem
/ Abstract
Abstract The G 0 parity-violation experiment at Jefferson Lab (Newport News, VA) is designed to determine the contribution of strange/anti-strange quark pairs to the intrinsic properties of the proton. In the forward-angle part of the experiment, the asymmetry in the cross-section was measured for e ⇒ p elastic scattering by counting the recoil protons corresponding to the two beam-helicity states. Due to the high accuracy required to measure the few-part-per-million asymmetry, the G 0 experiment was based on a custom experimental setup with its own associated electronics and data acquisition (DAQ) system. Highly specialized time-encoding electronics provided time-of-flight spectra for each detector for each helicity state. More conventional electronics, processing only a small fraction of the events, was used for monitoring (mainly FastBus). The time-encoding electronics and the DAQ system have been designed to handle events from the 128 detector pairs at a mean rate of 2 MHz per detector pair with low deadtime and with minimal helicity-correlated systematic errors. In this paper, we outline the general architecture and the main features of the electronics and the DAQ system dedicated to G 0 forward-angle measurements.
Journal: Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment