238 research outputs found

    Development of an advanced Compton camera with gaseous TPC and scintillator

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    A prototype of the MeV gamma-ray imaging camera based on the full reconstruction of the Compton process has been developed. This camera consists of a micro-TPC that is a gaseous Time Projection Chamber (TPC) and scintillation cameras. With the information of the recoil electrons and the scattered gamma-rays, this camera detects the energy and incident direction of each incident gamma-ray. We developed a prototype of the MeV gamma-ray camera with a micro-TPC and a NaI(Tl) scintillator, and succeeded in reconstructing the gamma-rays from 0.3 MeV to 1.3 MeV. Measured angular resolutions of ARM (Angular Resolution Measure) and SPD (Scatter Plane Deviation) for 356 keV gamma-rays were 18∘18^\circ and 35∘35^\circ, respectively.Comment: 4 pages, 5 figures. Proceedings of the 6th International Workshop On Radiation Imaging Detector

    Studies of the performance of different front-end systems for flat-panel multi-anode PMTs with CsI(Tl) scintillator arrays

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    We have studied the performance of two different types of front-end systems for our gamma camera based on Hamamatsu H8500 (flat-panel 64 channels multi-anode PSPMT) with a CsI(Tl) scintillator array. The array consists of 64 pixels of 6×6×20mm36\times6\times20{\rm mm}^3 which corresponds to the anode pixels of H8500. One of the system is based on commercial ASIC chips in order to readout every anode. The others are based on resistive charge divider network between anodes to reduce readout channels. In both systems, each pixel (6mm) was clearly resolved by flood field irradiation of 137^{137}Cs. We also investigated the energy resolution of these systems and showed the performance of the cascade connection of resistive network between some PMTs for large area detectors.Comment: 9 pages, 6 figures, proceedings of the 7th International Workshop on Radiation Imaging Detectors (IWORID7), submitted to NIM

    Development of Large area Gamma-ray Camera with GSO(Ce) Scintillator Arrays and PSPMTs

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    We have developed a position-sensitive scintillation camera with a large area absorber for use as an advanced Compton gamma-ray camera. At first we tested GSO(Ce) crystals. We compared light output from the GSO(Ce) crystals under various conditions: the method of surface polishing, the concentration of Ce, and co-doping Zr. As a result, we chose the GSO(Ce) crystals doped with only 0.5 mol% Ce, and its surface polished by chemical etching as the scintillator of our camera. We also made a 16×\times16 cm2^2 scintillation camera which consisted of 9 position-sensitive PMTs (PSPMTs Hamamatsu flat-panel H8500), the each of which had 8×\times8 anodes with a pitch of 6 mm and coupled to 8×\times8 arrays of pixelated 6×6×\times6\times13 mm3^3 GSO(Ce) scintillators. For the readout system of the 576 anodes of the PMTs, we used chained resistors to reduce the number of readout channels down to 48 to reduce power consumption. The camera has a position resolution of less than 6mm and a typical energy resolution of 10.5% (FWHM) at 662 keV at each pixel in a large area of 16×\times16 cm2^2. %to choose the best scintillator for our project. Furthermore we constructed a 16×\times16 array of 3×3×\times3\times13 mm3^3 pixelated GSO(Ce) scintillators, and glued it to a PMT H8500. This camera had the position resolution of less than 3mm, over an area of 5×\times5 cm2^2, except for some of the edge pixels; the energy resolution was typically 13% (FWHM) at 662 keV.Comment: Proceedings of PSD7 appear in NIM

    Evidence of TeV gamma-ray emission from the nearby starburst galaxy NGC 253

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    TeV gamma-rays were recently detected from the nearby normal spiral galaxy NGC 253 (Itoh et al., 2002). Observations to detect the Cherenkov light images initiated by gamma-rays from the direction of NGC 253 were carried out in 2000 and 2001 over a total period of ∌\sim150 hours. The orientation of images in gamma-ray--like events is not consistent with emission from a point source, and the emission region corresponds to a size greater than 10 kpc in radius. Here, detailed descriptions of the analysis procedures and techniques are given.Comment: 16 pages, 27 figures, aa.cl

    Dependence of the gamma-ray emission from SN 1006 on the astronomical parameters

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    We use nonlinear kinetic theory to study the remnant dynamics and the particle acceleration as well as the properties of the nonthermal emission from the supernova remnant SN 1006. The known range of astronomical parameters is examined to determine whether it encompasses the existing synchrotron emission data. Given the present-day spatial extent and expansion rate of the object, it is shown that the hadronic gamma-ray flux is very sensitive to the ambient gas density N_H and that the existing H.E.S.S. upper limit requires N_H < 0.1 cm^{-3}. The strength of the amplified magnetic field downstream of the shock is about 150 \mu G.Comment: 10 pages, 8 figures, to be published in Astronomy and Astrophysic

