Title: KOPIO Closeout BNL, April 22, 2005
1KOPIO CloseoutBNL, April 22, 2005
- The KOPIO Sub-panel
- Marj Corcoran
- Peter Denes
- Karol Lang
- Dick Loveless
- Leo Piilonen
- Stan Wojcicki
- NSF, NSERC observers
,
2Preamble
- We thank the KOPIO Collaboration and the RSVP
Project Office for frank and open discussions and
presentations. - We have been impressed with the amount of effort
put into the planning of the experiment. - At the conceptual level KOPIO appears to be well
thought-out and ingenious. - It is also understood that limited funds
available so far have led to a yet-incomplete
detailed design but we have not identified any
show-stoppers. - We were unable to thoroughly review the physics
capabilities - but have no reason to doubt the claims presented
in the CDR. - Findings and recommendations of the recent
Ritchies Panel have been largely accepted by
KOPIO. - We are reminded, however, that the past history
teaches that upgrades will be necessary to reach
the design sensitivity - Below are our findings, comments and
recommendations.
3First physics run in 2012
4KOPIO breakout sessions
- Presentations by
- Mike Marx Status and plans
- Dana Beavis Vacuum (WBS 1.2.1)
- Toshio Numao Preradiator (WBS 1.2.2)
- Nello Nappi KOPIO Trigger (WBS 1.2.7)
- Oleg Mineev Photon veto (WBS 1.2.5)
- Vladimir Issakov Calorimeter (WBS 1.2.3)
- Doug Bryman - Backgrounds
- Discussions with sub-system managers
- Vacuum (WBS 1.2.1) Lang, Piilonen ?? Beavis
an eng - Preradiator (WBS 1.2.2) Loveless ?? Numao
- Calorimeter Photon Veto (WBS 1.2.3/1.2.5) -
Corcoran, Lang ?? Issakov, Mineev - Charged Particle Veto (WBS 1.2.3) - Piilonen ??
Frank - Trigger, DAQ (WBS 1.2.7/1.2.8) Denes ?? Nappi,
Kettel, Schamberger - Offline (WBS 1.2.9) Piilonen ?? Poutissou
- No discussions on System Integration and Project
Services (WBS 1.2.10/1.2.11)
51.2.1 Vacuum - Findings
- System consists of
- Upstream Vacuum Decay Vessel ( 1418k)
- Vacuum Transitions (windows membrane) (
359k) - D4 Vacuum Box ( 238k)
- Downstream Veto Vacuum Tank ( 393k)
- Vacuum Pumping Station ( 630k)
- Management Activities (includes ¼ engineer for 4
years) ( 167k) - Biggest technical challenge
- 12m3, 10-7 Torr, 7 X0
- Investigated many options
- Beryllium, Carbon fiber, Al Honeycomb, Aluminum
- Carbon fiber 1/5 scale under construction in
Russia - Spun aluminum seems best vendor quotes and
fabrication plan - (SPINCRAFT) a vessel for 381k
- Will order 2 vessels, the first one for tests
- Membrane to separate 10-3 and 10-7 Torr vacuums.
- Charge Particle Veto (CPV) to reside inside 10-3
volume
61.2.1 Vacuum - Findings
- Costs and Schedule
- Probed down to level 5 cost drivers
-
1.2.1 Vacuum - Comments
- In the past invested heavily in engineering of
the tank good call! - More engineering necessary and is budgeted!
- Need to integrate Charge Particle Veto
- mounting
- feedthroughs
- define the membrane
- Costing on D4 and D/S vacuum box agrees with past
experience - Need to integrate the Magnet Photon veto system
- Main cost drivers Vacuum tank, pumping station
- Reasonable costs and schedule and the level of
contingency -
-
1.2.1 Vacuum - Recommendation
- Complete the design CPV engineering integration
71.2.2 Preradiator - Findings
- The preradiator is a 3 x 3 m2 sandwich of 256
(2x2x64) cathode strip drift chambers and 288x27
6 scintillator planks (8 mm thick) with Pb
radiators - Designed to measure gamma ray location with a
position accuracy of 5mm and an angular accuracy
of 25mrad. - The cathode strip chambers consist of 75K
channels of anode (wire TDCs) and 75K channels
of cathode (strips ADCs). - On the outside of the scintillator-drift chamber
sandwich is an array of 32x36 external photon
vetos, which are made of Pb-scintillator. - The Triumf group is responsible for the
preradiator including the front-end chamber
electronics. - They will provide and install all parts of the
preradiator except the external veto counters. - 5M from Canada
- The estimated cost of the complete preradiator is
22.6M with a contingency of 5.4M (31).
