The 1 second sampling should lead to a more accurate measure of the luminosity responsible for SpaceCharge distortions. This is demonstrated by the plot below of sDCA vs. BBC rates (or any other luminosity-related scaler, like ZDC rates). In this plot, the red points are the 30 second scalers, and the blue points use the 1 second scalers, where each point is determined from 150 uncorrected CuCu22 minbias events to get a good measure (150 events spans about 5-10 seconds in time). It is evident in this plot that the 1 second scalers lead to a more linear distribution, indicating a better 1-to-1 correspondence between sDCA and the BBC sum, in this case, which is important for the distortion correction. It is also interesting to observe that even in this small sample, the two scaler sources can disagree by as much as a factor of 2!
Using the Calib_SC_GL.C macro, as documented in the SpaceCharge and GridLeak Calibration How-To Guide, resulted in the following output:
root.exe [0] .x Calib_SC_GL.C("input4.dat","run!=6082047&&run!=6082010")
Found 9 dataset specifications.
*** Best scaler = bbce+bbcw [ID = 4]
* Constraint on SC x GL = 1.17e-07
* Guesses on SC = 1.39e-08 , 6.48e-09 , 1.4e-08 , 6.48e-09
* Guesses on SO = 2.4e+04 , 2.36e+04
*** FINAL CALIBRATION VALUES: ***
SC = 1.4e-08 * ((bbce+bbcw) - (2.38e+04)) with GL = 8.4
After calibrations, the GridLeak distortion plots look like this: