Content deleted Content added
link change, see Talk:Particle physics experiments |
Citation bot (talk | contribs) Removed URL that duplicated identifier. Removed access-date with no URL. Removed parameters. | Use this bot. Report bugs. | Suggested by Headbomb | Linked from Wikipedia:WikiProject_Academic_Journals/Journals_cited_by_Wikipedia/Sandbox | #UCB_webform_linked 791/990 |
||
(25 intermediate revisions by 17 users not shown) | |||
Line 1:
{{Short description|Electronic used in particle generators}}
{{refimprove|date=September 2013}}
[[File:Short Nuclear Instrumentation Crate - side view.jpg|thumb|A NIM Crate with various modules]]
'''Modular crate electronics''' are a general type of electronics and support infrastructure commonly used for trigger electronics and data acquisition in [[particle detector]]s. These types of electronics are common in such detectors because all the electronic pathways are made by discrete physical cables connecting together logic blocks on the fronts of modules. This allows circuits to be designed, built, tested, and deployed very quickly (in days or weeks) as an experiment is being put together. Then the modules can all be removed and used again when the experiment is done.
A crate is a box (chassis) that mounts in an electronics rack with an opening in the front facing the user. There are rails on the top and bottom of the crate that extend from the open (user) end to the back end of the crate. The back end of the crate contains power and data connectors that modules connect to. Electronics modules slide into the crate along the rails and plug into the power/data connectors at the back. Modules have signal connectors, controls, and lights on their faceplate that are used to interact with other modules.
Some modules just draw power from the backplane connectors and have all of their data inputs and outputs on the front plate. Other modules take inputs or controls to and from the backplane or have their behavior controlled from the backplane. Some types of modules have active circuitry inside them, and act almost as small computers; others are not stateful at all and are only dumb single components.
== Types of
There are
=== RENATRAN ===
The very first standard for crate electronics was Renatran, which itself was derived from the Esone Standard published in 1964.<ref>{{cite journal|title=Renatran Basic Functional Units|year=1967|publisher=IEEE|doi=10.1109/TNS.1967.4324413|last1=Fabre|first1=R.|last2=Gallice|first2=P.|last3=Raoult|first3=N.|last4=Robin|first4=G.|journal=IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science|volume=14|issue=1|pages=170–188|bibcode=1967ITNS...14..170F}}</ref> This standard was in use mainly in France in nuclear research.
The Renatran system consisted of a 5U rackable crate that could accept up to 8 single-width or up to 4 double width plug-in units, with the backplane supplying several power rails, as well as serial and parallel communications between modules, and between the rack and external equipment such as printers and computers.
Each plug-in units had the dials, indicators and connectors on the front, and a single screw-mated 24 pin connector (Souriau 8196-17, no longer produced) on the rear to connect to the back-plane. Certain units had additional connectors on the rear, either doubled from the front panel for a more permanent installation, or extra ports for specific purposes, such as daisy chaining counting modules or linking level comparators together. A plug-in unit generally accomplished a single task, such as giving out a clock signal, inverting signal polarity, attenuating or amplifying signals, and more.
=== NIM ===
The
=== CAMAC ===
A later crate standard is [[Computer Automated Measurement and Control|Computer Automated Measurement and Control, or CAMAC]].<ref>{{cite web|title=AN INTRODUCTION TO CAMAC|url=http://www-esd.fnal.gov/esd/catalog/intro/introcam.htm|publisher=FNAL|accessdate=21 September 2013|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130923050041/http://www-esd.fnal.gov/esd/catalog/intro/introcam.htm|archive-date=23 September 2013|url-status=dead}}</ref>
=== FASTBUS ===
[[FASTBUS]]<ref name="FNAL intro to Fastbus">{{cite web|title=AN INTRODUCTION TO FASTBUS|url=http://www-esd.fnal.gov/esd/catalog/intro/introfb.htm|publisher=FNAL|accessdate=21 September 2013|url-status=dead|archiveurl=https://web.archive.org/web/20130923010620/http://www-esd.fnal.gov/esd/catalog/intro/introfb.htm|archivedate=23 September 2013}}</ref>
The FASTBUS backplane
=== VME ===
[[Image:VMEbus.jpg|thumb|right|VME64 crate with, from left, an ADC module, a scaler module and a processor module]]
[[VMEbus|VME]] (VMEbus)
VME
=== PXI ===
PCI eXtensions for Instrumentation ([[PXI]]) is one of several modular electronic instrumentation platforms in current use. These platforms are used as a basis for building electronic test equipment, automation systems, and modular laboratory instruments.
===AdvancedTCA===
The [[Advanced Telecommunications Computing Architecture|Advanced Telecom Computing Architecture]] is an open standard for crates.
Additionally to power supply and data buses, it also defines a management infrastructure.
This allows to perform an array of maintenance task remotely.
The standard is governed by the [[PICMG]] consortium.
<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.picmg.org/openstandards/advancedtca/|title=PICMG | AdvancedTCA}}</ref>
The requirements for cards to be used in AdvancedTCA crates, are called [[Advanced Mezzanine Card]]s (AMCs) and are specified independently in their own standard.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.picmg.org/openstandards/advanced-mezzanine-card/|title=PICMG | Advanced MC®}}</ref>
===MicroTCA===
[[MicroTCA]] is an open, modular standard, based upon [[Advanced Telecommunications Computing Architecture|AdvancedTCA]], but with a smaller form factor.
Initially developed for applications in telecommunications, it has since outgrown its initial purpose by developing modules for military, aerospace and scientific use.<ref>{{Cite web|url=https://www.picmg.org/openstandards/microtca/|title=PICMG | MicroTCA}}</ref>
As AdvancedTCA, it uses [[Advanced Mezzanine Card|AMCs]], which makes cards interchangeable between those two.
==See also==
* [[Bus (computing)]]
* [[Blade server]]
==References==
{{Reflist}}
[[Category:Experimental particle physics]]
|