Collector Box

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Figure 1. Black collector box on Gammasphere, circled in white; yellow-encased power supply above collector box and gray VME crate below.

As a part of Gammasphere's upgraded DAQ system, a new "collector box" has been added. The collector box collects and maps all analog signals for up to 30 detectors, coming from the pickoff card in the SBX to the collector, and being output to the digitizers. For concepts like "electric honeycomb", the collector box implements distinct hardware to accurately route signals to the digitizer. It does this this by utilizing time synchronization with its access to the trigger system to ensure that the correct set of samples are used for the reconstruction of each BGO waveform. Control and monitoring of Gammasphere's modules are maintained with the help of the collector box, using EPICS IOC. It provides power to individual SBX units via a singular 48V input from the power supply (above the circled collector box in the image to the right).

The collector box was created to replace the inefficient system that preceded it, known as VXI crates. They consisted of multiple boards and racks, including over a hundred heavy, 60-foot multi-conductor cables that were draped all around Gammasphere. Detector slope boxes were connected directly to an entirely separate system called the VXI system, which would convert the signals to digitizer-readable differential signals before sending them off to "VXI digitizers". The VXI system had an entire "shack" designated to it, whereas the collector box upgrade can now be attached directly to Gammasphere's chassis and contain the DAQ system near the detectors. The previous system took up physical space within the room and presented a heat issue as well as multiple obsolescence risks and possibilities of power supply failure. The collector box eliminates these risks, and physically and digitally optimizes the overall system.

Collector Box Hardware

Throughout Gammasphere

Figure 2. A top-view mapping of Gammasphere's collector box setup.

Figure 1 shows a hemisphere of Gammasphere, and two of the collector boxes placed on it. On the other side of Gammasphere, there are another two collector boxes with the rest of the DAQ. This is because Gammasphere has four collector boxes and VME crates, each of which power and receive data from approximately 30 detectors. Figure two shows all of this from an above point of view. The semicircle “N” represents the Gammasphere’s northern hemisphere, while “S” represents Gammasphere’s southern hemisphere. Each collector box is shown (in the diagram) from the connector side, where cables are plugged in for data acquisition. All four are paired with their VME crate, where the arrangement of digitizers, IOCs, and trigger modules are carefully placed. Note that Figure 2 is giving a closeup of the system, but Figure 1 represents what the DAQ system actually looks like in real life.

In Each Collector Box

Figure 3. Collector box hardware