Paper
18 October 1996 Study of high-pressure xenon gas scintillation drift chambers with wave-shifting fiber and CsI photocathode readouts
Jeff Wilkerson, Timothy K. Edberg, Jason Hamm, Bernard Sadoulet, Paul Shestople, Garth Smith
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
We are studying high pressure (20 atmospheres) xenon gas scintillation drift chambers for use in hard x-ray astronomy. These detectors combine the concepts of the gas scintillation proportional counter and the time projection chamber, with the scintillation light read out using waveshifting fibers or plane parallel proportional counters with CsI photocathodes. We have operated both a small technical prototype and a large flight prototype chamber. The CSI photocathodes have consistently given quantum efficiencies near 30% for the detection of xenon scintillation light and plane parallel proportional counters filled with methane have provided gains better than 106. The small GSDC with a CsI readout has a measured energy resolution of 6.0% FWHM at 30 keV, within about a factor of two and a half of the ultimate resolution obtainable in the device. The resolution is currently limited by spread of the incident x-ray beam causing a variable fraction of scintillation light to be observed for each event. We report on the development status of this technology.
© (1996) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Jeff Wilkerson, Timothy K. Edberg, Jason Hamm, Bernard Sadoulet, Paul Shestople, and Garth Smith "Study of high-pressure xenon gas scintillation drift chambers with wave-shifting fiber and CsI photocathode readouts", Proc. SPIE 2806, Gamma-Ray and Cosmic-Ray Detectors, Techniques, and Missions, (18 October 1996); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.253998
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KEYWORDS
Scintillation

Xenon

Quantum efficiency

Electrons

Photons

Prototyping

Sensors

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