Changeset 6748 for trunk/MagicSoft
- Timestamp:
- 03/04/05 14:52:40 (20 years ago)
- Location:
- trunk/MagicSoft/TDAS-Extractor
- Files:
-
- 8 edited
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trunk/MagicSoft/TDAS-Extractor/Algorithms.tex
r6747 r6748 13 13 \begin{figure}[htp] 14 14 \includegraphics[width=0.99\linewidth]{ExtractorClasses.eps} 15 \caption{Sketch of the inheritances of three exemplaryMARS signal extractor classes:15 \caption{Sketch of the inheritances of three typical MARS signal extractor classes: 16 16 MExtractFixedWindow, MExtractTimeFastSpline and MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter} 17 17 \label{fig:extractorclasses} … … 113 113 extracted arrival time, its error and the number of saturating FADC slices, respectively. 114 114 \par 115 The pedestals can be used for the extraction via the reference ``ped'', also the AB-flagis given116 for AB-clock noise correction.115 The pedestals can be used for the extraction via the reference ``ped'', also the ``AB-flag'' is given 116 for clock noise correction. 117 117 \end{description} 118 118 -
trunk/MagicSoft/TDAS-Extractor/Calibration.tex
r6747 r6748 34 34 35 35 Table~\ref{tab:pulsercolours} lists the available colors and intensities and 36 figures~\ref{fig:pulseexample1leduv} and~\ref{fig:pulseexample23ledblue} show exemplarypulses36 figures~\ref{fig:pulseexample1leduv} and~\ref{fig:pulseexample23ledblue} show typical pulses 37 37 as registered by the FADCs. 38 38 Whereas the UV-pulse is rather stable, the green and blue pulses can show smaller secondary … … 90 90 \par 91 91 Although we had looked at and tested all colour and extractor combinations resulting from these data, 92 we restrict ourselves to show here only exemplarybehaviour and results of extractors.92 we restrict ourselves to show here only typical behaviour and results of extractors. 93 93 All plots, including those which are not displayed in this TDAS, can be retrieved from the following 94 94 locations: … … 357 357 \centering 358 358 \includegraphics[width=0.99\linewidth]{PheVsCharge-4.eps} 359 \caption{Conversion factor $c_{phe}$ for three exemplaryinner pixels (upper plots)360 and three exemplaryouter ones (lower plots) obtained with the extractor359 \caption{Conversion factor $c_{phe}$ for three typical inner pixels (upper plots) 360 and three typical outer ones (lower plots) obtained with the extractor 361 361 {\textit{MExtractFixedWindow}} on a window size of 8 high-gain and 8 low-gain slices 362 362 (extractor \#4). } … … 384 384 \par 385 385 Figure~\ref{fig:linear:phevscharge4} shows the conversion factor $c_{phe}$ obtained for different light intensities 386 and colors for three exemplary inner and three exemplaryouter pixels using a fixed window on386 and colors for three typical inner and three typical outer pixels using a fixed window on 387 387 8 FADC slices. The conversion factor seems to be linear to a good approximation, with the following restrictions: 388 388 \begin{itemize} … … 408 408 \centering 409 409 \includegraphics[width=0.99\linewidth]{PheVsCharge-9.eps} 410 \caption{Conversion factor $c_{phe}$ for three exemplaryinner pixels (upper plots)411 and three exemplaryouter ones (lower plots) obtained with the extractor410 \caption{Conversion factor $c_{phe}$ for three typical inner pixels (upper plots) 411 and three typical outer ones (lower plots) obtained with the extractor 412 412 {\textit{MExtractFixedWindowSpline}} 413 413 on a window size of 8 high-gain and 8 low-gain slices (extractor \#9). } … … 418 418 \centering 419 419 \includegraphics[width=0.99\linewidth]{PheVsCharge-15.eps} 420 \caption{Conversion factor $c_{phe}$ for three exemplaryinner pixels (upper plots)421 and three exemplaryouter ones (lower plots) obtained with the extractor420 \caption{Conversion factor $c_{phe}$ for three typical inner pixels (upper plots) 421 and three typical outer ones (lower plots) obtained with the extractor 422 422 {\textit{MExtractFixedWindowPeakSearch}} on a window size of 8 high-gain and 8 low-gain slices 423 423 (extractor \#15). } … … 429 429 \includegraphics[width=0.99\linewidth]{PheVsCharge-14.eps} 430 430 \caption{Example of a the development of the conversion factor FADC counts to photo-electrons for three 431 exemplary inner pixels (upper plots) and three exemplaryouter ones (lower plots) obtained with the extractor431 typical inner pixels (upper plots) and three typical outer ones (lower plots) obtained with the extractor 432 432 {\textit{MExtractFixedWindowPeakSearch}} 433 433 on a window size of 6 high-gain and 6 low-gain slices (extractor \#11). } … … 455 455 \includegraphics[width=0.99\linewidth]{PheVsCharge-20.eps} 456 456 \caption{Example of a the development of the conversion factor FADC counts to photo-electrons for three 457 exemplary inner pixels (upper plots) and three exemplaryouter ones (lower plots) obtained with the extractor457 typical inner pixels (upper plots) and