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The suitability of large area drift chambers as the technology choice for the cosmic ray inspection and passive tomography (CRIPT) project
- Source :
- 2011 2nd International Conference on Advancements in Nuclear Instrumentation, Measurement Methods and their Applications.
- Publication Year :
- 2011
- Publisher :
- IEEE, 2011.
-
Abstract
- The CRIPT project brings together several Canadian institutions, concerned with the detection of Special Nuclear Materials (SNM), addressing a requirement at ports-of-entry for detection of SNM in the many thousands of containers that flow into and out of Canada every day, while at the same time providing a way of monitoring the contents of nuclear waste storage containers, for waste management and non-proliferation reasons. The scale of these applications is large — typically tens of cubic metres, requiring detectors that can cover a large area at a minimum cost. The CRIPT project considered drift chambers adapted from high energy physics experience, as one of its technology choices. We report here on the performance of a full scale prototype, which covers an area of 2.4m × 1.2m with only 6 readout channels, and provides a 2D data point with accuracies (in x and z) of around 2 mm
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Journal :
- 2011 2nd International Conference on Advancements in Nuclear Instrumentation, Measurement Methods and their Applications
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi...........3f7d417fb5da0efdd052072411699d89