266 research outputs found
A Monolithic Time Stretcher for Precision Time Recording
Identifying light mesons which contain only up/down quarks (pions) from those
containing a strange quark (kaons) over the typical meter length scales of a
particle physics detector requires instrumentation capable of measuring flight
times with a resolution on the order of 20ps. In the last few years a large
number of inexpensive, multi-channel Time-to-Digital Converter (TDC) chips have
become available. These devices typically have timing resolution performance in
the hundreds of ps regime. A technique is presented that is a monolithic
version of ``time stretcher'' solution adopted for the Belle Time-Of-Flight
system to address this gap between resolution need and intrinsic multi-hit TDC
performance.Comment: 9 pages, 15 figures, minor corrections made, to appear as JINST_008
IceCube's In-Ice Radio Extension: Status and Results
In 2006-2010, several Radio Frequency (RF) detectors and calibration
equipment were deployed as part of the IceCube array at depths between 5 to
1400 meters in preparation for a future large scale GZK neutrino detector.
IceCube's deep holes and well-established data handling system provide a unique
opportunity for deep-ice RF detection studies at the South-Pole. We will
present verification and calibration results as well as a status-review of
ongoing analyses such as ice-properties, RF noise and reconstruction
algorithms.Comment: 4 pages, 6 figures, to appear in the proceedings of the Acoustic and
Radio EeV Neutrino detection Activities (ARENA) 2010 conferenc
The PRO1 ASIC for Fast Wilkinson Encoding
Wilkinson conversion of stored samples in large Switch Capacitor Array (SCA)
ASICs, such as used for high speed waveform sampling, has many benefits in
terms of compactness, no missing output codes, low power requirements and
robustness. However such Analog-to-Digital conversions are relatively slow,
limited by the encoder clock speed. By repeating the same fast sampling
technique used by the SCA, combined with a fast priority encoder, significantly
faster conversion is demonstrated for a prototype ASIC designated PRO1. For
8-10 bits of resolution, this technique is compact and requires far fewer
system resources.Comment: 10 pages, 11 figure
BES3 time of flight monitoring system
A Time of Flight monitoring system has been developed for BES3.
The light source is a 442-443 nm laser diode, which is stable and provides a
pulse width as narrow as 50 ps and a peak power as large as 2.6 W. Two
optical-fiber bundles with a total of 512 optical fibers, including spares, are
used to distribute the light pulses to the Time of Flight counters. The design,
operation, and performance of the system are described.Comment: 8 pages 16 figures, submitted to NI
TARGET: A multi-channel digitizer chip for very-high-energy gamma-ray telescopes
The next-generation very-high-energy (VHE) gamma-ray observatory, the
Cherenkov Telescope Array, will feature dozens of imaging atmospheric Cherenkov
telescopes (IACTs), each with thousands of pixels of photo-sensors. To be
affordable and reliable, reading out such a mega-channel array requires event
recording technology that is highly integrated and modular, with a low cost per
channel. We present the design and performance of a chip targeted to this
application: the TeV Array Readout with GSa/s sampling and Event Trigger
(TARGET). This application-specific integrated circuit (ASIC) has 16 parallel
input channels, a 4096-sample buffer for each channel, adjustable input
termination, self-trigger functionality, and tight window-selected readout. We
report the performance of TARGET in terms of sampling frequency, power
consumption, dynamic range, current-mode gain, analog bandwidth, and cross
talk. The large number of channels per chip allows a low cost per channel (\10
to \20 including front-end and back-end electronics but not including
photosensors) to be achieved with a TARGET-based IACT readout system. In
addition to basic performance parameters of the TARGET chip itself, we present
a camera module prototype as well as a second-generation chip (TARGET~2), both
of which have been produced.Comment: 16 pages, 15 figures, version 3 (matches version published in
Astroparticle Physics
AURA - A radio frequency extension to IceCube
The excellent radio frequency transparency of cold polar ice, combined with
the coherent Cherenkov emission produced by neutrino-induced showers when
viewed at wavelengths longer than a few centimeters, has spurred considerable
interest in a large-scale radio-wave neutrino detector array.
The AURA (Askaryan Under-ice Radio Array) experimental effort, within the
IceCube collaboration, seeks to take advantage of the opportunity presented by
IceCube drilling through 2010 to establish the radio frequency technology
needed to achieve 100-1000 km^3 effective volumes.
In the 2006-2007 Austral summer 3 deep in-ice radio frequency (RF) clusters
were deployed at depths of 1300m and 300m on top of the IceCube strings.
Additional 3 clusters will be deployed in the Austral summer of 2008-2009.
Verification and calibration results from the current deployed clusters are
presented, and the detector design and performances are discussed. Augmentation
of IceCube with large-scale 1000km^3sr radio and acoustic arrays would extend
the physics reach of IceCube into the EeV-ZeV regime and offer substantial
technological redundancy.Comment: To appear in the proceedings of the Acoustic and Radio EeV Neutrino
detection Activities (ARENA) 2008 conferenc
Sub-10ps Monolithic and Low-power Photodetector Readout
Recent advances in photon detectors have resulted in high-density imaging
arrays that offer many performance and cost advantages. In particular, the
excellent transit time spread of certain devices show promise to provide
tangible benefits in applications such as Positron Emission Tomography (PET).
Meanwhile, high-density, high-performance readout techniques have not kept on
pace for exploiting these developments. Photodetector readout for next
generation high event rate particle identification and time-resolved PET
requires a highly-integrated, low-power, and cost-effective readout technique.
We propose fast waveform sampling as a method that meets these criteria and
demonstrate that sub-10ps resolution can be obtained for an existing device.Comment: 12 pages, 20 figures, submitted to NIM
A study of charged kappa in
Based on events collected by BESII, the decay
is studied. In the invariant mass
spectrum recoiling against the charged , the charged
particle is found as a low mass enhancement. If a Breit-Wigner function of
constant width is used to parameterize the kappa, its pole locates at MeV/. Also in this channel,
the decay is observed for the first time.
Its branching ratio is .Comment: 14 pages, 4 figure
The pole in
Using a sample of 58 million events recorded in the BESII detector,
the decay is studied. There are conspicuous
and signals. At low mass, a large
broad peak due to the is observed, and its pole position is determined
to be - MeV from the mean of six analyses.
The errors are dominated by the systematic errors.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures, submitted to PL
Energy and Flux Measurements of Ultra-High Energy Cosmic Rays Observed During the First ANITA Flight
The first flight of the Antarctic Impulsive Transient Antenna (ANITA)
experiment recorded 16 radio signals that were emitted by cosmic-ray induced
air showers. For 14 of these events, this radiation was reflected from the ice.
The dominant contribution to the radiation from the deflection of positrons and
electrons in the geomagnetic field, which is beamed in the direction of motion
of the air shower. This radiation is reflected from the ice and subsequently
detected by the ANITA experiment at a flight altitude of 36km. In this paper,
we estimate the energy of the 14 individual events and find that the mean
energy of the cosmic-ray sample is 2.9 EeV. By simulating the ANITA flight, we
calculate its exposure for ultra-high energy cosmic rays. We estimate for the
first time the cosmic-ray flux derived only from radio observations. In
addition, we find that the Monte Carlo simulation of the ANITA data set is in
agreement with the total number of observed events and with the properties of
those events.Comment: Added more explanation of the experimental setup and textual
improvement
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