    An Electron-Tracking Compton Telescope for a Survey of the Deep Universe by MeV gamma-rays

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    Photon imaging for MeV gammas has serious difficulties due to huge backgrounds and unclearness in images, which are originated from incompleteness in determining the physical parameters of Compton scattering in detection, e.g., lack of the directional information of the recoil electrons. The recent major mission/instrument in the MeV band, Compton Gamma Ray Observatory/COMPTEL, which was Compton Camera (CC), detected mere ∌30\sim30 persistent sources. It is in stark contrast with ∌\sim2000 sources in the GeV band. Here we report the performance of an Electron-Tracking Compton Camera (ETCC), and prove that it has a good potential to break through this stagnation in MeV gamma-ray astronomy. The ETCC provides all the parameters of Compton-scattering by measuring 3-D recoil electron tracks; then the Scatter Plane Deviation (SPD) lost in CCs is recovered. The energy loss rate (dE/dx), which CCs cannot measure, is also obtained, and is found to be indeed helpful to reduce the background under conditions similar to space. Accordingly the significance in gamma detection is improved severalfold. On the other hand, SPD is essential to determine the point-spread function (PSF) quantitatively. The SPD resolution is improved close to the theoretical limit for multiple scattering of recoil electrons. With such a well-determined PSF, we demonstrate for the first time that it is possible to provide reliable sensitivity in Compton imaging without utilizing an optimization algorithm. As such, this study highlights the fundamental weak-points of CCs. In contrast we demonstrate the possibility of ETCC reaching the sensitivity below 1×10−121\times10^{-12} erg cm−2^{-2} s−1^{-1} at 1 MeV.Comment: 19 pages, 12 figures, Accepted to the Astrophysical Journa

    Development of an ASD IC for the Micro Pixel Chamber

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    A new amplifier-shaper-discriminator (ASD) chip was designed and manufactured for the Micro Pixel Chamber (Ό\mu-PIC). The design of this ASD IC is based on the ASD IC (TGC-ASD) for the Thin Gap Chamber in the LHC Atlas Experiment. The decay time constant of the preamplifier is 5-times longer than that of the TGC-ASD, and some other modifications have been made in order to improve the signal-to-noise ratio of the Ό\mu-PIC. The ASD IC uses SONY Analog Master Slice bipolar technology. The IC contains 4 channels in a QFP48 package. The decay time constant of the preamplifier is 80 ns and its gain is approximately 0.8 V/pC. The output from the preamplifier is received by a shaper (main-amplifier) with a gain of 7. A baseline restoration circuit is incorporated in the main-amplifier, and the current used for the baseline restoration is 5-times smaller than that of the TGC-ASD. The threshold voltage for the discriminator section is common to the 4 channels and their digital output level is LVDS-compatible. The ASD IC also has an analog output of the preamplifier. The equivalent noise charge at the input capacitance of 50 pF is around 2000 electrons. The power dissipation with LVDS outputs (100 Ω\Omega load) is 57 mW/ch. Using this ASD, the analog output voltage from the signal of the Ό\mu-PIC is about 2-times higher than the case of using the TGC-ASD.As a consequence, the MIPs tracking performance of the Time Projection Chamber (TPC) with the Ό\mu-PIC was improved.The performance of the ASD IC and an improved tracking performance of the TPC are reported.Comment: 6 pages, 14 figures, submitted for IEEE/TNS 200

    Detection of diffuse TeV gamma-ray emission from the nearby starburst galaxy NGC 253

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    We report the TeV gamma-ray observations of the nearby normal spiral galaxy NGC 253. At a distance of ∌\sim2.5 Mpc, NGC 253 is one of the nearest starburst galaxies. This relative closeness, coupled with the high star formation rate in the galaxy, make it a good candidate TeV gamma-ray source. Observations were carried out in 2000 and 2001 with the CANGAROO-II 10 m imaging atmospheric Cerenkov telescope. TeV gamma-ray emission is detected at the ∌11σ\sim 11\sigma level with a flux of (7.8±2.5)×10−12cm−2sec−1(7.8 \pm 2.5)\times 10^{-12} {\rm cm}^{-2} {\rm sec}^{-1} at energies >>0.5 TeV. The data indicate that the emission region is broader than the point spread function of our telescope.Comment: 4 pages, double colomn, 3 figures, aa.cl
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