OPERA is a long-baseline neutrino experiment at the Gran Sasso underground laboratories (LNGS), to observe vτappearance in a vτneutrino beam produced at CERN. The detector is a structure of two super modules, each built-up of a massive lead/nuclear-emulsion target complemented by electronic detectors and a magnetic spectrometer. The two magnets are instrumented by 1000 Resistive Plate Chambers (RPCs) detectors for a total surface of about 3200 m2. The slow control system has been designed to monitor and control all the critical parameters for the proper functioning of the spectrometers. The different hardware (Magnet and RPC High Voltage power supplies, RPC current meters, Magnet and RPC temperature sensors, RPC timing boards) is read out via CAN bus connections by several distributed clients. The clients write the data to a relational database (PostgresSQL) which is the heart of the system: it gives persistence to the data and allows to perform correlations useful to debug possible system malfunctioning. Among the various tools (histograms and XML Configuration Managers), a controller process checks for possible failures of the system using data from the database and generates warnings/alarms for people on shift. © 2008 IEEE.

Bergnoli, A., Bertolin, A., Baignera, R., Carrara, E., Cazes, A., Dal Corso, F., et al. (2008). The OPERA spectrometer slow control system. IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON NUCLEAR SCIENCE, 55(1), 349-355 [10.1109/TNS.2007.913470].

The OPERA spectrometer slow control system

Terranova, F.;
2008

Abstract

OPERA is a long-baseline neutrino experiment at the Gran Sasso underground laboratories (LNGS), to observe vτappearance in a vτneutrino beam produced at CERN. The detector is a structure of two super modules, each built-up of a massive lead/nuclear-emulsion target complemented by electronic detectors and a magnetic spectrometer. The two magnets are instrumented by 1000 Resistive Plate Chambers (RPCs) detectors for a total surface of about 3200 m2. The slow control system has been designed to monitor and control all the critical parameters for the proper functioning of the spectrometers. The different hardware (Magnet and RPC High Voltage power supplies, RPC current meters, Magnet and RPC temperature sensors, RPC timing boards) is read out via CAN bus connections by several distributed clients. The clients write the data to a relational database (PostgresSQL) which is the heart of the system: it gives persistence to the data and allows to perform correlations useful to debug possible system malfunctioning. Among the various tools (histograms and XML Configuration Managers), a controller process checks for possible failures of the system using data from the database and generates warnings/alarms for people on shift. © 2008 IEEE.
Articolo in rivista - Articolo scientifico
CAN bus; Database; Magnet; Resistive plate chamber; Slow control; Nuclear and High Energy Physics; Nuclear Energy and Engineering; Electrical and Electronic Engineering
English
2008
55
1
349
355
none
Bergnoli, A., Bertolin, A., Baignera, R., Carrara, E., Cazes, A., Dal Corso, F., et al. (2008). The OPERA spectrometer slow control system. IEEE TRANSACTIONS ON NUCLEAR SCIENCE, 55(1), 349-355 [10.1109/TNS.2007.913470].
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/189187
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