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Modern experiments in heavy ion collisions operate with huge data rates that can not be fully stored on the currently available storage devices. Therefore the data flow should be reduced by selecting those collisions that potentially carry the information of the physics interest. The future CBM experiment will have no simple criteria for selecting such collisions and requires the full online reconstruction of the collision topology including reconstruction of short-lived particles.
In this work the KF Particle Finder package for online reconstruction and selection of short-lived particles is proposed and developed. It reconstructs more than 70 decays, covering signals from all the physics cases of the CBM experiment: strange particles, strange resonances, hypernuclei, low mass vector mesons, charmonium, and open-charm particles.
The package is based on the Kalman filter method providing a full set of the particle parameters together with their errors including position, momentum, mass, energy, lifetime, etc. It shows a high quality of the reconstructed particles, high efficiencies, and high signal to background ratios.
The KF Particle Finder is extremely fast for achieving the reconstruction speed of 1.5 ms per minimum-bias AuAu collision at 25 AGeV beam energy on single CPU core. It is fully vectorized and parallelized and shows a strong linear scalability on the many-core architectures of up to 80 cores. It also scales within the First Level Event Selection package on the many-core clusters up to 3200 cores.
The developed KF Particle Finder package is a universal platform for short- lived particle reconstruction, physics analysis and online selection.
The future heavy-ion experiment CBM (FAIR/GSI, Darmstadt, Germany) will focus on the measurements of very rare probes, which require the experiment to operate under extreme interaction rates of up to 10 MHz. Due to high multiplicity of charged particles in heavy-ion collisions, this will lead to the data rates of up to 1 TB/s. In order to meet the modern achievable archival rate, this data ow has to be reduced online by more than two orders of magnitude.
The rare observables are featured with complicated trigger signatures and require full event topology reconstruction to be performed online. The huge data rates together with the absence of simple hardware triggers make traditional latency limited trigger architectures typical for conventional experiments inapplicable for the case of CBM. Instead, CBM will employ a novel data acquisition concept with autonomous, self-triggered front-end electronics.
While in conventional experiments with event-by-event processing the association of detector hits with corresponding physical event is known a priori, it is not true for the CBM experiment, where the reconstruction algorithms should be modified in order to process non-event-associated data. At the highest interaction rates the time difference between hits belonging to the same collision will be larger than the average time difference between two consecutive collisions. Thus, events will overlap in time. Due to a possible overlap of events one needs to analyze time-slices rather than isolated events.
The time-stamped data will be shipped and collected into a readout buffer in a form of a time-slice of a certain length. The time-slice data will be delivered to a large computer farm, where the archival decision will be obtained after performing online reconstruction. In this case association of hit information with physical events must be performed in software and requires full online event reconstruction not only in space, but also in time, so-called 4-dimensional (4D) track reconstruction.
Within the scope of this work the 4D track finder algorithm for online reconstruction has been developed. The 4D CA track finder is able to reproduce performance and speed of the traditional event-based algorithm. The 4D CA track finder is both vectorized (using SIMD instructions) and parallelized (between CPU cores). The algorithm shows strong scalability on many-core systems. The speed-up factor of 10.1 has been achieved on a CPU with 10 hyper-threaded physical cores.
The 4D CA track finder algorithm is ready for the time-slice-based reconstruction in the CBM experiment.