Gammasphere: Difference between revisions

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Image:GScloseup.jpg|thumb|700px|GammaSphere
poly 1501 444 1203 988 1151 1494 1803 1568 1821 1118 2203 904 1897 564 [[Gammasphere Detectors]]
poly 111 637 691 538 941 451 1105 733 1061 1525 329 1891 313 1063 [[Gammasphere Detectors]]
poly 497 297 611 239 727 507 601 539 [[The Slope Box]]
poly 937 375 1019 387 959 597 [[The Slope Box]]
poly 267 397 471 683 203 419 [[The Slope Box]]
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Gammasphere is the world's most powerful spectrometer for nuclear structure research. Built in the early 1990s, it centers around unique experiments involving nuclear physics. It is particularly tailored to collect gamma ray data following heavy-ion fusion. Beams of ions are directed at a target (usually a thin metal film). Nuclei from the beam fuse with those in the target, producing highly excited, much heavier nuclei. Gammasphere detects gamma rays — high-energy light particles — emitted from the excited nuclei as they spin and cool. This is done with 110 [[High Purity Germanium (HPGe)]] [[Gammasphere Detectors|detectors]]. Each germanium detector is surrounded by bismuth germanium oxide (BGO), which allows for the suppression of background resulting from gamma-rays whose energies are not completely absorbed by the germanium detector. The data is collected using hardware on Gammasphere and on each detector.
 
==Hardware==
To acquire the desired data, each detector goes through data collection as a part of a larger data acquisition system ([[DAQ system]]).  The DAQ system is now fully digital, having been updated fully from an analog system in 2023. Attached to every Ge detector is a [[The Slope Box|slope box]] and [[The Slope Box Extension|SBX]].  They take data from a [[Preamplifier|preamplifier]] inside each detector and prepare to send it off to the greater [[DAQ system]]. Below are parts of the hardware that enable data acquisition.
* [[Gammasphere Detectors|'''Detectors''']]  
 
* [[The Slope Box|'''Slope Box''']]
 
* [[The Slope Box Extension|'''SBX''']]
 
* '''[[DAQ Power Supply]]'''
 
* [[Collector Box|'''Collector Box''']]
 
* '''[[VME Crates]]'''
 
==Researcher Data Acquisition==
Whenever research is being conducted with Gammasphere, data is collected and controlled by the researcher using the EPICS interface, called [[DGS Commander EDM Screens|EDM]]. EPICS is an acronym for “Experimental Physics and Instrumentation Control System”.  It refers to software that provides a common network framework for computers to collectively manage a distributed database of control and monitoring values and for user interface software on a Linux box to provide a graphical user interface to those control and monitoring values. The discrete control and monitoring values in EPICS are called Process Variables, usually abbreviated as PV.  A “PV” is one discrete value for control or monitoring that can be a numerical value, a bit-field with discrete selections or just a single bit. The graphical user interface program EPICS uses is called EDM, for “Extensible Display Manager”.  EDM allows EPICS to represent PVs as visual controls – text boxes for values, drop-down selections for bit-fields, check boxes or buttons for single bits.

Latest revision as of 18:07, March 10, 2023

Gammasphere DetectorsGammasphere DetectorsThe Slope BoxThe Slope BoxThe Slope Box
GammaSphere

Gammasphere is the world's most powerful spectrometer for nuclear structure research. Built in the early 1990s, it centers around unique experiments involving nuclear physics. It is particularly tailored to collect gamma ray data following heavy-ion fusion. Beams of ions are directed at a target (usually a thin metal film). Nuclei from the beam fuse with those in the target, producing highly excited, much heavier nuclei. Gammasphere detects gamma rays — high-energy light particles — emitted from the excited nuclei as they spin and cool. This is done with 110 High Purity Germanium (HPGe) detectors. Each germanium detector is surrounded by bismuth germanium oxide (BGO), which allows for the suppression of background resulting from gamma-rays whose energies are not completely absorbed by the germanium detector. The data is collected using hardware on Gammasphere and on each detector.

Hardware

To acquire the desired data, each detector goes through data collection as a part of a larger data acquisition system (DAQ system). The DAQ system is now fully digital, having been updated fully from an analog system in 2023. Attached to every Ge detector is a slope box and SBX. They take data from a preamplifier inside each detector and prepare to send it off to the greater DAQ system. Below are parts of the hardware that enable data acquisition.

Researcher Data Acquisition

Whenever research is being conducted with Gammasphere, data is collected and controlled by the researcher using the EPICS interface, called EDM. EPICS is an acronym for “Experimental Physics and Instrumentation Control System”. It refers to software that provides a common network framework for computers to collectively manage a distributed database of control and monitoring values and for user interface software on a Linux box to provide a graphical user interface to those control and monitoring values. The discrete control and monitoring values in EPICS are called Process Variables, usually abbreviated as PV. A “PV” is one discrete value for control or monitoring that can be a numerical value, a bit-field with discrete selections or just a single bit. The graphical user interface program EPICS uses is called EDM, for “Extensible Display Manager”. EDM allows EPICS to represent PVs as visual controls – text boxes for values, drop-down selections for bit-fields, check boxes or buttons for single bits.