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Enhancing the ATIC Charge ResolutionThe Advanced Thin Ionization Calorimeter (ATIC) experiment measures the energy spectra of elements, from H to Fe, in the energy region from about 100 GeV to tens of TeV. The ATIC instrument was flown twice in long-duration balloon flights around the South Pole; the ATIC-1 test flight during Dec. 2000 - Jan. 2001 and the ATIC-2 science flight during Dec. 2002 - Jan. 2003. Analyses of both datasets have, to date, relied upon the highly segmented Silicon Matrix (SiM) detector to separate the incident cosmic ray from the calorimeter backscatter and to identify the charge. This method has worked well, enabling ATIC to separate protons from helium and to resolve all the major species up through iron. This charge resolution can be significantly improved by restricting the analysis to particle trajectories that pass through two SiM pixels at the cost of using only a fraction of the potential instrument geometry. However, immediately below the SiM is the two layer SI hodoscope (x, y) consisting of Bicron BC-408 plastic scintillator 2 cm wide, 1 cm thick, 88.2 cm long strips viewed by Hamamatsu R5611 photomultiplier tubes on each end of each strip. The primary purpose of the ATIC hodoscopes is to provide a fast trigger, and each hodoscope includes two crossed layers of strips (42 per layer in the case of Sl) providing supplemental particle trajectory information. The hodoscope readout electronics were designed to provide reasonable charge resolution over the dynamic range from protons through iron. This presentation discusses the S 1 hodoscope energy deposit calibrations, examines the charge resolution possible with this detector and investigates combining the S1 and SiM charge measurements to improve the overall ATIC charge resolution while minimizing degradation of the instrument geometry.
Document ID
20060047792
Acquisition Source
Marshall Space Flight Center
Document Type
Conference Paper
Authors
Guzik, T. G.
(Louisiana State Univ. Baton Rouge, LA, United States)
Adams, J. H., Jr.
(NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Huntsville, AL, United States)
Ahn, H. S.
(Maryland Univ. College Park, MD, United States)
Bashindzhagyan, G. L.
(Moscow State Univ. Russian Federation)
Batkov, K. E.
(Moscow State Univ. Russian Federation)
Chang, J.
(Academia Sinica China)
Christl, M.
(NASA Marshall Space Flight Center Huntsville, AL, United States)
Fazely, A. R.
(Southern Univ. Baton Rouge, LA, United States)
Ganel, O.
(Maryland Univ. College Park, MD, United States)
Gunashingha, R. M.
(Southern Univ. Baton Rouge, LA, United States)
Date Acquired
August 23, 2013
Publication Date
January 1, 2006
Subject Category
Solar Physics
Meeting Information
Meeting: 36th COSPAR Scientific Assembly
Location: Beijing
Country: China
Start Date: July 16, 2006
End Date: July 23, 2006
Sponsors: Committee on Space Research
Distribution Limits
Public
Copyright
Other

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