Search results for "Instrumentation"

showing 10 items of 4914 documents

FPGA implementation of a deep learning algorithm for real-time signal reconstruction in particle detectors under high pile-up conditions

2019

The analog signals generated in the read-out electronics of particle detectors are shaped prior to the digitization in order to improve the signal to noise ratio (SNR). The real amplitude of the analog signal is then obtained using digital filters, which provides information about the energy deposited in the detector. The classical digital filters have a good performance in ideal situations with Gaussian electronic noise and no pulse shape distortion. However, high-energy particle colliders, such as the Large Hadron Collider (LHC) at CERN, can produce multiple simultaneous events, which produce signal pileup. The performance of classical digital filters deteriorates in these conditions sinc…

Calibration and fitting methods010308 nuclear & particles physicsSignal reconstructionComputer scienceCluster findingDetectorTime signal01 natural sciencesSignal030218 nuclear medicine & medical imaging03 medical and health sciences0302 clinical medicineSignal-to-noise ratioAnalog signalPattern recognitionData processing methods0103 physical sciencesSimulation methods and programsInstrumentationDigital filterAlgorithmMathematical PhysicsEnergy (signal processing)Journal of Instrumentation
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A chamber to test the response of radon detectors to changing environmental conditions.

2011

Radon risk assessment is carried out with accurate measurements with active or passive instrumentation. All radon detectors must be calibrated and tested using a radon chamber containing a known concentration of radon produced by specific sources of 226Ra. Some of the chambers can also be used to test the response of detectors as a function of environmental conditions. In this case, it can be inferred a calibration curve with respect to changing of the parameter considered. For this aim, a new chamber radon was designed and realized to perform both calibration of instruments and to study the detector response in a large range of variation of the environmental parameters (pressure, 700 - 110…

Calibration curveSettore ING-IND/20 - Misure E Strumentazione NucleariInstrumentationNuclear engineeringchemistry.chemical_elementRadoncalibration chamberRadiation MonitoringCalibrationRadon detector calibration radon chamberHumansRadiology Nuclear Medicine and imagingRadon chamberRadiationRadiological and Ultrasound TechnologyDetectorPublic Health Environmental and Occupational HealthHumidityGeneral MedicinechemistryAir Pollutants RadioactiveRadonCalibrationenvironmental conditionEnvironmental scienceRadiation monitoringEnvironmental MonitoringRadiation protection dosimetry
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Airborne measurement of hot spot reflectance signatures

2004

The so-called hot spot is a fine directional signature of the surface reflectance observed for phase angles close to zero. In this paper, we analyze and discuss several such signatures acquired from the airborne POLDER and HyMap instruments during the DAISEX'99 campaign over agricultural crops. The observed signatures are very similar to those acquired from space at a resolution of several tens of kilometers [J. Geophys. Res. 107 (2002)], which provides further evidence that the hot spot is a scale-free feature. The hot spots can be fitted by a two-parameter function (amplitude and width) of the phase angle derived from canopy radiative transfer modeling. The model predicts that the amplitu…

Canopy[SDU.OCEAN]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Ocean Atmosphere010504 meteorology & atmospheric sciencesInstrumentationPhase angleResolution (electron density)0211 other engineering and technologiesSoil ScienceGeologyHot spot (veterinary medicine)02 engineering and technology01 natural sciencesAmplitudeRange (statistics)Computers in Earth Sciences[SDU.ENVI]Sciences of the Universe [physics]/Continental interfaces environmentGeologyHyMapComputingMilieux_MISCELLANEOUS021101 geological & geomatics engineering0105 earth and related environmental sciencesRemote sensing
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Effects of temperature and pressure on microcantilever resonance response.

