1. A discriminator and shaper circuit realized in CMOS technology for BABAR
- Author
-
G. Wormser, K. Truong, S. Sen, R. Chase, J Ardelean, A. Hrisoho, Laboratoire de l'Accélérateur Linéaire (LAL), and Université Paris-Sud - Paris 11 (UP11)-Institut National de Physique Nucléaire et de Physique des Particules du CNRS (IN2P3)-Centre National de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS)
- Subjects
Physics ,Nuclear and High Energy Physics ,Discriminator ,010308 nuclear & particles physics ,Coaxial cable ,business.industry ,Preamplifier ,Dynamic range ,Amplifier ,Electrical engineering ,Chip ,01 natural sciences ,law.invention ,CMOS ,law ,0103 physical sciences ,[PHYS.PHYS.PHYS-INS-DET]Physics [physics]/Physics [physics]/Instrumentation and Detectors [physics.ins-det] ,010306 general physics ,business ,Instrumentation ,Voltage - Abstract
An analog chip is designed to receive from a PM, through a 50 Ω coaxial cable, signals rising in 3 ns, falling in 8 ns, and to provide: • digital signals for timing purposes, • multiplixed analog output, proportional to the input, for spectral measurements; there are 8 channels per chip with a common gain adjustment for the preamplifier, and individual control for the offset and threshold setting. The discriminator sensitivity is 2 mV. The dynamic range is from 2 to 100 mV. The noise equivalent at the input is ≈100 μV. The RMS time dispersion is less than 550 ps for 3 mV threshold. The shaping amplifier is of bipolar shape with 80 ns peaking time and 2.5 V mean output voltage. The cross talk between channels is less than 2%.
- Published
- 1998