ALICE (A Large Ion Collider Experiment) is the LHC (Large Hadron Collider) experiment devoted to investigating the strongly interacting matter created in nucleus-nucleus collisions at the LHC energies. The ALICE ITS, Inner Tracking System, consists of six cylindrical layers of silicon detectors with three different technologies; in the outward direction: two layers of pixel detectors, two layers each of drift, and strip detectors. The number of parameters to be determined in the spatial alignment of the 2198 sensor modules of the ITS is about 13,000. The target alignment precision is well below 10 μm in some cases (pixels). The sources of alignment information include survey measurements, and the reconstructed tracks from cosmic rays and from protonproton collisions. The main track-based alignment method uses the Millepede global approach. An iterative local method was developed and used as well. We present the results obtained for the ITS alignment using about 10 5 charged tracks from cosmic rays that have been collected during summer 2008, with the ALICE solenoidal magnet switched off. © 2010 IOP Publishing Ltd and SISSA.
CITATION STYLE
Aamodt, K., Abel, N., Abeysekara, U., Abrahantes Quintana, A., Adamová, D., Aggarwal, M. M., … Zynovyev, M. (2010). Alignment of the ALICE inner tracking system with cosmic-ray tracks. Journal of Instrumentation, 5(3). https://doi.org/10.1088/1748-0221/5/03/P03003
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