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IOP Publishing, Journal of Instrumentation, 04(12), p. P04023-P04023, 2017

DOI: 10.1088/1748-0221/12/04/p04023

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Mechanical stability of the CMS strip tracker measured with a laser alignment system

Journal article published in 2017 by Pawel de Barbaro, Albert M. Sirunyan, Armen Tumasyan, Wolfgang Adam, E. Asilar, Thomas Bergauer, Johannes Brandstetter, Rudolf Fruehwirth, Simon De Visscher, Erica Brondolin, Marko Dragicevic, Janos Erö, Martin Flechl, Markus Friedl, R. Frühwirth and other authors.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.
This paper is made freely available by the publisher.

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Abstract

Submitted to JINST. All figures and tables can be found at http://cms-results.web.cern.ch/cms-results/public-results/publications/TRK-15-002 ; see paper for full list of authors ; The CMS tracker consists of 206 square meters of silicon strip sensors assembled on carbon fibre composite structures and is designed for operation in the temperature range from -25 to +25 degrees C. The mechanical stability of tracker components during physics operation was monitored with a few micron resolution using a dedicated laser alignment system as well as particle tracks from cosmic rays and hadron-hadron collisions. During the LHC operational period of 2011-2013 at stable temperatures, the components of the tracker were observed to experience relative movements of less than 30 microns. In addition, temperature variations were found to cause displacements of tracker structures of about 2 microns/degree C, which largely revert to their initial positions when the temperature is restored to its original value.