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RHIC Polarimetery

RHIC Polarimetery. A.Bazilevsky for RHIC Polarimetry group RHIC Spin Collaboration Metting April 10 (Friday), 2009. pC measurements. Online Polarization (%), not normalized (!) vs fill. Fills 10300 (Mar6) – 10522 (Apr 9) Pol-1 measure systematically lower than Pol-2

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RHIC Polarimetery

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  1. RHIC Polarimetery A.Bazilevsky for RHIC Polarimetry group RHIC Spin Collaboration Metting April 10 (Friday), 2009

  2. pC measurements Online Polarization (%), not normalized (!) vs fill Fills 10300 (Mar6) – 10522 (Apr 9) Pol-1 measure systematically lower than Pol-2 Blue1/Blue2  1 from Fill 10476 Yell1/Yell2  1 from Fill 10505

  3. Rate history Runs in reasonable conditions (below 3 MHz) Blue-1: since fill 10476 Blue-2 : Ok Yellow-1: since fill 10505 Yellow2: since fill 10414

  4. pC-BluevsHJet Hjet/pC is stable over fills within (large) stat. errors (of HJet) HJet: <P>=32% (fills 10402-10508) HJet/Blue1  0.960.04 (before target change, fill10476) HJet/Blue1  0.840.04 (after target change , fill10476) HJet/Blue2  0.820.02

  5. pC-Yellow vs HJet Hjet/pC is stable over fills within (large) stat. errors (of HJet) HJet: <P>=36% (fills 10439-10508) HJet/Yell1  1.020.03 (before target change, fill10505) HJet/Yell1  HJet/Yell2 (after target change , fill10505) HJet/Yell2  0.840.03

  6. Another APEX exercise: Polarization, “rate” corrected Fill 10508 • Energy correction assumed to be an offset (baseline shift) – should be confirmed • If so, it may explain the “rate” effect (target dependence and pol1/pol2 difference) • Plans: • Put pulses in other bunches (now only in bunch0) • Vary pulse amplitude Before correction After correction 2/NDF=24/9 2/NDF=12/9 Very thick targets (very high rate, >5MHz)

  7. Backups

  8. pC Monitoring ToF Generator pulses Carbon Ekin

  9. pC monitoring Low rate example: 10429.013 High rate example: 10346.007 Event rate vs time Pulse rate vs time Pulse amplitude vs time Pulse ToF vs time

  10. AN vs energy Ebeam = 100 GeV Any shift in energy measurements lead to a shift in AN (asymmetry)

  11. FastOffline vs Online From Xuan Li Flattop FastOffline: Use “deadlayer” concept to correct energy: all energy shifts are attributed to change in Si DeadLayer Online: Yell1/Yell20.8 Offline: Yell1/Yell20.9 Corrects about half of “rate effect”

  12. FastOffline vs Online From Xuan Li Injection FastOffline: Use “deadlayer” concept to correct energy: all energy shifts are attributed to change in Si DeadLayer Online: Yell1/Yell20.89 Offline: Yell1/Yell20.96 Corrects about half of “rate effect”

  13. FastOfflinevs Online From Xuan Li Flattop Online: Blue1/Blue20.86 FastOffline: Use “deadlayer” concept to correct energy: all energy shifts are attributed to change in Si DeadLayer Offline: Blue1/Blue20.88

  14. FastOfflinevs Online Injection Online: Blue1/Blue20.93 FastOffline: Use “deadlayer” concept to correct energy: all energy shifts are attributed to change in Si DeadLayer Offline: Blue1/Blue20.93

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