Paper
21 October 2004 A Compton imaging device for radioactive material detection
Andrew S. Hoover, William Baird, R. Marc Kippen, Mohini W. Rawool-Sullivan, John P. Sullivan
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The most serious terrorist threat we face today may come from radiological dispersion devices and unsecured nuclear weapons. It is imperative for national security that we develop and implement radiation detection technology capable of locating and tracking nuclear material moving across and within our borders. Many radionuclides emit gamma rays in the 0.2 -- 3 MeV range. Unfortunately, current gamma ray detection technology is inadequate for providing precise and efficient measurements of localized radioactive sources. Common detectors available today suffer from large background rates and have only minimal ability to localize the position of the source without the use of mechanical collimators, which reduces efficiency. Imaging detectors using the Compton scattering process have the potential to provide greatly improved sensitivity through their ability to reject off-source background. We are developing a prototype device to demonstrate the Compton imaging technology. The detector consists of several layers of pixelated silicon detectors followed by an array of CsI crystals coupled to photodiodes. Here we present the concept of our detector design and results from Monte Carlo simulations of our prototype detector.
© (2004) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Andrew S. Hoover, William Baird, R. Marc Kippen, Mohini W. Rawool-Sullivan, and John P. Sullivan "A Compton imaging device for radioactive material detection", Proc. SPIE 5540, Hard X-Ray and Gamma-Ray Detector Physics VI, (21 October 2004); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.562558
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CITATIONS
Cited by 4 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Sensors

Silicon

Point spread functions

Compton scattering

Signal to noise ratio

Scattering

Prototyping

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