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Characterization of a prototype imaging calorimeter for the Advanced Particle-astrophysics Telescope from an Antarctic balloon flight and CERN beam test

Authors :
G. S. Varner
Riccardo Paoletti
Roger D. Chamberlain
J. G. Mitchell
Eric Burns
Roberta Pillera
Wenlei Chen
F. Licciulli
G. E. Simburger
Dana Braun
George Suarez
Manel Errando
Dawson J. Huth
D. Serini
Jeffrey Dumonthier
Adapt
Makiko Kuwahara
Jonah Hoffman
Eric A. Wulf
Stefan Funk
Teresa Tatoli
Leonardo Di Venere
Patrick L. Kelly
J. H. Buckley
A. Zink
John Mitchell
S. Alnussirat
Jeremy Buhler
John Krizmanic
Wolfgang V. Zober
Georgia A. de Nolfo
Richard Bose
Francesco Giordano
Zachary Hughes
Michael Cherry
Brian Rauch
Corrado Altomare
Marion Sudvarg
M. N. Mazziotta
Gang Liu
Source :
Proceedings of 37th International Cosmic Ray Conference — PoS(ICRC2021).
Publication Year :
2021
Publisher :
Sissa Medialab, 2021.

Abstract

We report the results and analysis methods from field-testing the imaging calorimeter prototype for the Advanced Particle-astrophysics Telescope (APT) through an antarctic balloon flight (in the 2019 austral Antarctic balloon season) and through a CERN heavy-ion beam test in 2018. The Advanced Particle-astrophysics Telescope is a proposed space-based gamma- and cosmic-ray instrument that utilizes a novel distributed imaging calorimeter for both particle tracking and energy reconstruction. The imaging CsI calorimeter (ICC) consists of a CsI:Na scintillator read out by (WLS) fibers in both the x- and y-planes. To function both as a gamma-ray and cosmic-ray instrument APT must operate over a large dynamic range, from the single photon-election regime for low energy gamma-ray events to high-$Z$ cosmic-ray events. Analysis of data from a 150 mm x 150 mm prototype instrument (APTlite) on a piggy-back flight on the 2019 SuperTIGER-2.3 balloon instrument provided cosmic ray data that were used to demonstrate the key detector and electronics elements of the ICC. Significantly, analysis of flight data demonstrated the large dynamic range of the instrument, showing the possibility to reconstruct the nuclear charge through analysis of the scintillation tail of saturating high-Z cosmic-ray events by utilizing the deep memory depth available to the TARGET waveform digitizer electronics. Spatial reconstruction of events was performed using a two-sided Voigt profile demonstrating position localization within the imaging calorimeter plane to less 3 WLS fiber widths. Charge resolution was evaluated on a 50 mm x 50 mm prototype placed in the 150 GeV/nuc, A/Z = 2.2 CERN SPS beam line. Nuclei were tagged using HNX/TIGERISS silicon-strip detectors and silicon pad detectors, which allowed for fragmentation cuts in the data. The vastly saturating signals were reconstructed from the CsI:Na scintillation tail and show an APT charge resolution up to Z = 11 (with experimental limitations preventing full evaluation for Z larger 11) and demonstrated no significant non-linearity in the Z$^2$ measurement derived from the CsI:Na optical signal response up to $Z=82$.

Details

Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Proceedings of 37th International Cosmic Ray Conference — PoS(ICRC2021)
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........0b1c8cb272f5d6e9e3eba7a78b9d3ae6