Hi, 
it seems to me that we have about 1ns difference in the delay in left and 
right sectors.
atatched are plots of reconstructed mass spectra from unpolarized 
deuterium runs. red curve is positive charges into left sector, blue curve 
is positive charge into right sector.
the bottum plot is the mass spectra reconstructed by lrn. there is huge 
shift in the two (proton)mass peaks, 190MeV away. 
since momentum and track length reconstruction in the two sectors are 
rather symmetric, the most possible reason for this shift is a different 
delay in the two sector.
note that for a positive charge into left sector for example, mass is 
calculated by: m = p/(gamma*beta) where beta = L/T and in turn T = ttl - 
ttr + reconstructed electron time of flight. 
the difference in delay enters into ttl - ttr. 1ns difference corresponds 
to ~10% of electron time of flight and ~5% of proton time of flight. so 
mass reconstruction is marginally sensitive to 1ns errors.
the figure on the top shows the mass spectra after subtracting an extra 20 
channels offset in one sector. the two (proton)mass peaks are aligned. 
there is some funny shape which could come from the fact different paddle 
combinations have different energy loss for instance, so the big peak is 
in fact the sum of many small peaks at different location.
The impact of this difference is more than just a shift in mass 
reconstruction. Reconstruction and particle ID work at their best when 
coincident trigger is activated by an electron. when the delays in left 
and right are different, program could be misled to consider a pi+/pi- as 
the trigger particle instead of the electron.
Please let me know what you think.
Chi
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