three typical outer ones (lower plots) obtained with the extractor 458 458 {\textit{MExtractTimeAndChargeSlidingWindow}} 459 459 on a window size of 6 high-gain and 6 low-gain slices (extractor \#20). } … … 474 474 \centering 475 475 \includegraphics[width=0.99\linewidth]{PheVsCharge-23.eps} 476 \caption{Conversion factor $c_{phe}$ for three exemplaryinner pixels (upper plots)477 and three exemplaryouter ones (lower plots) obtained with the extractor476 \caption{Conversion factor $c_{phe}$ for three typical inner pixels (upper plots) 477 and three typical outer ones (lower plots) obtained with the extractor 478 478 {\textit{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline}} with amplitude extraction (extractor \#23). } 479 479 \label{fig:linear:phevscharge23} … … 499 499 \centering 500 500 \includegraphics[width=0.99\linewidth]{PheVsCharge-24.eps} 501 \caption{Conversion factor $c_{phe}$ for three exemplaryinner pixels (upper plots)502 and three exemplaryouter ones (lower plots) obtained with the extractor501 \caption{Conversion factor $c_{phe}$ for three typical inner pixels (upper plots) 502 and three typical outer ones (lower plots) obtained with the extractor 503 503 {\textit{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline}} with window size of 1 high-gain and 2 low-gain slices 504 504 (extractor \#24). } … … 523 523 \centering 524 524 \includegraphics[width=0.99\linewidth]{PheVsCharge-25.eps} 525 \caption{Conversion factor $c_{phe}$ for three exemplaryinner pixels (upper plots)526 and three exemplaryouter ones (lower plots) obtained with the extractor525 \caption{Conversion factor $c_{phe}$ for three typical inner pixels (upper plots) 526 and three typical outer ones (lower plots) obtained with the extractor 527 527 {\textit{MExtractTimeAndChargeSpline}} with window size of 2 high-gain and 3 low-gain slices 528 528 (extractor \#25). } … … 553 553 \centering 554 554 \includegraphics[width=0.99\linewidth]{PheVsCharge-30.eps} 555 \caption{Conversion factor $c_{phe}$ for three exemplaryinner pixels (upper plots)556 and three exemplaryouter ones (lower plots) obtained with the extractor555 \caption{Conversion factor $c_{phe}$ for three typical inner pixels (upper plots) 556 and three typical outer ones (lower plots) obtained with the extractor 557 557 {\textit{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter}} 558 558 using a window size of 6 high-gain and 6 low-gain slices with UV-weights (extractor \#30). } … … 571 571 \centering 572 572 \includegraphics[width=0.99\linewidth]{PheVsCharge-31.eps} 573 \caption{Conversion factor $c_{phe}$ for three exemplaryinner pixels (upper plots)574 and three exemplaryouter ones (lower plots) obtained with the extractor573 \caption{Conversion factor $c_{phe}$ for three typical inner pixels (upper plots) 574 and three typical outer ones (lower plots) obtained with the extractor 575 575 {\textit{MExtractTimeAndChargeDigitalFilter}} using a window size of 576 576 4 high-gain and 4 low-gain slices (extractor \#31). } -
trunk/MagicSoft/TDAS-Extractor/Conclusions.tex
r6745 r6748 2 2 3 3 In the past, many MAGIC analyses have been conducted using different signal extractors. 4 We develop ped and tested the most important signal and time extraction algorithms in the standard MAGIC software4 We developed and tested the most important signal and time extraction algorithms in the standard MAGIC software 5 5 framework MARS. Our findings are that using a right signal extractor is important since some of the investigated ones 6 differ considerably in quality and can sever ly degrade the subsequent analyses. On the other hand, we have found that7 advanced signal recon truction algorithms open a new window to lower analysis energy threshold and permit to use the6 differ considerably in quality and can severely degrade the subsequent analyses. On the other hand, we have found that 7 advanced signal reconstruction algorithms open a new window to lower analysis energy threshold and permit to use the 8 8 time information of shower analyses. 9 9 \par -
trunk/MagicSoft/TDAS-Extractor/Criteria.tex
r6747 r6748 132 132 the reading and writing routines of the MARS software. 133 133 134 Thus, for an online-analysis a different extraction algorithm might be chosen thanfor the final most accurate134 Thus, for an online-analysis a different extraction algorithm might be chosen as for the final most accurate 135 135 reconstruction of the signals offline. 136 136 -
trunk/MagicSoft/TDAS-Extractor/Introduction.tex
r6747 r6748 80 80 \item[Inner and Outer pixels:\xspace] The MAGIC camera has two types of pixels which incorporate the following differences: 81 81 \begin{enumerate} 82 \item Size: The outer pixels have a factor four bigger area th en the inner pixels~\cite{MAGIC-design}.82 \item Size: The outer pixels have a factor four bigger area than the inner pixels~\cite{MAGIC-design}. 83 83 Their (quantum-efficiency convoluted) effective area is about a factor 2.6 higher. 84 84 \item Gain: The camera is flat-fielded in order to yield a similar reconstructed charge signal for the same photon illumination intensity. -
