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Featured researches published by J. Garofoli.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2012

Charged particle tracking with the Timepix ASIC

Kazuyoshi Carvalho Akiba; M. Artuso; Ryan Badman; A. Borgia; Richard Bates; Florian Bayer; Martin van Beuzekom; J. Buytaert; Enric Cabruja; M. Campbell; P. Collins; Michael Crossley; R. Dumps; L. Eklund; D. Esperante; C. Fleta; A. Gallas; M. Gandelman; J. Garofoli; M. Gersabeck; V. V. Gligorov; H. Gordon; E.H.M. Heijne; V. Heijne; D. Hynds; M. John; A. Leflat; Lourdes Ferre Llin; X. Llopart; M. Lozano

A prototype particle tracking telescope was constructed using Timepix and Medipix ASIC hybrid pixel assemblies as the six sensing planes. Each telescope plane consisted of one 1.4 cm2 assembly, providing a 256 ×256 array of 55μm square pixels. The telescope achieved a pointing resolution of 2.4μm at the position of the device under test. During a beam test in 2009 the telescope was used to evaluate in detail the performance of two Timepix hybrid pixel assemblies; a standard planar 300μm thick sensor, and 285μm thick double sided 3D sensor. This paper describes a charge calibration study of the pixel devices, which allows the true charge to be extracted, and reports on measurements of the charge collection characteristics and Landau distributions. The planar sensor achieved a best resolution of 4.0±0.1μm for angled tracks, and resolutions of between 4.4 and 11μm for perpendicular tracks, depending on the applied bias voltage. The double sided 3D sensor, which has significantly less charge sharing, was found to have an optimal resolution of 9.0±0.1μm for angled tracks, and a resolution of 16.0±0.2μm for perpendicular tracks. Based on these studies it is concluded that the Timepix ASIC shows an excellent performance when used as a device for charged particle tracking.


Classical and Quantum Gravity | 2008

The LSC glitch group: monitoring noise transients during the fifth LIGO science run

L. Blackburn; L. Cadonati; S. Caride; S. Caudill; S. Chatterji; N. Christensen; J. Dalrymple; S. Desai; A. Di Credico; Gregory Ely; J. Garofoli; L. M. Goggin; G. González; R. Gouaty; C. Gray; A. M. Gretarsson; D. Hoak; T. Isogai; E. Katsavounidis; J. S. Kissel; Sergey Klimenko; R. A. Mercer; S. R P Mohapatra; S. Mukherjee; F. J. Raab; K. Riles; P. R. Saulson; R. Schofield; P. Shawhan; J. Slutsky

The LIGO Scientific Collaboration (LSC) glitch group is part of the LIGO detector characterization effort. It consists of data analysts and detector experts who, during and after science runs, collaborate for a better understanding of noise transients in the detectors. Goals of the glitch group during the fifth LIGO science run (S5) included (1) offline assessment of the detector data quality, with focus on noise transients, (2) veto recommendations for astrophysical analysis and (3) feedback to the commissioning team on anomalies seen in gravitational wave and auxiliary data channels. Other activities included the study of auto-correlation of triggers from burst searches, stationarity of the detector noise and veto studies. The group identified causes for several noise transients that triggered false alarms in the gravitational wave searches; the times of such transients were identified and vetoed from the data generating the LSC astrophysical results.


Journal of Instrumentation | 2013

Radiation damage in the LHCb vertex locator

A. Affolder; K. Akiba; M. Alexander; S. Ali; M. Artuso; J. Benton; M. van Beuzekom; P. M. Bjørnstad; G. Bogdanova; S. Borghi; T. J. V. Bowcock; H. Brown; J. Buytaert; G. Casse; P. Collins; S. De Capua; D. Dossett; L. Eklund; C. Farinelli; J. Garofoli; M. Gersabeck; Timothy Gershon; H. Gordon; J. Harrison; V. Heijne; K. Hennessy; D. Hutchcroft; E. Jans; M. John; T. Ketel

LHCb is a dedicated experiment to study New Physics in the decays of beauty and charm hadrons at the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN. The beauty and charm hadrons are identified through their flight distance in the Vertex Locator (VELO), and hence the detector is critical for both the trigger and offline physics analyses. Due to their close proximity to the LHC beam the VELO sensors are exposed to higher ftuences than those of any other LHC subdetector. These proceedings present the primary results from radiation damage studies performed from the start of LHC data taking until late 2012. They include the first observation of type-inversion at the LHC, the highest statistics measurement of the silicon effective band gap after irradiation, and the observation of a radiation-induced charge loss effect due to the presence of a second metal layer.


Proceedings of 36th International Conference on High Energy Physics — PoS(ICHEP2012) | 2013

Diamond Sensors in HEP

M. Mikuz; R. Potenza; W. Dulinski; Tyzhnevyi; S. Smith; H. Jansen; J. Weingarten; J. Garofoli; S. Lagomarsino; M. Gastal; R. Wang; M. Pomorski; L Upleger; R Mori; K. K. Gan; Bellini; Raffaello D'Alessandro; M Moench; W. De Boer; Cindro; S. Roe; A. Quadt; G. Chiodini; H. Frais-Kölbl; J. Goldstein; P. Olivero; J. P. Cumalat; S. R. Wagner; G. Kramberger; P. Weilhammer

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V. Heijne

University of Massachusetts Amherst

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L. Eklund

University of Glasgow

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M. John

University of Oxford

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M. Mikuz

University of Ljubljana

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Bellini

University of Florence

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