high-resolution time-of-flight spectrometer for fast neutrons

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I I High-Resolution Time-of-Flight Spectrometer for Fast Neutrons JRA - Proposal: Development of a next-generation detection system for high- energy neutron Performance goals: - Very good time-of-flight resolution (<100 psec) - Good spatial resolution (<1 cm in all three dimensions) - High detection efficiency (>90%) - Good neutron recognition / multi-hit capabilities Letter of Intent What ? Why ? How ? Who ? Improving the R 3 B experimental facility at GSI

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What ? Why ? How ? Who ?. Letter of Intent. High-Resolution Time-of-Flight Spectrometer for Fast Neutrons. JRA - Proposal: Development of a next-generation detection system for high-energy neutron Performance goals: - Very good time-of-flight resolution (

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Page 1: High-Resolution Time-of-Flight Spectrometer for Fast Neutrons

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High-Resolution Time-of-Flight Spectrometer for Fast Neutrons

JRA - Proposal:

Development of a next-generation detection system for high-energy neutron

Performance goals:

- Very good time-of-flight resolution (<100 psec)

- Good spatial resolution (<1 cm in all three dimensions)

- High detection efficiency (>90%)

- Good neutron recognition / multi-hit capabilities

Letter of Intent What ?

Why ?

How ?

Who ?

Improving the R3B experimental facility at GSI

Page 2: High-Resolution Time-of-Flight Spectrometer for Fast Neutrons

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The R3B facility @GSI

Excitation energy E* from kinematically complete measurement of all outgoing particles:

Neutrons

ToF, E

LANDtracking → BA/Q

Charged fragments

PhotonsALADINlarge-acceptance dipole

ToF, x, y, z

Crystal Ball and TargetBeam

projectiletracking

~12 m

Mixed beam

Page 3: High-Resolution Time-of-Flight Spectrometer for Fast Neutrons

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The Large Area Neutron Detector LAND

Nucl. Instr. Meth. A314 (1992) 136

Resolution:

Tof ~ 250 ps p

~ 5 - 10 MeV/c

IVM ~ 0.2 - 1. MeV

Efficiency1

Neutron Energy (MeV)

Page 4: High-Resolution Time-of-Flight Spectrometer for Fast Neutrons

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Physics Motivation

A large number of physics programs (and users) will benefit (fragmentation beams, reaccelerated beams, >50 A MeV)

Some experiments critically depend on the improved performance

- Inelastic excitation of radioactive nuclei elm excitation, multipole response, new collective modes

- Quasi-free scattering in particular (p,pn) reactions, n detector at 45 degree → resolution !!! single-particle structure, nucleon-nucleon correlations, in-medium effects

- Astrophysical reaction rates (,n) cross sections at very low excitation energy → resolution !!!

- Nuclear states beyond the driplines e.g. multi-neutron clusters → multi-hit recognition capability !!!

- The asymmetry energy and the nuclear/neutron Equation of State pygmy dipole, n-skin, neutron flow measurements ...

- Kinematical complete measurements of fission and spallation reactions

What ?

Why ?

How ?

Who ?

Page 5: High-Resolution Time-of-Flight Spectrometer for Fast Neutrons

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Research and Development Program

Idea: Converter principle plus RPC – based charged particle detection (modular detector, >10000 channels, >100 m2 RPC) RPCs have been used for detection of minimum-ionizing light charged particles Time resolution in the order of 50 psec has been reached

Activities:

• Understanding of the reaction mechanisms/hadronic shower properties and their

simulation• Simulation of possible detector concepts and their optimization• Study of detections principles, alternatives to converter/charged-particle principle• Detection of low-energy charged particles with RPCs (efficiency, resolution)• Development of prototype modules and tests• Development of a cost-effective readout scheme providing excellent time

resolution

Final deliverable: Prototype (20% detector)

What ?

Why ?

How ?

Who ?

Page 6: High-Resolution Time-of-Flight Spectrometer for Fast Neutrons

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Collaboration

Participants and Expertise

GSIKVI GroningenISS BucharestJagellonian University KrakowUniversidad Santiago de CompostelaCEA SaclayUniversity FrankfurtUniversity MainzTU DarmstadtUniversity KölnFZ Rossendorf

Associated Partners: Saha Institute, Kolkata; Tokyo Institute of Technology

What ?

Why ?

How ?

Who ?

Collaboration will bring in manpower, laboratory infrastructure, plus all investment costs