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Decay Detector Development for Giant Resonance Studies By: Gus Olson Mentor: Dr. Youngblood

Decay Detector Development for Giant Resonance Studies By: Gus Olson Mentor: Dr. Youngblood

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Page 1: Decay Detector Development for Giant Resonance Studies By: Gus Olson Mentor: Dr. Youngblood

Decay Detector Development for Giant Resonance Studies

By: Gus OlsonMentor: Dr. Youngblood

Page 2: Decay Detector Development for Giant Resonance Studies By: Gus Olson Mentor: Dr. Youngblood

Motivation• The energy of the Isoscalar Giant Monopole Resonance (EGMR) can

be used to deduce Knm, the incompressibility of nuclear matter.• Knm is an important parameter in several fields.

– Directly related to the curvature of the equation of state of nuclear matter.

– Helps in understanding nuclear structure and heavy ion collisions – Important value in nuclear astrophysics: supernova collapse and

neutron stars.– Provides a test for theoretical nuclear models, and nucleon-nucleon

effective interactions.• The giant resonance has been thoroughly studied in stable nuclei

over a wide range of A (12C-208Pb).• Future research directed towards the study of giant resonances in

unstable nuclei.

Page 3: Decay Detector Development for Giant Resonance Studies By: Gus Olson Mentor: Dr. Youngblood

Giant Resonances• Collective nuclear excitations• Several oscillation modes: Monopole, Dipole, Quadrapole etc. • Isoscaler and Isovector resonances, as well as electric and

magnetic resonances exist for each resonance mode

isoscalar isoscalarisovector isovector____________magnetic___________________electric____________

Macroscopic diagrams of the giant resonances

Page 4: Decay Detector Development for Giant Resonance Studies By: Gus Olson Mentor: Dr. Youngblood

Measuring Giant Resonances• Procedure for 28Si(α, α’):• MDM Spectrometer

– Beam of 240MeV α’s from the K500 cyclotron is inelastically scattered by target nuclei

– Momentum of scattered particles is analyzed by Dipole magnet

• Focal plane detector – Gas (isobutane) is ionized by

incoming particles– High voltage causes liberated

electrons to drift upwards– 4 resistive wires measure position – Plate at top of detector measures ΔE

for particle identification– Plastic Scintillator measures total

energy and gives a fast signal to trigger the electronics to acquire data.

• Scattering angle and energy for each particle are obtained by using position signals from each wire.

• To clearly identify the monopole resonance small angle (including 0°) measurements are necessary

Focal Plane Detector

TargetChamber

Dipole Magnet

Page 5: Decay Detector Development for Giant Resonance Studies By: Gus Olson Mentor: Dr. Youngblood

Data Analysis

• Giant Resonances exist at about 10-40 MeV excitation energy • Lower energy peaks are single particle excitations• Large peak consists of all Giant Resonance collective excitations• Energy spectrum is separated into peak and continuum

contributions.• Continuum due primarily to knock-out and pick-up→break-up

reactions.

E=240 MeV 28Si(α,α’)

5Li p 5He n The break-up processes

Page 6: Decay Detector Development for Giant Resonance Studies By: Gus Olson Mentor: Dr. Youngblood

Data Analysis (cont.)

• Spectrum is separated into energy “bins” (equal width energy intervals)– Angular distribution for each energy bin

• Each energy bin is fit by a weighted sum of the theoretical cross-sections for each of the resonance modes (from DWBA calculations) .– The weights give the strength

distribution of each resonance mode. – Using the strength functions of the

resonance modes we can obtain the energy of the resonance

28Si

28Si

Page 7: Decay Detector Development for Giant Resonance Studies By: Gus Olson Mentor: Dr. Youngblood

Giant Resonance in Radioactive Nuclei

• Problem: Can’t use a radioactive target: decay products contaminate the target

• Use the inverse reaction, with a radioactive beam.– Low density of gaseous helium target means fewer interactions. Also, it is difficult

to contain the gas in the target chamber.– Beam intensity for a radioactive beam will be much lower so having a solid target

is essential.– Using solid 6Li target allows us to avoid difficulties involved with a gas target.

• We will use 28Si (which is, of course, not radioactive) as a test case to be sure the new detector gives us results consistent with previous methods.

28 28( , *)Si Si28 ( , ')Si Inverse Reaction:Normal Reaction:

28 6 6( , ')Si Li Li 6 28 28( , *)Li Si Si

Page 8: Decay Detector Development for Giant Resonance Studies By: Gus Olson Mentor: Dr. Youngblood

Giant Resonance in Radioactive Nuclei

• Problem: The GR excited state has a very short lifetime

• Excitation energy of 28Si* can only be determined if the scattering angle and energy of both fragments are known.– Large fragments can be detected in the Focal plane detector as

before.– Small fragments require a new detector placed in the target

chamber.

28 27*Si Al p 28 24*Si Mg Two main decay channels

Page 9: Decay Detector Development for Giant Resonance Studies By: Gus Olson Mentor: Dr. Youngblood

Decay Detector• Two 1mm thick layers of

scintillating plastic strips oriented vertically and horizontally measure the scattering angle of α’s and p’s.

