GEM SYSTEM, APPARATUS, AND METHOD FOR TRACKING COSMIC RAY MUONS
20230324571 · 2023-10-12
Inventors
Cpc classification
G01T1/2985
PHYSICS
International classification
Abstract
A gas electron multiplier (GEM), used to track cosmic ray muons, can have readout electrodes oriented in a helical pattern so that it can fit inside a narrow aperture borehole. The helical orientation of the readout electrodes provides for high spatial resolution and yet is cost effective to manufacture. The GEM can have an insulation layer, a plurality of conduction layers and an inner layer comprising a plurality of helical conductive stripes extending between two ends of the GEM.
Claims
1. A narrow cylindrical GEM detector apparatus for detecting muons, the apparatus comprising: an insulation layer; a plurality of conduction layers; and an inner layer comprising a plurality of helical conductive strips extending between the two ends of the detector.
2. The apparatus of claim 1, further comprising a housing.
3. The apparatus of claim 2, wherein the housing comprises a cylindrical shape.
4. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the GEM detector consists of multiple longitudinal segments connected together via interconnects.
5. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the GEM layer is comprised of semi-circular halves.
6. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the helical conductive strips extend along the length of the apparatus.
7. The apparatus of claim 1, wherein the helical conductive strips extend both in clock-wise and counter clock-wise directions along the length of the apparatus.
8. A method of using the apparatus of claim 1 to detect muons in a borehole, the method comprising: providing the apparatus of claim 1; installing a GEM detector apparatus within a suitable environmental enclosure into a borehole collecting the signals from the detector readout consisting of time and pulse height for each current pulse measured on the pickup wires; filtering the set of signals by selecting only those for which a prescribed number of signals are measured within a predefined time window consistent with the passage of an energetic charged particle through the detector; collecting the grouped signals into candidate events; interpolating the signal in the candidate events to reconstruct the positions of a charged particle as it pierces the GEM layers of the detector on entry and exit; using linear regression or other reasonable interpolation method (such as curvilinear fit in the presence of magnetic fields, or accounting for multiple scattering for low energy particles) to determine the trajectory (two angles and an origin) of the charged particle (muon) from the known geometry and position of the detector and the interpolated positions of entry and exit; populating radiographic image with the observed rate of muons impinging upon the detector from all angles within some defined field of view; populating radiographic image with the observed rate of muons impinging upon the detector at a given position on the detector from all angles within some defined field of view; and using the radiographic images to infer the average density of the medium in all directions within some defined field of view.
9. A GEM detector apparatus comprising: an insulation layer; a plurality of conduction layers; an inner layer comprising a plurality of helical conductive strips extending between the two ends of the detector.
10. A detection system comprising: a GEM detector comprising a plurality of helical conductive strips extending between the two ends of the detector; and a data acquisition system for acquiring information from the GEM detector.
Description
BRIEF DESCRIPTION OF THE FIGURES
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DETAILED DESCRIPTION
[0025] An embodiment for a cylindrical apparatus for detecting cosmic ray muons using gas electron multiplier (GEM) technology where readout electrodes are oriented in a helical pattern around the apparatus is disclosed. The apparatus is relatively inexpensive to manufacture, affords very high spatial resolution, and can be fit inside a narrow aperture borehole.
[0026] The GEM detector is composed of one or more, concentric, coaxial, cylindrical GEM tracking layers. Each GEM layer has two conductive layers 20, 30, and an insulating layer 10 between the two conductive layers. Each layer has perforations that are coaligned among the layers. The three layers with perforations 75 are collectively a foil. Typically, the diameter of each perforation 75 is similar to the thickness of the layers.
[0027] In an embodiment, the GEM detector has one concentric cylindrical triple-GEM tracking layers, where each layer has a total active length of 300 cm (comprised of multiple segments of 50 cm stacked together).
[0028] The anode plane of the detector is a multi-layer kapton/copper flexible circuit with helical clockwise and counter-clockwise strips. In an embodiment, the GEM detector may be operated with an approximate Ar:C4H10 90:10 gas mixture.
[0029]
[0030] In an embodiment the apparatus 1 has one GEM layer and helically wound conductive strips for readout of the amplified ionization current. The apparatus has an insulating medium 10, inner and outer conductive layers 20, 30 surrounding the insulating medium 10, and an inner layer 50 having readout electrodes 60 on an inner printed circuit board (PCB) 70. The conductive layers have perforations 75 in them for amplification of the ionization charge. In this Figure the perforations 75 are exaggerated for illustration purposes. They are typically closely spaced and have small diameter such that the GEM layer resembles a mesh foil that is only partially opaque.
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[0032] When in use, an electron avalanche forms in the region between the conductive layers, within the perforations (holes) of the insulating layer.
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[0035] In an embodiment, the printed circuit board 70 has one or more layers of conductive strips 80 that are wrapped helically, clockwise and counter-clockwise, around the cylindrical body of the inner layer from the bottom to the top of the apparatus in a helical configuration. In an embodiment, the PCB has two layers of conductive strips that are wrapped exactly once around the cylinder between the two surfaces of the device. The two layers of conductive strips on the PCB are electrically isolated from one another. In an embodiment the PCB is constructed with a flexible material.
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[0037] Referring to
[0038] Supposing that there are m windings in the clockwise and n windings in the counter-clockwise direction (m=4, n=3 in
[0039] These (m+n) possible locations are resolved by using the two-sided measurement to determine where along the set of pickup wires the muon-initiated electron avalanche induced a mirror current. This provides an additional measurement with associated uncertainty indicated by the gradient band. If the uncertainty is narrower than the pitch between the (m+n) possible solutions, then the actual position at which the muon impacts one side of the cylindrical apparatus (the black dot) is uniquely determined.
[0040] During operation, a data acquisition system “reads out”, or measures the current pulse characteristics (e.g., voltage and time) to determine the impact location of a muon-induced electron avalanche along a pickup wire.
[0041] The conductive strips 80 are read out at one or both ends of the detector. In the case of double-sided readout, the relative charge—based on the resistive properties of the strips—and/or relative timing information for readouts on both ends can be further used to interpolate the position of the induced signal from a charged particle along a particular strip.
[0042] In an embodiment, the apparatus has the helix windings >1 for each helix, and the ambiguity of multiple crossings is resolved using the relative charge and/or timing measurements from both ends of each strip.
[0043] Charged particles (such as muons) passing through the ionizing gas liberate electrons which drift towards the GEM layer. Large electron multiplication (electron avalanche) occurs in the 1 or more GEM layers. This avalanche drifts towards the conductive strips on the printed circuit board which are held at a lower potential. The drift current induces a fast response on the readout strips, which can be digitized. By measuring the voltage response on multiple neighbouring strips within any one of the helical bundles, an average position of the pulse across those strips may be interpolated. Then, the intersection of the average strip between the counter wound helices provides a spatial position measurement for where a charged particle (muon) trajectory pierced the cylinder wall. Since the positions of the strips and the system geometry is known, these yield fully 3D space point measurements on piercing the wall of the detector at entry and exit for each charged particle that passes through the detector. The (minimally) two space points provide a straight-line trajectory that can be used to generate a radiographic intensity image, which can be combined from multiple other such sensors to perform muon tomographic analysis.
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LIST OF FEATURES
[0045] 1 apparatus [0046] 10 insulating medium [0047] 20 inner conductive layer [0048] 30 outer conductive layer [0049] 40 enclosure [0050] 50 inner layer of the apparatus [0051] 60 read out electrodes [0052] 70 printed circuit board (PCB) [0053] 75 perforations [0054] 80 conductive strips [0055] 85 muon