ATLAS offline data quality monitoring

J. Adelman(Yale University), M. A. Baak(European Organization for Nuclear Research), N. Boelaert(Lund University), M. D’Onofrio(Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona), J. A. Frost(University of Cambridge), C. Guyot(Commissariat à l'Énergie Atomique et aux Énergies Alternatives), M. Hauschild(European Organization for Nuclear Research), A. Hoecker(European Organization for Nuclear Research), K. J. C. Leney(University of Liverpool), E. Lytken(Lund University), M. Martı́nez(Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona), J. Masik(University of Manchester), A. M. Nairz(European Organization for Nuclear Research), P. U. E. Onyisi(Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory), S. Roe(European Organization for Nuclear Research), S. Schaetzel(European Organization for Nuclear Research), M. G. Wilson(Stanford University)
Journal of Physics Conference Series
April 1, 2010
Cited by 18Open Access
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Abstract

The ATLAS experiment at the Large Hadron Collider reads out 100 Million electronic channels at a rate of 200 Hz. Before the data are shipped to storage and analysis centres across the world, they have to be checked to be free from irregularities which render them scientifically useless. Data quality offline monitoring provides prompt feedback from full first-pass event reconstruction at the Tier-0 computing centre and can unveil problems in the detector hardware and in the data processing chain. Detector information and reconstructed proton-proton collision event characteristics are distilled into a few key histograms and numbers which are automatically compared with a reference. The results of the comparisons are saved as status flags in a database and are published together with the histograms on a web server. They are inspected by a 24/7 shift crew who can notify on-call experts in case of problems and in extreme cases signal data taking abort.


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