294 research outputs found
Impact of Neutron Energy on Asteroid Deflection Performance
In the future, a hazardous asteroid will find itself on a collision course with Earth. For asteroids of moderate size or larger, a nuclear device is one of humanity\u27s only technologies capable of mitigating this threat via deflection on a timescale of less than a decade. This work examined how the output neutron energy from a nuclear device standoff detonation affects the deflection of a notional asteroid that is 300 meters in diameter and composed of silicon dioxide at a bulk density of 1.855 g/cm3. 14.1 MeV and 1 MeV neutron energy sources were modeled in MCNP to quantify the energy deposition in the asteroid target. The asteroid\u27s irradiated region was discretized in angle by tracing the rays emanating from the point of detonation and in depth by considering the neutron mean-free-paths. This high-fidelity approach was shown to deviate from previous analytic approximations commonly used for asteroid energy deposition. 50 kt and 1 Mt neutron yields of the energy deposition mappings were imported into a hydrodynamic asteroid model in ALE3D to simulate the deflective response due to blow-off ejecta. Underexplored in literature, changing the neutron energy was found to have up to a 70% impact on deflection performance due to induced differences in the energy deposition profile and in the energy coupling efficiency. The magnitude of energy deposition accounted for most of the observed variation in the asteroid velocity change, making the coupling efficiency more significant than the spatial profile characteristics. These findings are vital for determining the optimal source neutron energy spectrum for asteroid deflection applications
Going global: The introduction of the Asian isopod Ianiropsis serricaudis Gurjanova (Crustacea: Peracarida) to North America and Europe
The Asian isopod Ianiropsis serricaudis is now well established in fouling communities, often associated with introduced ascidians, throughout the Northern Hemisphere but has gone largely unnoticed because of its diminutive size (typically less than 3 mm in length) and the difficulties of identifying small peracarid crustaceans. Known locations include the northeastern Pacific (Puget Sound, San Francisco Bay, and Monterey Bay), the northwestern Atlantic (from the Gulf of Maine to Barnegat Bay, NJ), and the northeastern Atlantic (England and the Netherlands). We predict that this species is widespread along North America and European coasts, and may already be introduced to cold temperate waters of the Southern Hemisphere as well
Performance of the most recent Microchannel-Plate PMTs for the PANDA DIRC detectors at FAIR
In the PANDA experiment at the FAIR facility at GSI two DIRC (Detection of
Internally Reflected Cherenkov light) detectors will be used for /K
separation up to 4 GeV/c. Due to their location in a high magnetic field and
other stringent requirements like high detection efficiency, low dark count
rate, radiation hardness, long lifetime and good timing, MCP-PMTs
(microchannel-plate photomultiplier) were the best choice of photon sensors for
the DIRC detectors in the PANDA experiment. This paper will present the
performance of some of the latest 22 inch MCP-PMTs from Photek and
Photonis, including the first mass production tubes for the PANDA Barrel DIRC
from Photonis. Performance parameters like the collection efficiency (CE),
quantum efficiency (QE), and gain homogeneity were determined. The effect of
magnetic fields on some properties like gain and charge cloud width was
investigated as well. Apart from that the spatial distribution of many internal
parameters like time resolution, dark count rate, afterpulse ratio, charge
sharing crosstalk and recoil electrons were measured simultaneously with a
multihit capable DAQ system. The latest generation of Photonis MCP-PMTs shows
an unexpected "escalation" effect where the MCP-PMT itself produces photons.Comment: Proceedings contribution to RICH2022 (11th International Workshop on
Ring Imaging Cherenkov Detectors
Lifetime and performance of the very latest microchannel-plate photomultipliers
The PANDA experiment at the FAIR facility at GSI will study hadron physics
using a high intensity antiproton beam of up to 15 GeV/c momentum to perform
high precision spectroscopy. Two DIRC detectors with their image planes
residing in an 1 T magnetic field will be used in the experiment. The
only suitable photon detectors for both DIRCs were identified to be
Microchannel-Plate Photomultipliers (MCP-PMTs). Since the aging problems of
MCP-PMTs were solved recently by coating the MCPs with the so-called
ALD-technique (atomic layer deposition) we are investigating devices which are
significantly improved with respect to other parameters, as, e.g., the
collection efficiency (CE) and the quantum efficiency (QE). The latest
generation of MCP-PMTs can reach a detective quantum efficiency DQE = QE - CE
of 30%. This paper will present the performance of the most advanced 53
53 mm ALD-coated MCP-PMTs from Photonis (8 8 and 3
100 anodes) and Photek (8 8 anodes), also inside the magnetic
field. With a picosecond laser and a multi-hit capable DAQ system which allows
read out up to 300 pixels simultaneously, parameters like darkcount rate,
afterpulse probability and time resolution can be investigated as a function of
incident photon position.Comment: Proceedings contribution to NDIP20 (9th Conference on New
Developments in Photodetection
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