2003

Abstract The variation in resonance response of microcantilevers was investigated as a function of pressure (10 −2 –10 6  Pa) and temperature (290–390 K) in atmospheres of helium (He) and dry nitrogen (N 2 ). Our results for a silicon cantilever under vacuum show that the frequency varies in direct proportion to the temperature. The linear response is explained by the decrease in Young's modulus with increasing the temperature. However, when the cantilever is bimaterial, the response is nonlinear due to differential thermal expansion. Resonance response as a function of pressure shows three different regions, which correspond to molecular flow regime, transition regime, and viscous regime. …

CantileverChemistryMean free pathThermodynamicschemistry.chemical_elementYoung's modulusMolecular physicsAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsThermal expansionElectronic Optical and Magnetic Materialssymbols.namesakeFree molecular flowDeflection (engineering)symbolsKnudsen numberInstrumentationHeliumUltramicroscopy
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Comparison among different rainfall energy harvesting structures

2018

In this paper, an experimental comparison between different rainfall harvesting devices through the study of the electrical rectifying circuit is proposed. In more detail, three harvesting structures are considered: the cantilever, the bridge and the floating circle. Different waveforms were acquired and discussed. The processed data were compared in order to suggest the best choice for the rectifying circuit, from the simplest one to that most frequently endorsed in the technical literature.

CantileverComputer science020209 energyHardware_PERFORMANCEANDRELIABILITY02 engineering and technologylcsh:TechnologyEnergy harvesterlcsh:ChemistryEngineering (all)Hardware_INTEGRATEDCIRCUITS0202 electrical engineering electronic engineering information engineeringElectronic engineeringWaveformGeneral Materials ScienceRectifying circuitlcsh:QH301-705.5InstrumentationFluid Flow and Transfer ProcessesEnergy harvester; Piezoelectric effect; Rectifying circuit; Materials Science (all); Instrumentation; Engineering (all); Process Chemistry and Technology; Computer Science Applications1707 Computer Vision and Pattern Recognition; Fluid Flow and Transfer Processeslcsh:TProcess Chemistry and TechnologyGeneral EngineeringEnergy harvesterComputer Science Applications1707 Computer Vision and Pattern RecognitionTechnical literaturelcsh:QC1-999Computer Science ApplicationsSettore ING-IND/31 - Elettrotecnicalcsh:Biology (General)lcsh:QD1-999lcsh:TA1-2040Materials Science (all)lcsh:Engineering (General). Civil engineering (General)Energy harvestinglcsh:PhysicsPiezoelectric effectHardware_LOGICDESIGN
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Monitoring the chemical changes in Pd induced by hydrogen absorption using microcantilevers.

2003

Abstract The reactivity of the palladium shaped as a microcantilever is investigated as a function of the hydrogen stoichiometry. A small cell holding the microcantilever is designed to monitor the deflection and the flexural resonance response from high vacuum to a hydrogen gas pressure of several bars. The measurements show that the Young's modulus is accurate if the cantilever is thick enough to be described by a continuum mechanics approach. The orientation distribution function of the palladium grains determined by X-ray diffraction enables to correlate Young's modulus measured using microcantilevers with the elastic constant tensor issued from the literature. The surface stress induce…

CantileverHydrogenHydrideSurface stressUltra-high vacuumAnalytical chemistrychemistry.chemical_elementYoung's modulusAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsElectronic Optical and Magnetic Materialssymbols.namesakechemistrysymbolsInstrumentationStoichiometryPalladiumUltramicroscopy
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Determining cantilever stiffness from thermal noise

2013

We critically discuss the extraction of intrinsic cantilever properties, namely eigenfrequency fn, quality factor Qn and specifically the stiffness kn of the nth cantilever oscillation mode from thermal noise by an analysis of the power spectral density of displacement fluctuations of the cantilever in contact with a thermal bath. The practical applicability of this approach is demonstrated for several cantilevers with eigenfrequencies ranging from 50 kHz to 2 MHz. As such an analysis requires a sophisticated spectral analysis, we introduce a new method to determine kn from a spectral analysis of the demodulated oscillation signal of the excited cantilever that can be performed in the frequ…

