Alignment
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Technical Definition
This section explains how the tracker alignment is defined.
- There are three places that alignment transforms are inserted
- between the whole tracker and the nominal geometry
- between each plane and the aligned tracker
- between each panel and the aligned plane
- transforms
- apply rotation before displacement
- a rotation is defined as right-handed about the local x, then y, then z axes (rad)
- add an offset in position (mm)
- tracker geometry object are in coordinate centered at the nominal tracker center
Here is how the geometry is conceptually built up, including the alignment
- create straws within the panel
- straw direction is +y
- straws are placed around the +x axis with the longer (innermost) straw near x=0
- the origin is the average position of the two innermost straws
- straw z is plus or minus half the layer spacing
- Apply the panel alignment of rotations and displacements. The coordinates are these current local coordinates. For example, to move a panel to a larger radius in the final detector, apply a +x alignment.
- Place the panel in the plane. This involves rotating the panel to its nominal phi position around the z axis, and adding its nominal displacement of about
x += 380*cos(phi)
andy += 380*sin(phi)
- Apply the plane alignment of rotations and displacements. The coordinates are the center of the plane. For example, to move a plane vertically up in the final detector, apply a +y alignment.
- Place the plane within the tracker. This only involves moving it along the z axis.
- Place the tracker by applying the tracker alignment. The coordinates are all the same as the final detector. To move it closer to the calorimeter, apply a +z alignment. To spin it about its axes apply a z roation.