Projection imaging with ultracold neutrons
/ Authors
K. Kuk, C. Cude-Woods, C. Chavez, J. Choi, J. Estrada, M. Hoffbauer, M. Makela, P. Merkel, C. Morris, E. Ramberg
and 42 more authors
Z. Wang, T. Bailey, Matej Blatnik, E. Adamek, L. Broussard, M. Brown, N. Callahan, S. Clayton, S. Currie, X. Ding, D. Dinger, B. Filippone, E. Fries, P. Geltenbort, E. George, F. González, K. Hickerson, K. Hoffman, A. Holley, T. Ito, S. MacDonald, C-Y. Liu, C. O'Shaughnessy, R. Pattie, Jr., D. Phillips, B. Plaster, D. Salvat, A. Saunders, S. Seestrom, E. Sharapov, S. Sjue, V. Su, X. Sun, Z. Tang, P. Walstrom, W. Wei, J. Wexler, T. Womack, A. Young, B. Zeck, Ucn collaboration
/ Abstract
A new boron-coated CCD camera is described for direct detection of ultracold neutrons (UCN) through the capture reactions $^{10}$B (n,$\alpha$0$\gamma$)$^7$Li (6%) and $^{10}$B(n,$\alpha$1$\gamma$)$^7$Li (94%). The experiments, which extend earlier works using a boron-coated ZnS:Ag scintillator, are based on direct detections of the neutron-capture byproducts in silicon. The high position resolution, energy resolution and particle ID performance of a scientific CCD allows for observation and identification of all the byproducts $\alpha$, $^7$Li and $\gamma$ (electron recoils). A signal-to-noise improvement on the order of 10$^4$ over the indirect method has been achieved. Sub-pixel position resolution of a few microns is demonstrated. The technology can also be used to build UCN detectors with an area on the order of 1 m$^2$. The combination of micrometer scale spatial resolution, few electrons ionization thresholds and large area paves the way to new research avenues including quantum physics of UCN and high-resolution neutron imaging and spectroscopy.
Journal: Nuclear Instruments and Methods in Physics Research Section A: Accelerators, Spectrometers, Detectors and Associated Equipment