Paper
18 August 1995 Multiphoton errors in the calibration of photon-counting detectors with radioactive scintillators
Author Affiliations +
Proceedings Volume 2622, Optical Engineering Midwest '95; (1995) https://doi.org/10.1117/12.216876
Event: Optical Engineering Midwest '95, 1995, Chicago, IL, United States
Abstract
Radioactive scintillators have been used to calibrate photodetectors for many years. When these photodetectors are photon counters, an unusual calibration error occurs. Differences in the throughput or quantum efficiency of detection systems normally produce corresponding differences in the amount of light measured by the detection systems. But scintillators can produce pulses composed of several photons. When these sources are used to calibrate photon counting detection systems, differences in throughput can cause differences in pulse intensity rather than differences in pulse rate. Since photon counters are actually pulse rate detectors, differences in the pulse rate produced by photon counters may not accurately reflect differences in the throughput of these detection systems. This paper will present data and a model illustrating this problem, as well as a solution for the problem. The paper will also show how this effect can be used for absolute measurement of the efficiency of a detection system.
© (1995) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Eric Heinz "Multiphoton errors in the calibration of photon-counting detectors with radioactive scintillators", Proc. SPIE 2622, Optical Engineering Midwest '95, (18 August 1995); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.216876
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KEYWORDS
Scintillators

Photon counting

Calibration

Data modeling

Photodetectors

Single photon

Electrons

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