• 3’’ thick scintillator blocks measure the total energy of the particles. – Together these scintillators

allow us to make particle determinations

• Scintillators will be connected to photomultiplier tubes (located outside the target chamber) via optical fibers

• Will be able to measure particles at ±35° vertically and horizontally. (each strip measures 5°)

Page 10: Decay Detector Development for Giant Resonance Studies By: Gus Olson Mentor: Dr. Youngblood

Plastic Scintillators• Incoming charged particles lose

energy in the scintillator by exciting the molecules of the scintillator.

• Excited molecules decay by photon emission (peak output at ~420 nm for our scintillators (BC408)).

• Energy loss in the scintillator, and hence the light output, depends on the kinetic energy of the particle, its charge, and the thickness of the scintillator.

• Plastic scintillators are ideal for our needs– Very fast response (~2ns decay time)– Can be easily machined into the

shapes we need for our detector

Page 11: Decay Detector Development for Giant Resonance Studies By: Gus Olson Mentor: Dr. Youngblood

Light Output• Calculating relative light output

– Energy loss per unit length (dE/dx, the stopping power) and range (x) estimates are obtained using a computer program (SRIM).

– Light output is related to energy loss by

– dL/dx is integrated to obtain L(x). • total light output of a particle which stops

completely in the scintillator at a range x.• This can be used for particle

determinations with the 3” scintillators.

– Light output for particles not totally stopped (as in the case of the thin scintillator strips) is obtained using the relation

og(1 )dL dE

L adx dx

225( / ) /a mg cm MeV

Light Output for Protons and Alphas

0

0.20.4

0.6

0.81

1.2

1.4

1.61.8

2

0 50 100 150 200 250 300

E(MeV)

L

Alpha

Proton

1.1415pL =0.0033E

1.2972L =0.0008E

[1] T.J. Gooding and H.G. Pugh, Nuclear Instruments And Methods 7, 189-192

[1]

( ) ( )tL L x L x t Where x=range and t=thickness of scintillator.

Page 12: Decay Detector Development for Giant Resonance Studies By: Gus Olson Mentor: Dr. Youngblood

Optical Fibers

• Operate on the principle of total internal reflection– Most of fiber is core, surrounded

by a thin “cladding” with a lower index of refraction.

– At incident angles greater than the critical angle (θc=sin-1(nc/nf)) all light is reflected internally.

• Plastic optical fibers are flexible and can transmit light even when bent.

• We used fibers 1mm in diameter arranged in bundles to connect the scintillator to the PMT.

Claddingnc=1.49

Corenf=1.6

θ

Page 13: Decay Detector Development for Giant Resonance Studies By: Gus Olson Mentor: Dr. Youngblood

Photomultiplier Tube

• Scintillation photons incident on photocathode.

• Photocathode emits electrons via the photoelectric effect

• High voltage accelerates electron towards dynodes

• On impacting each dynode secondary electrons are emitted

• Avalanche of electrons is converted to an electrical pulse at the anode

Page 14: Decay Detector Development for Giant Resonance Studies By: Gus Olson Mentor: Dr. Youngblood

Test Case

• One scintillator strip connected via optical fibers to a photomultiplier tube with a beta source (90Sr) to test light output.

Fiber-bundle endsPlastic scintillator Photomultiplier tube

Page 15: Decay Detector Development for Giant Resonance Studies By: Gus Olson Mentor: Dr. Youngblood

Testing• We must collect as much of the light as we

can to PMT to get reliable particle detection.

• Scintillation light is emitted in all directions some travels directly to the fibers but most must be reflected at the surface of the Scintillator

– Total internal reflection– External reflection by aluminum foil

• Must have good optical coupling between each of the components

– Surfaces need to be very flat and very clear– Optical cement, and optical grease are used

to make connections• Light Tight

– We must make sure that we can reliably seal off each component from any outside light leaking in or we will get false detects.

– Prevents cross-Talk between different scintillator strips.

Scint.

Al

Internal reflection

External reflection↑

-140

-120

-100

-80

-60

-40

-20

0

20

-20 -10 0 10 20 30

time(ns)

vo

ltag

e(m

V)

Sample PMT output: 7.3” long scintillator, 18” long fibers using a β-source (90Sr).

Page 16: Decay Detector Development for Giant Resonance Studies By: Gus Olson Mentor: Dr. Youngblood

Testing (cont.)• We were concerned that we might not get enough light reflected in

the fibers due to the acceptance angle so we tested wrapping the fibers in Al:– We tested using 2” long fibers that had been wrapped in Al foil but this

showed no change in output amplitude. • Light attenuation in optical fibers:

– Tested with fiber lengths of 2”, 12”, and 18” with no appreciable amplitude difference.

• Light attenuation and reflection losses in scintillator:– Output shows great dependence on the position of the test-source:

~150-200mV with source close to the coupling with the fibers compared with ~40-60mV at the far end of the scintillator.

– The manufacturer’s rating indicates that light attenuation should not be a great problem at such short lengths (1/e of the original amplitude at 210cm), thus it seems that we are losing too much of the light on the multiple reflections down the scintillator.

Page 17: Decay Detector Development for Giant Resonance Studies By: Gus Olson Mentor: Dr. Youngblood

Acknowledgments

• Department of Energy, National Science Foundation, Texas A&M University, Cyclotron Institute.

• DHY group: Dr. Dave H. Youngblood, Dr. Y.-W. Lui, Dr. Yoshiaki Tokimoto, Xinfeng Chen.