Search results for "Instrumentation"
showing 10 items of 4914 documents
A purity monitoring system for liquid argon calorimeters
2005
Abstract For liquid argon calorimeters electronegative impurities dissolved in the medium degrade the detector response and deteriorate the energy resolution, especially at high energies. A concept for a purity monitoring system for liquid argon calorimeters has been developed and is presented here. Special combined monitors of 241 Am- and 207 Bi-cells are used to monitor the concentration of impurities. The working principle as well as results from test measurements are discussed.
First isochronous mass spectrometry at the experimental storage ring ESR
2000
Short-lived exotic nuclei can be produced and separated with the high-energy secondary nuclear beam facility FRS at GSI. These nuclides can be injected and stored in the storage ring ESR. The lower lifetime limit of the presently existing methods for mass measurements on these nuclides at the ESR is about a few seconds. We have developed and investigated an isochronous operational mode of the ESR, that makes mass measurements of nuclides with lifetimes down to a few ls feasible. It has been commissioned in experiments using long-lived nuclides with known masses. A mass resolving power of about 150 000 has been achieved in a "rst pilot experiment. A suitable detector system has been implemen…
Transverse laser cooling of a radio-frequency bunched ion beam in the storage ring TSR
1996
Abstract We report on the observation of the indirect transverse laser cooling effect in a radio-frequency bunched beam of 7.3 MeV 9 Be + ions, stored in the Heidelberg Test Storage Ring and subject to direct longitudinal laser cooling. This bunched scheme offers particular advantages for producing ultracold beams with unprecedented phase-space densities.
Layout and performance of RPC used in the Argo-YBJ experiment
2006
The layout of the RPCs, used in the Argo-YBJ experiment to image with a high space-time granularity the atmospheric shower, is described in this paper. The detector has been assembled to provide both digital and analog informations in order to cover a wide particle density range with a time accuracy of 1 ns. The experimental results obtained operating the chambers in streamer mode at sea level with a standard gas mixture are presented. (c) 2006 Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.
Preliminary assessment of the imaging capability of the YAP–(S)PET small animal scanner in neuroscience
2006
The new and fully engineered version of the YAP–(S)PET small animal scanner has been tested at the University of Mainz for preliminary assessment of its imaging capability for studies related to neuropharmacology and psychiatry. The main feature of the scanner is the capability to combine PET and SPECT techniques. It allows the development of new and interesting protocols for the investigation of many biological phenomena, more effectively than with PET or SPECT modalities alone. The scanner is made up of four detector heads, each one composed of a 4 � 4c m 2 of YAlO3:Ce (or YAP:Ce) matrix, and has a field of view (FOV) of 4 cm axially � 4c m + transaxially. In PET mode, the volume resoluti…
Small angle scattering from oriented latent nuclear tracks
1984
Abstract Using X-ray and neutron small-angle scattering we studied the defects in mica created by irradiation with uranium ions delivered from the UNILAC accelerator at GSI (Darmstadt, Germany). The defects are regions of reduced density and are best described as cylinders with Gaussian radial density distribution. Scaling laws are given for the time development and the energy dependence of the track parameters.
Focusing ions by viscous drag and weak electric fields in an ion guide
1991
Abstract A new special ion guide has one or more grids at low electric potential in the space between nozzle and skimmer. Viscous drag caused by helium flow is used together with weak electric fields for focusing ions through the skimmer. A typical yield through the skimmer is 75% of that through the nozzle. The focusing device is called a “squeezer”. Most properties of the “squeezer ion guide” are similar to those of an ordinary ion guide. Because the kinetic energies are only of the order of 10 eV, however, problems caused by ion scattering are greatly reduced as compared to ordinary ion guides.
A heavy-ion identification system for the detection of rare events
1990
Abstract A large area detection system is described which consists of twelve low-pressure multi-wire proportional counters and is used in the search for exotic super-massive nuclei. The experiments are based on Rutherford backscattering of heavy ions, preferably 208Pb or 238U, from various target samples. The measured parameters of a detected particle are its time-of-flight, scattering angle, and specific ionization. From this information the mass of the target nucleus can be inferred. The present experimental sensitivity for the detection of exotic nuclei with at least twice the mass of the projectile is about 10−12 relative to the number of nucleons.
A Møller polarimeter for CW and pulsed intermediate energy electron beams
1990
The Moller polarimeter was mainly designed for the cw electron beam of the Mainz microtron (MAMI). The described polarimeter covers an energy range between 25 and 185 MeV and can relatively simply be upgraded to the maximum MAMI energy of 840 MeV. The Moller-scattered electrons are momentum-analyzed in the defocusing plane of a quadrupole magnet and both Moller electrons can be detected in coincidence for symmetrical scattering with ⊖cm=90°. All polarization components of the electron beam can be measured by suitable choices of the orientation of the target polarization. For pulsed electron beams with a small duty factor and a high peak current the polarimeter can also be operated with sing…
Effects of scintillation light collection on the time resolution of a time-of-flight detector for annihilation quanta
1990
Monte Carlo methods were used to simulate the production and collection of scintillation light in a BaF/sub 2/ crystal. The calculated results were compared to measured values for detectors with different heights. Based on this simulation, a TOF (time-of-flight) detector consisting of two conical BaF/sub 2/ crystals (base radius 18 mm, top radius 15 mm, height 25 mm) was assembled. The total time resolution of this system was (210+or-5) ps FWHM (full width at half maximum) for 511-keV annihilation quanta and was found to be independent of the source position between the detectors. Since the time resolution of the TOF detector system consisting of two conical BaF/sub 2/ crystals is sufficien…