David M Newbold
University of Bristol
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Publication
Featured researches published by David M Newbold.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2017
Y. Abreu; Y. Amhis; L. Arnold; G. Ban; W. Beaumont; M. Bongrand; D. Boursette; J. M. Buhour; B. C. Castle; K. Clark; B. Coupé; A. S. Cucoanes; David Cussans; A. De Roeck; J. D'Hondt; D. Durand; M. Fallot; S. Fresneau; L. Ghys; L. Giot; B. Guillon; G. Guilloux; S. Ihantola; X. Janssen; S. Kalcheva; L. N. Kalousis; E. Koonen; M. Labare; G. Lehaut; J. Mermans
The next generation of very-short-baseline reactor experiments will require compact detectors operating at surface level and close to a nuclear reactor. This paper presents a new detector concept based on a composite solid scintillator technology. The detector target uses cubes of polyvinyltoluene interleaved with 6LiF:ZnS(Ag) phosphor screens to detect the products of the inverse beta decay reaction. A multi-tonne detector system built from these individual cells can provide precise localisation of scintillation signals, making efficient use of the detector volume. Monte Carlo simulations indicate that a neutron capture efficiency of over 70 % is achievable with a sufficient number of 6LiF:ZnS(Ag) screens per cube and that an appropriate segmentation enables a measurement of the positron energy which is not limited by γ-ray leakage. First measurements of a single cell indicate that a very good neutron-gamma discrimination and high neutron detection efficiency can be obtained with adequate triggering techniques. The light yield from positron signals has been measured, showing that an energy resolution of 14%/√E(MeV) is achievable with high uniformity. A preliminary neutrino signal analysis has been developed, using selection criteria for pulse shape, energy, time structure and energy spatial distribution and showing that an antineutrino efficiency of 40% can be achieved. It also shows that the fine segmentation of the detector can be used to significantly decrease both correlated and accidental backgrounds.
ieee npss real time conference | 2016
C. Amstutz; F. Ball; M. Balzer; J. J. Brooke; L. Calligaris; Davide Cieri; E. Clement; Geoffrey Hall; Tanja Harbaum; Kristian Harder; Pr Hobson; G. Iles; Thomas James; K Manolopoulos; T. Matsushita; A. Morton; David M Newbold; S. Paramesvaran; M. Pesaresi; Ivan Reid; A. Rose; Oliver Sander; T. Schuh; C. H. Shepherd-Themistocleous; Antoni Shtipliyski; Sioni Summers; Alexander Tapper; I. R. Tomalin; Kirika Uchida; P. Vichoudis
A new tracking system is under development for operation in the CMS experiment at the High Luminosity LHC. It includes an outer tracker which will construct stubs, built by correlating clusters in two closely spaced sensor layers for the rejection of hits from low transverse momentum tracks, and transmit them off-detector at 40 MHz. If tracker data is to contribute to keeping the Level-1 trigger rate at around 750 kHz under increased luminosity, a crucial component of the upgrade will be the ability to identify tracks with transverse momentum above 3 GeV/c by building tracks out of stubs. A concept for an FPGA-based track finder using a fully time-multiplexed architecture is presented, where track candidates are identified using a projective binning algorithm based on the Hough Transform. A hardware system based on the MP7 MicroTCA processing card has been assembled, demonstrating a realistic slice of the track finder in order to help gauge the performance and requirements for a full system. This paper outlines the system architecture and algorithms employed, highlighting some of the first results from the hardware demonstrator and discusses the prospects and performance of the completed track finder.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2007
Jim J Brooke; David Cussans; Rje Frazier; S Galagedera; G. P. Heath; B. Huckvale; Steve Nash; David M Newbold; A Shah
We have developed a novel design of triggering system as part of the pipelined hardware Level-1 trigger logic for the CMS experiment at LHC. The Global Calorimeter Trigger is the last element in the processing of calorimeter data, and provides most of the input to the final Level-1 decision. We present the detailed functional requirements for this system. Our design meets the requirements using generic, configurable Trigger Processing Modules built from commercial programmable logic and high-speed serial data links. We describe the hardware, firmware and software components of this solution. CMS has chosen an alternative solution to build the final trigger system; we discuss the implications of our experiences for future development projects along similar lines.
Journal of Instrumentation | 2017
R. Aggleton; L. E. Ardila-Perez; F. Ball; M. Balzer; G. Boudoul; J. J. Brooke; Michele Caselle; L. Calligaris; Davide Cieri; E. Clement; S. Dutta; Geoffrey Hall; Kristian Harder; Pr Hobson; G. Iles; T. James; K Manolopoulos; T. Matsushita; A. Morton; David M Newbold; S. Paramesvaran; M. Pesaresi; N. Pozzobon; Ivan Reid; A. Rose; Oliver Sander; C. H. Shepherd-Themistocleous; Antoni Shtipliyski; T. Schuh; L. Skinnari
A new tracking detector is under development for use by the CMS experiment at the High-Luminosity LHC (HL-LHC). A crucial requirement of this upgrade is to provide the ability to reconstruct all charged particle tracks with transverse momentum above 2–3 GeV within 4 μs so they can be used in the Level-1 trigger decision. A concept for an FPGA-based track finder using a fully time-multiplexed architecture is presented, where track candidates are reconstructed using a projective binning algorithm based on the Hough Transform, followed by a combinatorial Kalman Filter. A hardware demonstrator using MP7 processing boards has been assembled to prove the entire system functionality, from the output of the tracker readout boards to the reconstruction of tracks with fitted helix parameters. It successfully operates on one eighth of the tracker solid angle acceptance at a time, processing events taken at 40 MHz, each with up to an average of 200 superimposed proton-proton interactions, whilst satisfying the latency requirement. The demonstrated track-reconstruction system, the chosen architecture, the achievements to date and future options for such a system will be discussed.
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2004
M. Apollonio; G. Barber; Ken W Bell; D. Britton; J. Brooke; Robert M Brown; J. Bourotte; B. Camanzi; D. J. A. Cockerill; G. Davies; E. Devitsin; G. Ergun; Sergei Gninenko; N. Golubev; Y. Goussev; M. Haguenauer; R. Head; Helen F Heath; P.R. Hobson; D.C. Imrie; A. Inyakin; V. Katchanov; M. Kirsanov; A.L. Lintern; A. B. Lodge; E. Mcleod; S Nash; David M Newbold; M. Ukhanov; V. E. Postoev
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2002
M. Apollonio; G. Barber; Ken W Bell; D. Britton; J. Brooke; Robert M Brown; J. Bourotte; B Camanzi; D. J. A. Cockerill; G. Davies; E. Devitsin; Sergei Gninenko; N. Golubev; Y. Goussev; P. Grafström; M. Haguenauer; R. Head; Helen F Heath; P.R. Hobson; A. Inyakin; V. Katchanov; M. Kirsanov; L. Lintern; A. B. Lodge; E. Mcleod; S Nash; David M Newbold; M. Ukhanov; V. E. Postoev; D. Patalakha
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2004
Ta Barrass; Oje Maroney; S Metson; David M Newbold
European Physical Journal C | 1999
Mi Adamovich; David M Newbold; Vj Smith
Journal of Instrumentation | 2018
Y. Abreu; Y. Amhis; W. Beaumont; M. Bongrand; D. Boursette; B. C. Castle; K. Clark; B. Coupé; David Cussans; A. De Roeck; D. Durand; M. Fallot; L. Ghys; L. Giot; K. Graves; B. Guillon; D. Henaff; B. Hosseini; S. Ihantola; S. Jenzer; S. Kalcheva; L. N. Kalousis; M. Labare; G. Lehaut; S. Manley; L. Manzanillas; J. Mermans; I. Michiels; C. Moortgat; David M Newbold
Journal of Instrumentation | 2018
Y. Abreu; L. Giot; V. Pestel; I. Piñera; J. Mermans; N. C. Ryder; D. Boursette; B. C. Castle; L. Arnold; L. Simard; G. Lehaut; E. Koonen; J. H. Rademacker; A. De Roeck; G. Pronost; B. Guillon; S. Kalcheva; X. Janssen; A. Weber; K. Clark; Y. Amhis; J. Park; J. D'Hondt; S. Van Dyck; I. Michiels; D. Ryckbosch; M. Labare; B. Coupé; K. Petridis; M. H. Schune