1,735 research outputs found
Study of X-ray Radiation Damage in Silicon Sensors
The European X-ray Free Electron Laser (XFEL) will deliver 30,000 fully
coherent, high brilliance X-ray pulses per second each with a duration below
100 fs. This will allow the recording of diffraction patterns of single complex
molecules and the study of ultra-fast processes. Silicon pixel sensors will be
used to record the diffraction images. In 3 years of operation the sensors will
be exposed to doses of up to 1 GGy of 12 keV X-rays. At this X-ray energy no
bulk damage in silicon is expected. However fixed oxide charges in the
insulating layer covering the silicon and interface traps at the Si-SiO2
interface will be introduced by the irradiation and build up over time.
We have investigated the microscopic defects in test structures and the
macroscopic electrical properties of segmented detectors as a function of the
X-ray dose. From the test structures we determine the oxide charge density and
the densities of interface traps as a function of dose. We find that both
saturate (and even decrease) for doses between 10 and 100 MGy. For segmented
sensors the defects introduced by the X-rays increase the full depletion
voltage, the surface leakage current and the inter-pixel capacitance. We
observe that an electron accumulation layer forms at the Si-SiO2 interface. Its
width increases with dose and decreases with applied bias voltage. Using TCAD
simulations with the dose dependent parameters obtained from the test
structures, we are able to reproduce the observed results. This allows us to
optimize the sensor design for the XFEL requirements
Performance of the EUDET-type beam telescopes
Test beam measurements at the test beam facilities of DESY have been
conducted to characterise the performance of the EUDET-type beam telescopes
originally developed within the EUDET project. The beam telescopes are equipped
with six sensor planes using MIMOSA26 monolithic active pixel devices. A
programmable Trigger Logic Unit provides trigger logic and time stamp
information on particle passage. Both data acquisition framework and offline
reconstruction software packages are available. User devices are easily
integrable into the data acquisition framework via predefined interfaces.
The biased residual distribution is studied as a function of the beam energy,
plane spacing and sensor threshold. Its standard deviation at the two centre
pixel planes using all six planes for tracking in a 6\,GeV
electron/positron-beam is measured to be
(2.88\,\pm\,0.08)\,\upmu\meter.Iterative track fits using the formalism of
General Broken Lines are performed to estimate the intrinsic resolution of the
individual pixel planes. The mean intrinsic resolution over the six sensors
used is found to be (3.24\,\pm\,0.09)\,\upmu\meter.With a 5\,GeV
electron/positron beam, the track resolution halfway between the two inner
pixel planes using an equidistant plane spacing of 20\,mm is estimated to
(1.83\,\pm\,0.03)\,\upmu\meter assuming the measured intrinsic resolution.
Towards lower beam energies the track resolution deteriorates due to increasing
multiple scattering. Threshold studies show an optimal working point of the
MIMOSA26 sensors at a sensor threshold of between five and six times their RMS
noise. Measurements at different plane spacings are used to calibrate the
amount of multiple scattering in the material traversed and allow for
corrections to the predicted angular scattering for electron beams
UK meteotsunamis: a revision and update on events and their frequency
A tsunami is a series of waves caused by the displacement of water. The displacement may result from âbottomâupâ seabed movement, such as caused by earthquakes, landslides and volcanic eruptions or âtopâdownâ movement, from pressure perturbations in the atmosphere. These âtopâdownâ events are termed meteotsunamis. Meteotsunamis frequently occur in the Mediterranean, the Baltic Sea, the east coast and Great Lakes of North America, and Japan, so they are not exclusive to the United Kingdom. The most recent meteotsunami near the UK coast was in May 2017, when waves around 2m in elevation, generated by a storm passing over the UK, struck the coast of the Netherlands. Historical documents covering the past 150âyears describe many meteotsunamis from United Kingdom (UK) coastal waters (Haslett et al ., 2009; Haslett and Bryant, 2009; Tappin et al ., 2013; VilibiÄ et al ., 2015; O'Brien et al ., 2018). Some of these events have resulted in fatalities, involving beach users who were struck by unexpected sea waves.
Meteotsunamis commonly strike the coasts of the UK, damaging harbours, boats and very rarely, causing fatalities. In the UK, they were usually detected by analysis after the event, unless witnessed firstâhand. This postâevent analysis is particularly necessary in the UK because the data provided by the tide gauge system, operated by the Environment Agency, only records at 15âmin intervals, not in real time as in the rest of Europe. The periods of meteotsunamis are in the range of minutes to tens of minutes (Pattiaratchi and Wijeratne, 2015). A frequency of tens of minutes is similar to a typical frequency expected from a meteotsunami that would have an amplified response from harbour or bay resonance (Tappin et al ., 2013). Therefore, those occurring in UK waters are not often recorded with the present tide gauge settings and as a consequence, cannot be analysed effectively
Simulation of the Response of the Solid State Neutron Detector for the European Spallation Source
The characteristics of the Solid-state Neutron Detector, under development
for neutron-scattering measurements at the European Spallation Source, have
been simulated with a Geant4-based computer code. The code models the
interations of thermal neutrons and ionising radiation in the 6Li-doped
scintillating glass of the detector, the production of scintillation light and
the transport of optical, scintillation photons through the the scintillator,
en route to the photo-cathode of the attached multi-anode photomultiplier.
Factors which affect the optical-photon transport, such as surface finish,
pixelation of the glass sheet, provision of a front reflector and optical
coupling media are compared. Predictions of the detector response are compared
with measurements made with neutron and gamma-ray sources, a collimated alpha
source and finely collimated beams of 2.5 MeV protons and deuterons.Comment: Preprint 22 pages, 12 figures, published in NIM
Response of a Li-glass/multi-anode photomultiplier detector to collimated thermal-neutron beams
The response of a position-sensitive Li-glass scintillator detector being
developed for thermal-neutron detection with 6 mm position resolution has been
investigated using collimated beams of thermal neutrons. The detector was moved
perpendicularly through the neutron beams in 0.5 to 1.0 mm horizontal and
vertical steps. Scintillation was detected in an 8 X 8 pixel multi-anode
photomultiplier tube on an event-by-event basis. In general, several pixels
registered large signals at each neutron-beam location. The number of pixels
registering signal above a set threshold was investigated, with the
maximization of the single-hit efficiency over the largest possible area of the
detector as the primary goal. At a threshold of ~50% of the mean of the
full-deposition peak, ~80% of the events were registered in a single pixel,
resulting in an effective position resolution of ~5 mm in X and Y. Lower
thresholds generally resulted in events demonstrating higher pixel
multiplicities, but these events could also be localized with ~5 mm position
resolution.Comment: 23 pages, 8 figure
High-E_T dijet photoproduction at HERA
The cross section for high-E_T dijet production in photoproduction has been
measured with the ZEUS detector at HERA using an integrated luminosity of 81.8
pb-1. The events were required to have a virtuality of the incoming photon,
Q^2, of less than 1 GeV^2 and a photon-proton centre-of-mass energy in the
range 142 < W < 293 GeV. Events were selected if at least two jets satisfied
the transverse-energy requirements of E_T(jet1) > 20 GeV and E_T(jet2) > 15 GeV
and pseudorapidity requirements of -1 < eta(jet1,2) < 3, with at least one of
the jets satisfying -1 < eta(jet) < 2.5. The measurements show sensitivity to
the parton distributions in the photon and proton and effects beyond
next-to-leading order in QCD. Hence these data can be used to constrain further
the parton densities in the proton and photon.Comment: 36 pages, 13 figures, 20 tables, including minor revisions from
referees. Accepted by Phys. Rev.
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