trunk/MagicSoft/TDAS-Extractor/MonteCarlo.tex
r6652 r6748 3 3 \subsection{Introduction \label{sec:mc:intro}} 4 4 5 Many chara steristics of the extractor can only be investigated with the use of Monte-Carlo simulations~\cite{MC-Camera}5 Many characteristics of the extractor can only be investigated with the use of Monte-Carlo simulations~\cite{MC-Camera} 6 6 of signal pulses and noise for the following reasons: 7 7 … … 28 28 \item No switching noise due to the low-gain switch has been simulated. 29 29 \item The intrinsic transit time spread of the photo-multipliers has not been simulated. 30 \item The pulses have been simulated in steps of 0.2\,ns before digitization. There is thus an artificial numeri al time resolution30 \item The pulses have been simulated in steps of 0.2\,ns before digitization. There is thus an artificial numerical time resolution 31 31 limit of $0.2\,\mathrm{ns}/\sqrt{12} \approx 0.06\,\mathrm{ns}$. 32 32 \item The total dynamic range of the entire signal transmission chain was set to infinite, thus the detector has been simulated … … 200 200 section~\ref{sec:mc:convfactors}. 201 201 \par 202 One can see that for small signals, small extrac ion windows yield better resolutions, but extractors which do not202 One can see that for small signals, small extraction windows yield better resolutions, but extractors which do not 203 203 entirely cover the whole pulse, show a clear dependency of the resolution with the signal strength. In the high-gain region, 204 this is valid for all fixed window extractors up to 6~FADC slices integra ion region, all sliding window extractors up to 4~FADC204 this is valid for all fixed window extractors up to 6~FADC slices integration region, all sliding window extractors up to 4~FADC 205 205 slices and for all spline extractors and the digital filter. Among those extractors with a signal dependent resolution, the 206 206 digital filter with 6~FADC slices extraction window shows the smallest dependency, namely 80\% per 50 photo-electrons. This … … 320 320 %%% mode: latex 321 321 %%% TeX-master: "MAGIC_signal_reco" 322 %%% TeX-master: "MAGIC_signal_reco" 322 323 %%% End: 323 324 -
trunk/MagicSoft/TDAS-Extractor/Pedestal.tex
r6747 r6748 364 364 Figures~\ref{fig:sw:distped} through~\ref{fig:df4:distped} show the 365 365 extracted pedestal distributions for some selected extractors (\#18, \#23, \#25, \#28 and \#29) 366 for one exemplarychannel (pixel 100) and two background situations: Closed camera with only electronic366 for one typical channel (pixel 100) and two background situations: Closed camera with only electronic 367 367 noise and open camera pointing to an extra-galactic source. 368 368 One can see the (asymmetric) Poisson behaviour of the … … 519 519 of a pedestal run using a sliding window of 6 FADC slices allowed to move within a window of 520 520 7 (top), 9 (center) and 13 slices. 521 A pedestal run with galactic star background has been taken and one exemplarypixel (Nr. 100).521 A pedestal run with galactic star background has been taken and one typical pixel (Nr. 100). 522 522 One can clearly see the pedestal contribution and a further part corresponding to one or more 523 523 photo-electrons.} … … 564 564 applied on a sliding window of different sizes. 565 565 In the top plot, a pedestal run with extra-galactic star background has been taken and in the bottom, 566 a galactic star background. An exemplarypixel (Nr. 100) has been used.566 a galactic star background. An typical pixel (Nr. 100) has been used. 567 567 Above, a rate of 0.08 phe/ns and below, a rate of 0.1 phe/ns has been obtained.} 568 568 \label{fig:df:ratiofit} … … 600 600 the applied global extraction window sizes. 601 601 A pedestal run with extra-galactic star background has been taken and 602 an exemplarypixel (Nr. 100) used. The conversion factor obtained from the602 an typical pixel (Nr. 100) used. The conversion factor obtained from the 603 603 standard calibration is shown as a reference line. The obtained conversion factors are systematically 604 604 lower than the reference one.} -
trunk/MagicSoft/TDAS-Extractor/Results.tex
r6745 r6748 18 18 \item The extractor should not have a charge bias bigger than its charge resolution. 19 19 \item The time resolution should not be worse than twice the one obtainable with the best extractor. 20 \item The number of mis-reconstruc ed times should not exceed 1\% on average (including the FADC jumps).20 \item The number of mis-reconstructed times should not exceed 1\% on average (including the FADC jumps). 21 21 \item The needed CPU-time should not exceed the one required for reading the data into memory and writing it to disk. 22 22 \end{itemize}
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