A compact ultra-clean system for deploying radioactive sources inside the KamLAND detector

Authors
  • T.I. Banks
  • S.J. Freedman
  • J. Wallig
  • N. Ybarrolaza
  • A. Gando
  • Y. Gando
  • H. Ikeda
  • K. Inoue
  • Y. Kishimoto
  • M. Koga
  • T. Mitsui
  • K. Nakamura
  • I. Shimizu
  • J. Shirai
  • A. Suzuki
  • Y. Takemoto
  • K. Tamae
  • K. Ueshima
  • H. Watanabe
  • B.D. Xu
  • H. Yoshida
  • S. Yoshida
  • A. Kozlov
  • C. Grant
  • G. Keefer
  • A. Piepke
  • T. Bloxham
  • B.K. Fujikawa
  • K. Han
  • K. Ichimura
  • H. Murayama
  • T. O'Donnell
  • H.M. Steiner
  • L.A. Winslow
  • D.A. Dwyer
  • R.D. McKeown
  • C. Zhang
  • B.E. Berger
  • C.E. Lane
  • J. Maricic
  • T. Miletic
  • M. Batygov
  • J.G. Learned
  • S. Matsuno
  • M. Sakai
  • G.A. Horton-Smith
  • K.E. Downum
  • G. Gratta
  • Y. Efremenko
  • O. Perevozchikov
  • H.J. Karwowski
  • D.M. Markoff
  • W. Tornow
  • K.M. Heeger
  • J.A. Detwiler
  • S. Enomoto
  • M.P. Decowski
Publication date 2015
Journal Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A - Accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment
Volume | Issue number 769
Pages (from-to) 88-96
Organisations
  • Faculty of Science (FNWI) - Institute of Physics (IoP) - Institute for High Energy Physics (IHEF)
Abstract
We describe a compact, ultra-clean device used to deploy radioactive sources along the vertical axis of the KamLAND liquid-scintillator neutrino detector for purposes of calibration. The device worked by paying out and reeling in precise lengths of a hanging, small-gauge wire rope (cable); an assortment of interchangeable radioactive sources could be attached to a weight at the end of the cable. All components exposed to the radiopure liquid scintillator were made of chemically compatible UHV-cleaned materials, primarily stainless steel, in order to avoid contaminating or degrading the scintillator. To prevent radon intrusion, the apparatus was enclosed in a hermetically sealed housing inside a glove box, and both volumes were regularly flushed with purified nitrogen gas. An infrared camera attached to the side of the housing permitted real-time visual monitoring of the cable׳s motion, and the system was controlled via a graphical user interface.
Document type Article
Language English
Published at https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nima.2014.09.068
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