/AllPhysics2760/Nov2011_HI-SD_PhotonHI-276TeV_ppRereco/RECO, CMS collaboration
Cite as: CMS collaboration (2020). AllPhysics2760 (PhotonHI) primary dataset in RECO format from the 2.76 TeV proton-proton run of 2011 (/AllPhysics2760/Nov2011_HI-SD_PhotonHI-276TeV_ppRereco/RECO). CERN Open Data Portal. DOI:10.7483/OPENDATA.91DO.0DEV
Dataset Collision Heavy-ion physics CMS 2.76TeV pp CERN-LHC
AllPhysics2760 (PhotonHI) primary dataset from the 2.76 TeV proton-proton run of 2011. These proton-proton data are at the same centre-of-mass energy and have a similar trigger menu to those in Pb-Pb collisions.
The list of validated runs, which must be applied to all analyses, either with the full validation or for an analysis requiring only muons, can be found in
docker.io/cmsopendata/cmssw_4_4_7-slc5_amd64_gcc434:latest
gitlab-registry.cern.ch/cms-cloud/cmssw-docker-opendata/cmssw_4_4_7-slc5_amd64_gcc434:latest
Data taking / HLT
The collision data were assigned to different RAW datasets using the following HLT configuration.
HLT trigger paths
This dataset is derived from /AllPhysics2760/Run2011A-v1/RAW. All trigger paths for that dataset are listed under /AllPhysics2760/Run2011A-16Jul2011-v1/RECO.
During data taking all the runs recorded by CMS are certified as good for physics analysis if all subdetectors, trigger, lumi and physics objects (tracking, electron, muon, photon, jet and MET) show the expected performance. Certification is based first on the offline shifters evaluation and later on the feedback provided by detector and Physics Object Group experts. Based on the above information, which is stored in a specific database called Run Registry, the Data Quality Monitoring group verifies the consistency of the certification and prepares a json file of certified runs to be used for physics analysis. For each reprocessing of the raw data, the above mentioned steps are repeated. For more information see:
CMS data quality monitoring: Systems and experiences
The CMS Data Quality Monitoring software experience and future improvements
The CMS data quality monitoring software: experience and future prospects
You can access these data through the CMS Open Data container or the CMS Virtual Machine. See the instructions for setting up one of the two alternative environments and getting started with CMS heavy-ion data data in
Running CMS analysis code using Docker
These open data are released under the Creative Commons Zero v1.0 Universal license.
Neither the experiment(s) ( CMS ) nor CERN endorse any works, scientific or otherwise, produced using these data.
This release has a unique DOI that you are requested to cite in any applications or publications.