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The distributed Slow Control System of the XENON100 Experiment

2012-11-05
E. Aprile, M. Alfonsi, K. Arisaka, F. Arneodo, C. Balan, L. Baudis, A. Behrens, P. Beltrame, K. Bokeloh, E. Brown, G. M. Bruno, R. Budnik, M. Le Calloch, J. M. Cardoso, W.-T. Chen, B. Choi, H. Contreras, J.-P. Cussonneau, M. P. Decowski, E. Duchovni, S. Fattori, A. D. Ferella, W. Fulgione, F. Gao, M. Garbini, K.-L. Giboni, L. Goetzke, C. Grignon, E. Gross, W. Hampel, D.N. McKinsey, A. Kish, J. Lamblin, R. F. Lang, C. Levy, K. E. Lim, Q. Lin, S. Lindemann, M. Lindner, J. A. M. Lopes, K. Lung, A. Manzur, T. Marrodán Undagoitia, F. V. Massoli, Y. Mei, A. J. Melgarejo Fernandez, Y. Meng, A. Molinario, E. Nativ, K. Ni, U. Oberlack, S. E. A. Orrigo, E. Pantic, J. V. Patricio, R. Persiani, G. Plante, N. Priel, A. C. C. Ribeiro, A. Rizzo, S. Rosendahl, J. M. F. dos Santos, G. Sartorelli, J. Schreiner, et al. (12 additional authors not shown)

Abstract

The XENON100 experiment, in operation at the Laboratori Nazionali del Gran Sasso (LNGS) in Italy, was designed to search for evidence of dark matter interactions inside a volume of liquid xenon using a dual-phase time projection chamber. This paper describes the Slow Control System (SCS) of the experiment with emphasis on the distributed architecture as well as on its modular and expandable nature. The system software was designed according to the rules of Object-Oriented Programming and coded in Java, thus promoting code reusability and maximum flexibility during commissioning of the experiment. The SCS has been continuously monitoring the XENON100 detector since mid 2008, remotely recording hundreds of parameters on a few dozen instruments in real time, and setting emergency alarms for the most important variables.

Abstract (translated by Google)
URL

https://arxiv.org/abs/1211.0836

PDF

https://arxiv.org/pdf/1211.0836


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