81.2.2. Preradiator - comments
- The cathode strip drift chambers are well-suited
to measuring the position and angle of the ?o
conversion. - This is a well-developed technology used in other
contemporary experiments - The WBS structure shows good detail and is fairly
complete - Contingency of 31 seems small for a project of
this size and development - Labor costs for chambers are comparable to
materials costs (reasonable) but labor costs for
electronics seems small - Electronics testing is part of vendor delivery --
may need additional testing of assembled systems - Includes funding for 3 years of a system engineer
91.2.2 Preradiator findings/comments
- The estimated base cost for the chamber
electronics (not including contingency) is 6.53M - 32/channel for both anode and cathode
- Labor for all electronics costed under anode,
should be redone - Spares (about 10) should be included
- Scintillator design uses extruded planks with
holes - WLS shifting fibers inserted into holes -- nice
design - Cathode strip chambers are excellent antennas
- Solid grounds are essential
- May need considerable work/testing during
installation at Brookhaven - Triumf group is likely to need additional
people/support to complete this project - responsibility for installing/integrating the
photon vetos not designated
101.2.3 Calorimeter - comments
- The design of the lead/scintillator modules is
well-thought-out and complete. Costing was well
documented and based on extensive experience. -
- The Calorimeter will be a shashlyk structure
fabricated in Russia. - The group at Vladimir has an impressive track
record in producing such devices, including
Phenix, LHCb, and HERA-B. - They can produce the modules very
cost-effectively.
111.2.5 Photon Vetoes - Findings
- The photon vetoes consist of four different
subsystems - Upstream Veto Barrel Veto Magnet Veto
Downstream Veto - Shashlyk log lead/scintillator technology
- These systems need a single-photon veto
inefficiency on the order of 10-4 for KOPIO to
succeed. - Where possible E949 phototubes will be recycled,
resulting in considerable cost savings. - Shashlyk technology also used in the Preradiator
photon veto. -
121.2.5 Photon Vetoes - comments
- The designs of the lead/scintillator modules
seemed to be well-thought-out and complete.
Costing was well documented and based on
extensive experience. - Support structures In all cases except the
barrel veto, the mechanical design of the support
structure is yet to be designed. - Responsibility for installing/integrating the
photon vetos not designated - Hermeticity is crucial to the success of the
experiment. Therefore, the design of the support
structure, especially ensuring it introduces no
gaps or inert material is of utmost importance. - Spares For devices which are using 949 PMTs,
there are some spare phototubes. For detectors
which need new PMTs, no spares are in the
baseline. None of the detectors have spare
front-end electronics. But it is clear that the
experiment cannot tolerate even one dead channel
in the photon vetoes
1.2.5 Photon Vetoes - recommendations
- Assign responsibility and provide adequate
engineering to develop designs for the photon
veto support structures and integration.
131.2.6 Photon Catcher findings/comments
- The photon catcher is the an aerogel-lead device
sensitive to the Cherenkov radiation produced by
photons which convert in the lead. The
sensitivity to neutrons is only 0.3, but even so
this detector produces about 4-5 dead time. - This detector is the responsibility of the
Japanese group, who has assumed all financial
costs. - The Photon Catcher needs to achieve an
inefficiency of 10-2, so the requirements are not
nearly as stringent as for the other photon
vetoes. - The Monte Carlo studies have been validated with
beam tests at KEK, resulting in excellent
agreement with Monte Carlo and data.
141.2.4 Charged Particle Veto - Findings
- Cost 2.63M 1.27 3.35M
- Schedule detector construction/installation
done by FY08, electronics delivered by FY09 - Thin segmented scintillator envelope inside
vacuum tank to detect charged particles with
gt99.99 efficiency and 100 solid angle scints
overlap no cracks except for beamline - Barrel design, construction, assembly by Zurich
design is advanced - Downstream design, construction, assembly by BNL
design is conceptual - Front-end electronics shares common design with
other systems, but who constructs, assembles and
maintains it? - Each scint viewed by 3 or 2 direct-mount
phototubes for redundancy this detector is
inaccessible - Integration with vacuum vessel is needed at early
stage of vacuum vessel design feedthroughs at
vacuum vessel flanges for low voltage and LED
monitor high/low vacuum barrierincluding
mounting schemeand its contribution to the
inert-material budget in front of each scint
support structure heat-conduction scheme - Steeper charged particle entrance angle into
downstream scints ? need thin scint coating
MgF2? instead of wrapping to meet the
inert-material budget is this lt20 mg/cm2 or lt8
mg/cm2?
151.2.4 Charged Particle Veto - comments
- The Charged Particle Veto is well designed. Some
- issues vis a vis integration with the vacuum
vessel - (feedthroughs, support, heat transfer, high/low
vacuum - barrier) need to be resolved.
- The costs of this subsystem, probed down to WBS
- level 7 for the cost-drivers, are
well-documented with - price quotations for materials/equipment and
reasonable - estimates for fabrication/installation. No
spares. - Fairly complete WBS. All aspects of the necessary
work, including material procurement, design,
labour, tooling, integration, and installation
are included. Not clear who is responsible for
the readout electronics, though.
16Electronics
Many different components in many different WBS
elements
CLOCK
- Chamber readout owned by preradiator
- Photon readout is common
- Photodetector owned by subdetector
- Rest is owned by ? (Virtual) electronics group
or subdet. - Integration owned by subdetector
- Clock owned by L1 Trig
- L3 trigger 400 node processor farm
- L2 trigger TBD
Anode
TDC
Cathode
ADC
40 MHz
Logic/Pattern Boards
ADC
PMT
Base
ADC
APD
Super- visor
250-500 MHz
DAQ
Front end and digitizers
Collectors
L1 Trig.
17Electronics - comments
- Certain elements well developed and prototyped
others in (pre-) conceptual design - Significant engineering needed
- For prototype to production board design
- For trigger electronics design
- For FPGA coding
- Work estimates reasonable for an iteration
perhaps short for final production - Testing and integration manpower needed
- Schedule is tight for certain items
- L1 trigger has 6 months float ? need
manpower/engineering by then - 10x10 calo prototype assumed to use final
electronics ? 18 months to finalize calo
electronics
18Electronics - comments
- The group appropriately exercised the contingency
methodology proposed by the project. - Relative to charge recognizing, importantly,
that the construction project will include
significant engineering design and development
activity KOPIO presents no significant
electronics challenges
Electronics - recommendations
- Add people (and use that as a metric)
- Consider forming an electronics group (at least
for everything other than the chamber front-end)
191.2.9 Offline - Findings
- Cost 0.78M 1.18 0.92M
- Schedule hardware purchased as late as possible,
software development schedule to be fleshed out
in Fall 2005 with work done on collaborators
existing equipment - Hardware purchase commodity components tape
silo (4 tape drives, 600 tapes, 1 TB/tape) for
raw data disk farm (100 TB) for skimmed data 84
dual-node processor farm for real-time
processing 15 workstations network switches
racks - System manager (0.5 FTE) is shared with L3
trigger. - Software simulations, reconstruction,
generation of calibration constants, quality
assurance monitor, data analysis, skimming, data
management - One professional programmer and many physicists
to design and manage analysis framework, data
format, data management system, detector
description language, and documentation - Full-time software managers (physicists) needed
for simulation, event reconstruction, calibration
analysis, physics analysis, quality assurance
monitor. Additional manpower (physicists) needed
to do the work.
201.2.9 Offline - comments
- A plan needs to be formulated this year for the
software development effort. - The hardware costs of this subsystem, probed down
to WBS level 6 for the cost-drivers, are
well-documented with price quotations for
equipment (based on recent TRIUMF purchases) and
reasonable estimates for performance improvements
in 4 years. - Software costs are dominated by salary of one
computer professional. However, additional
professionals will be needed. - All aspects of the necessary work, including
equipment procurement, design, labour, tooling,
integration, and installation, are included in
the WBS. Timetables are to be solidified for
software work. - Additional manpower needs are likely.
- L3 and offline should consider adopting a common
processor-node spec.
21Contingency
- Currently, bottoms up Lockheed formula.
- This appears to be artificial and not adequate.
- Top-down contingency proposed by the RSVP
management is 45. It is more reasonable but we
are unable to assess if it is correct. - This would give a total cost of KOPIO to be
- 53M 1.45 ? 77M spares
- We recommend that KOPIO refines contingency
analysis to improve credibility of the cost
estimation.
22Response to the charge
- Technical approach and feasibility
- Conduct early beam tests as feasible
- Refine simulations to improve credibility of
background calculations - Completeness of the plan (WBS)
- Reasonably complete
- NO spares!
- Readiness to proceed to construction
- Significant engineering required
- Expansion of the Collaboration necessary
- Likely duration of the experiment
- Past experience for this type of experiments
teaches that upgrades and improvements will be
necessary to reach the design sensitivity - (Technical) metrics of progress
- Adding personnel is the most critical need
- Costs and schedule
- Refine contingency analysis to improve
credibility of cost estimation