Cosmic Ray

Scintillation crystals, PMTs, voltage dividers etc...
lodovico
Posts: 64
Joined: 10 May 2015, 23:08
Contact:

Cosmic Ray

Post by lodovico » 11 Jan 2016, 07:27

Hi to everybody,
for those who are interested I mark three posts that I put on the blog physicsopenlab :

http://physicsopenlab.org/2016/01/02/co ... incidence/
http://physicsopenlab.org/2016/01/04/sc ... -detector/
http://physicsopenlab.org/2016/01/10/co ... ons-decay/

They deals with a cosmic ray detector based on a coincidence detector and with another detector based on a plastic scintillator.
I have been inspired by one post of Pieter "pietkuip" on cosmic radiation.

Lodovico

User avatar
iRad
Posts: 217
Joined: 01 May 2015, 12:27
Location: Stuart, FL USA
Contact:

Re: Cosmic Ray

Post by iRad » 11 Jan 2016, 08:13

Hi Lodovico - Nice work, and a very nice BC412 plastic scintillator you got there! :)
Cheers, Tom
Cheers, Tom Hall / IRAD INC / Stuart, FL USA
Please check out my eBay Store: http://stores.ebay.com/The-Rad-Lab

lodovico
Posts: 64
Joined: 10 May 2015, 23:08
Contact:

Re: Cosmic Ray

Post by lodovico » 11 Jan 2016, 18:42

Yes,
indeed you did a really good job with the crystal and the PMT !
It works really well !
Thank you
Lodovico

User avatar
Sesselmann
Posts: 1374
Joined: 27 Apr 2015, 11:40
Location: Sydney
Contact:

Re: Cosmic Ray

Post by Sesselmann » 12 Jan 2016, 09:49

I recently visited the physics lab at the University of Sydney, where Marek Dolleiser showed me an interesting cosmic ray detector he made with three geiger tubes A, B and C. Each tube has a simple trigger circuit outputting a square wave pulse of fixed height so each tube has a specific pulse height.

PRA was used as a spectrum analyser to bin the counts from detectors A, B and C, but when A and B trigger together, the sum peak would appear and when A, B and C trigger together it produced a 5th peak.

This was a neat way to do coincidence counting without actually having a logic circuit.

Steven

lodovico
Posts: 64
Joined: 10 May 2015, 23:08
Contact:

Re: Cosmic Ray

Post by lodovico » 12 Jan 2016, 23:44

Right ! Smart way to use an MCA.
Lodovico

pietkuip
Posts: 56
Joined: 29 Apr 2015, 06:23
Location: Växjö, Sweden
Contact:

Re: Cosmic Ray

Post by pietkuip » 13 Jan 2016, 08:15

Nice Lodovico!

I am right now trying to detect the traces that muons make when they pass through the silicon of an image sensor. My sensor is small though (Raspberry Pi camera), so this takes some time.
Pieter Kuiper, Växjö (Sweden)
Course lab: 3 mCi neutron source; five 3" NaI(Tl) detectors, CdZnTe detector (Amptek); lead bricks, two GDM 20

lodovico
Posts: 64
Joined: 10 May 2015, 23:08
Contact:

Re: Cosmic Ray

Post by lodovico » 16 Jan 2016, 01:28

You mean directly with the camera or with something in front of it (a scintillator or something like that) ?
Lodovico

pietkuip
Posts: 56
Joined: 29 Apr 2015, 06:23
Location: Växjö, Sweden
Contact:

Re: Cosmic Ray

Post by pietkuip » 19 Jan 2016, 11:56

Directly in the sensor. I have the pi-camera covered with black electrical tape. It has been running for a few days now, and I do not see many events. I will start a new thread in a few days, hopefully with some interesting traces.

The pi-cam has a cmos sensor. Maybe it is better to use a ccd camera, I do not know much about this.
Pieter Kuiper, Växjö (Sweden)
Course lab: 3 mCi neutron source; five 3" NaI(Tl) detectors, CdZnTe detector (Amptek); lead bricks, two GDM 20

Wojtek
Posts: 6
Joined: 27 Jan 2016, 10:30
Contact:

Re: Cosmic Ray

Post by Wojtek » 27 Jan 2016, 10:34

Hi, Lodovico!
Amazing piece of work. I ordered a similar detector from Tom for the same purpose. I will post when I put the detection system together and get some results.

lodovico
Posts: 64
Joined: 10 May 2015, 23:08
Contact:

Re: Cosmic Ray

Post by lodovico » 27 Jan 2016, 18:51

Well done,
if you need information let me know, on the site you can download a pdf with some other details.
Thank you
Lodovico

Post Reply

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 47 guests