Barrel HCal Meeting

US/Eastern
Description
Murad Sarsour is inviting you to a scheduled ZoomGov meeting.
 
Topic: Epic Barrel HCal
Time: This is a recurring meeting Meet anytime
 
Join ZoomGov Meeting
 
Meeting ID: 161 050 1083
Passcode: 040716
 
---
 
One tap mobile
+16692545252,,1610501083#,,,,*040716# US (San Jose)
+16469641167,,1610501083#,,,,*040716# US (US Spanish Line)
 
---
 
Dial by your location
• +1 669 254 5252 US (San Jose)
• +1 646 964 1167 US (US Spanish Line)
• +1 646 828 7666 US (New York)
• +1 669 216 1590 US (San Jose)
• +1 415 449 4000 US (US Spanish Line)
• +1 551 285 1373 US (New Jersey)
 
Meeting ID: 161 050 1083
Passcode: 040716
 
Find your local number: https://bnl.zoomgov.com/u/abU0Cu5bD6
 
---
 
Join by SIP
 
---
 
Join by H.323
• 161.199.138.10 (US West)
• 161.199.136.10 (US East)
 
Meeting ID: 161 050 1083
Passcode: 040716

 

(compiled by Anjaly)

GENERAL

•    Eric mentioned the possibility to accommodate Elke in the meeting.
•    Stefan suggested sending a poll to decide on a new date and time. 

PROTOTYPE STATUS AND PLANS

• Norbert showed the plot from the phase scan comparing 50 cm and
  500 cm long cables (signal from preamp-shaper).

• Eric suggested performing a SPICE simulation to estimate impedance
     matching, signal reflection, ringing etc. For this, the input
     characteristics of the HGCROC need to be known. He noted that
     free Linux versions of SPICE are available.

• Martin questioned whether we still need to worry about signal
     reflection once waveform analysis can be done to quantify
     degradation.

• Norbert added that in cases of high multiplicity, long signals might
     interfere with the following signals, which should be checked in
     the simulation. He mentioned he would ask his engineers to do a
     quick calculation on this.

• Anjaly reported technical issues from last week with the setup.
     specifically, ASIC2 was not recording data. Power cycling the
     board (turning it off and on) seemed to resolve the issue. The
     board is now successfully taking data.

• Martin suggested building wide scintillators so that cosmic rays can
  hit anywhere across the surface. This would help collect more
  statistics. He offered to put together a few slides outlining this
  idea.

SIMULATION

• Derek gave a detailed update on major software priorities, focusing
     on completing TDR analyses and preparing a Pre-TDR update.

• David updated on his dropout study in neural networks: (Dropout is
     the percentage of neurons that are randomly ‘dropped’
     (deactivated) in each epoch during training. This prevents the
     model from overly relying on the same paths and adds
     non-linearity, though it makes training harder. More details
     given during a previous update on the multi-layered perceptron
     network)
His conclusion is that 50% dropout is too high, while
     using 10% or less might be appropriate. Further testing is needed
     to determine whether or not to use this and what value to be
     used.

There are minutes attached to this event. Show them.