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Requirements, Status, and Plans for Track Reconstruction at the sPHENIX Experiment...

by Joseph D Osborn
Publication Type
Conference Paper
Book Title
Connecting The Dots Proceedings
Publication Date
Conference Name
Connecting The Dots Workshop (CTD 2020)
Conference Location
Princeton, New Jersey, United States of America
Conference Sponsor
Princeton University
Conference Date
-

sPHENIX is a new experiment that is being constructed at the Relativistic Heavy Ion Collider at Brookhaven National Laboratory. The primary physics goals of sPHENIX are to measure jets, their substructure, and the upsilon resonances in p+p, p+Au and Au+Au collisions. To realize these goals, a tracking system composed of a time projection chamber and several silicon detectors will be used to identify tracks that correspond to jets and upsilon decays. However, the sPHENIX experiment will collect approximately 200 PB of data utilizing a finite-sized computing center; thus, performing track reconstruction in a timely manner is a challenge due to the large occupancy of heavy-ion collisions. The sPHENIX experiment, its track reconstruction, and the need for implementing faster track-fitting algorithms, such as that provided by the A Common Tracking Software package, into the sPHENIX software stack are discussed.