491 research outputs found
Sealed operation, and circulation and purification of gas in the HARPO TPC
HARPO is a time projection chamber (TPC) demonstrator of a gamma-ray
telescope and polarimeter in the MeV-GeV range, for a future space mission. We
present the evolution of the TPC performance over a five month sealed-mode
operation, by the analysis of cosmic-ray data, followed by the fast and
complete recovery of the initial gas properties using a lightweight gas
circulation and purification system.Comment: Proceedings_MPGD2015, EPJ Web of Conference
Measurement of 1.7 to 74 MeV polarised gamma rays with the HARPO TPC
Current {\gamma}-ray telescopes based on photon conversions to
electron-positron pairs, such as Fermi, use tungsten converters. They suffer of
limited angular resolution at low energies, and their sensitivity drops below 1
GeV. The low multiple scattering in a gaseous detector gives access to higher
angular resolution in the MeV-GeV range, and to the linear polarisation of the
photons through the azimuthal angle of the electron-positron pair.
HARPO is an R&D program to characterise the operation of a TPC (Time
Projection Chamber) as a high angular-resolution and sensitivity telescope and
polarimeter for {\gamma} rays from cosmic sources. It represents a first step
towards a future space instrument. A 30 cm cubic TPC demonstrator was built,
and filled with 2 bar argon-based gas. It was put in a polarised {\gamma}-ray
beam at the NewSUBARU accelerator in Japan in November 2014. Data were taken at
different photon energies from 1.7 MeV to 74 MeV, and with different
polarisation configurations. The electronics setup is described, with an
emphasis on the trigger system. The event reconstruction algorithm is quickly
described, and preliminary measurements of the polarisation of 11 MeVphotons
are shown.Comment: Proceedings VCI201
AFTER, the front end ASIC of the T2K Time Projection Chambers
The T2K (Tokai-to-Kamioka) experiment is a long baseline neutrino oscillation experiment in Japan. A near detector, located at 280m of the production target, is used to characterize the beam. One of its key elements is a tracker, made of three Time Projection Chambers (TPC) read by Micromegas endplates. A new readout system has been developed to collect, amplify, condition and acquire the data produced by the 124,000 detector channels of these detectors. The front-end element of this system is a a new 72-channel application specific integrated circuit. Each channel includes a low noise charge preamplifier, a pole zero compensation stage, a second order Sallen-Key low pass filter and a 511-cell Switched Capacitor Array. This electronics offers a large flexibility in sampling frequency, shaping time, gain, while taking advantage of the low physics events rate of 0.3 Hz. We detail the design and the performance of this ASIC and report on the deployment of the frond-end electronics on-site
MIMAC : A micro-tpc matrix for directional detection of dark matter
Directional detection of non-baryonic Dark Matter is a promising search
strategy for discriminating WIMP events from background. However, this strategy
requires both a precise measurement of the energy down to a few keV and 3D
reconstruction of tracks down to a few mm. To achieve this goal, the MIMAC
project has been developed. It is based on a gaseous micro-TPC matrix, filled
with CF4 and CHF3. The first results on low energy nuclear recoils (H, F)
obtained with a low mono-energetic neutron field are presented. The discovery
potential of this search strategy is discussed and illustrated by a realistic
case accessible to MIMAC.Comment: 6 pages, Proc. of the fifth international symposium on large TPCs for
low energy rare event detection, Paris, France, Dec. 2010. To appear in
Journal of Physic
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