557 research outputs found
Les glaciers enterrés du vallon des Jovet
Au cours de l'été 2009, le travail de terrain et la ténacité d'un étudiant de l'Université de Lausanne ont permis une découverte étonnante sur le territoire de la réserve Naturelle des Contamines-Montjoie, dans le secteur minéral dominant les lacs Jovet, au sud du massif du Mont-Blanc
In situ measurement of the electron drift velocity for upcoming directional Dark Matter detectors
Three-dimensional track reconstruction is a key issue for directional Dark
Matter detection and it requires a precise knowledge of the electron drift
velocity. Magboltz simulations are known to give a good evaluation of this
parameter. However, large TPC operated underground on long time scale may be
characterized by an effective electron drift velocity that may differ from the
value evaluated by simulation. In situ measurement of this key parameter is
hence needed as it is a way to avoid bias in the 3D track reconstruction. We
present a dedicated method for the measurement of the electron drift velocity
with the MIMAC detector. It is tested on two gas mixtures: CF4 and CF4 + CHF3.
The latter has been chosen for the MIMAC detector as we expect that adding CHF3
to pure CF4 will lower the electron drift velocity. This is a key point for
directional Dark Matter as the track sampling along the drift field will be
improved while keeping almost the same Fluorine content of the gas mixture. We
show that the drift velocity at 50 mbar is reduced by a factor of about 5 when
adding 30% of CHF3.Comment: 19 pages, 14 figures. Minor corrections, matches published version in
JINS
Measurement of the electron drift velocity for directional dark matter detectors
Three-dimensional track reconstruction is a key issue for directional Dark
Matter detection. It requires a precise knowledge of the electron drift
velocity. Magboltz simulations are known to give a good evaluation of this
parameter. However, large TPC operated underground on long time scale may be
characterized by an effective electron drift velocity that may differ from the
value evaluated by simulation. In situ measurement of this key parameter is
hence a way to avoid bias in the 3D track reconstruction. We present a
dedicated method for the measurement of the electron drift velocity with the
MIMAC detector. It is tested on two gas mixtures : and . We also show that adding allows us to lower the
electron drift velocity while keeping almost the same Fluorine content of the
gas mixture.Comment: Proceedings of the 4th international conference on Directional
Detection of Dark Matter (CYGNUS 2013), 10-12 June 2013, Toyama, Japa
Dark matter directional detection with MIMAC
MiMac is a project of micro-TPC matrix of gaseous (He3, CF4) chambers for
direct detection of non-baryonic dark matter. Measurement of both track and
ionization energy will allow the electron-recoil discrimination, while access
to the directionnality of the tracks will open a unique way to distinguish a
geniune WIMP signal from any background. First reconstructed tracks of 5.9 keV
electrons are presented as a proof of concept.Comment: 4 pages, proc. of the 44th Rencontres De Moriond: Electroweak
Interactions And Unified Theories, 7-14 Mar 2009, La Thuile, Ital
NIKEL_AMC: Readout electronics for the NIKA2 experiment
The New Iram Kid Arrays-2 (NIKA2) instrument has recently been installed at
the IRAM 30 m telescope. NIKA2 is a state-of-art instrument dedicated to
mm-wave astronomy using microwave kinetic inductance detectors (KID) as
sensors. The three arrays installed in the camera, two at 1.25 mm and one at
2.05 mm, feature a total of 3300 KIDs. To instrument these large array of
detectors, a specifically designed electronics, composed of 20 readout boards
and hosted in three microTCA crates, has been developed. The implemented
solution and the achieved performances are presented in this paper. We find
that multiplexing factors of up to 400 detectors per board can be achieved with
homogeneous performance across boards in real observing conditions, and a
factor of more than 3 decrease in volume with respect to previous generations.Comment: 21 pages; 16 figure
MIMAC: MIcro-tpc MAtrix of Chambers for dark matter directional detection
Directional detection of non-baryonic Dark Matter is a promising search
strategy for discriminating WIMP events from neutrons, the ultimate background
for dark matter direct detection. 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. The MIMAC (MIcro-tpc MAtrix of Chambers) collaboration has
developed in the last years an original prototype detector based on the direct
coupling of large pixelized micromegas with a special developed fast
self-triggered electronics showing the feasibility of a new generation of
directional detectors. The first bi-chamber prototype has been installed at
Modane, underground laboratory in June 2012. The first undergournd background
events, the gain stability and calibration are shown. The first spectrum of
nuclear recoils showing 3D tracks coming from the radon progeny is presented.Comment: Proceedings of the 4th International Conference on Directional Dark
Matter Detection CYGNUS2013, held in Toyoma (Japan), June 201
Trigger and readout electronics for the STEREO experiment
The STEREO experiment will search for a sterile neutrino by measuring the
anti-neutrino energy spectrum as a function of the distance from the source,
the ILL nuclear reactor. A dedicated electronic system, hosted in a single
microTCA crate, was designed for this experiment. It performs triggering in two
stages with various selectable conditions, processing and readout via UDP/IPBUS
of 68 photomultiplier signals continuously digitized at 250 MSPS. Additionally,
for detector performance monitoring, the electronics allow on-line calibration
by driving LED synchronously with the data acquisition. This paper describes
the electronics requirements, architecture and the performances achieved.Comment: Topical Workshop on Electronics for Particle Physics (TWEPP) 2015,
Lisboa. 9 pages, 9 figure
Development and validation of a 64 channel front end ASIC for 3D directional detection for MIMAC
A front end ASIC has been designed to equip the {\mu}TPC prototype developed
for the MIMAC project, which requires 3D reconstruction of low energy particle
tracks in order to perform directional detection of galactic Dark Matter. Each
ASIC is able to monitor 64 strips of pixels and provides the "Time Over
Threshold" information for each of those. These 64 digital informations,
sampled at a rate of 50 MHz, can be transferred at 400MHz by eight LVDS serial
links. Eight ASIC were validated on a 2x256 strips of pixels prototype.Comment: proceedings of TWEPP-11, Vienna, Austria, 26-30 September 201
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