CantileverMaterials scienceAcousticsInstrumentationGeneral Physics and AstronomyNanotechnologythermal excitationlcsh:Chemical technologylcsh:TechnologySignal530Full Research PaperstiffnessQuality (physics)medicineNanotechnologylcsh:TP1-1185General Materials ScienceElectrical and Electronic Engineeringlcsh:Sciencecantileverlcsh:TOscillationSpectral densityStiffnessQ-factornoncontact atomic force microscopy (NC-AFM)lcsh:QC1-999spectral analysisNanoscienceresonanceQ factorlcsh:Qmedicine.symptomAFMlcsh:Physics
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Measurement of Mechanical Properties of Cantilever Shaped Materials

2008

Microcantilevers were first introduced as imaging probes in Atomic Force Microscopy (AFM) due to their extremely high sensitivity in measuring surface forces. The versatility of these probes, however, allows the sensing and measurement of a host of mechanical properties of various materials. Sensor parameters such as resonance frequency, quality factor, amplitude of vibration and bending due to a differential stress can all be simultaneously determined for a cantilever. When measuring the mechanical properties of materials, identifying and discerning the most influential parameters responsible for the observed changes in the cantilever response are important. We will, therefore, discuss the…

CantileverMechanical engineeringReviewBendinglcsh:Chemical technologyBiochemistrymaterialsAnalytical ChemistryStress (mechanics)stresspressuresensorResidual stressgaslcsh:TP1-1185Electrical and Electronic EngineeringComposite materialInstrumentationContinuum mechanicsChemistrySurface forcetemperatureMicrocantileverAtomic and Molecular Physics and OpticsVibrationageingMaterial propertiesenvironmentmechanicsSensors
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Detection of gas trace of hydrofluoric acid using microcantilever

2004

Abstract Microcantilevers have been used as a gas sensor in order to detect Hydrofluoric acid (HF) in the concentration range of 0.26–13 ppm. Silicon derived elements (Si 3 N 4 , SiO x ) were chosen to serve as chemical sensitive layer. Cantilever deflection and frequency shift were analyzed and compared as a function of the flow rate and the concentration of the HF molecules. The stoichiometry and roughness of the sensitive layer were found to be of major importance. Results show that the most appropriate signal at the lowest concentration ( x surface by HF. The frequency shift that is mainly governed by the loss in cantilever mass can be used at higher concentration.

CantileverSiliconMetals and AlloysAnalytical chemistrychemistry.chemical_elementSurface finishCondensed Matter PhysicsSurfaces Coatings and FilmsElectronic Optical and Magnetic MaterialsVolumetric flow ratechemistry.chemical_compoundHydrofluoric acidchemistryMaterials ChemistryElectrical and Electronic EngineeringSilicon oxideInstrumentationLayer (electronics)StoichiometrySensors and Actuators B: Chemical
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ATLAS beam test results

1996

Many different configurations of electronics and-semiconductor strip detectors were studied in 1995 using the ATLAS tracking detector test area at the H8 beam-line of the CERN SPS. A significant fraction of these investigations are presented elsewhere in this volume and this paper will concentrate on the results with silicon strip detectors read out with electronics preserving the pulse height information. Data has been collected with the ADAM, APV5 and FElix read-out chips on a number of different detectors. The first results are presented for read out with LHC electronics of detectors to the ATLAS-A specification of 112.5 mu m pitch, employing n-strips in n-type silicon, capacitive coupli…

Capacitive couplingPhysicsNuclear and High Energy PhysicsLarge Hadron Colliderbusiness.industryPhysics::Instrumentation and DetectorsDetectorSTRIPSNoise (electronics)Signallaw.inventionOpticslawHigh Energy Physics::ExperimentElectronicsbusinessInstrumentationImage resolutionNuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research, Section A: Accelerators, Spectrometers, Detectors and Associated Equipment
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