John Wiley & Sons Signal Processing for Radiation Detectors Cover Presents the fundamental concepts of signal processing for all application areas of ionizing radiati.. Product #: 978-1-119-41014-0 Regular price: $139.25 $139.25 Auf Lager

Signal Processing for Radiation Detectors

Nakhostin, Mohammad

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1. Auflage Dezember 2017
528 Seiten, Hardcover
Wiley & Sons Ltd

ISBN: 978-1-119-41014-0
John Wiley & Sons

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Presents the fundamental concepts of signal processing for all application areas of ionizing radiation

This book provides a clear understanding of the principles of signal processing of radiation detectors. It puts great emphasis on the characteristics of pulses from various types of detectors and offers a full overview on the basic concepts required to understand detector signal processing systems and pulse processing techniques. Signal Processing for Radiation Detectors covers all of the important aspects of signal processing, including energy spectroscopy, timing measurements, position-sensing, pulse-shape discrimination, and radiation intensity measurement.

The book encompasses a wide range of applications so that readers from different disciplines can benefit from all of the information. In addition, this resource:
* Describes both analog and digital techniques of signal processing
* Presents a complete compilation of digital pulse processing algorithms
* Extrapolates content from more than 700 references covering classic papers as well as those of today
* Demonstrates concepts with more than 340 original illustrations

Signal Processing for Radiation Detectors provides researchers, engineers, and graduate students working in disciplines such as nuclear physics and engineering, environmental and biomedical engineering, and medical physics and radiological science, the knowledge to design their own systems, optimize available systems or to set up new experiments.

Preface xi

Acknowledgement xii

1 Signal Generation in Radiation Detectors 1

1.1 Detector Types 1

1.2 Signal Induction Mechanism 2

1.3 Pulses from Ionization Detectors 9

1.4 Scintillation Detectors 57

References 72

2 Signals, Systems, Noise, and Interferences 77

2.1 Pulse Signals: Definitions 77

2.2 Operational Amplifiers and Feedback 80

2.3 Linear Signal Processing Systems 83

2.4 Noise and Interference 101

2.5 Signal Transmission 120

2.6 Logic Circuits 130

References 133

3 Preamplifiers 135

3.1 Background 135

3.2 Charge-Sensitive Preamplifiers 137

3.3 Current-Sensitive Preamplifiers 159

3.4 Voltage-Sensitive Preamplifiers 162

3.5 Noise in Preamplifier Systems 163

3.6 ASIC Preamplifiers 176

3.7 Preamplifiers for Scintillation Detectors 182

3.8 Detector Bias Supplies 186

References 187

4 Energy Measurement 191

4.1 Generals 191

4.2 Amplitude Fluctuations 194

4.3 Amplifier/Shaper 203

4.4 Pulse Amplitude Analysis 234

4.5 Dead Time 244

4.6 ASIC Pulse Processing Systems 249

References 256

5 Pulse Counting and Current Measurements 261

5.1 Background 261

5.2 Pulse Counting Systems 263

5.3 Current Mode Operation 274

5.4 ASIC Systems for Radiation Intensity Measurement 286

5.5 Campbell's Mode Operation 289

References 293

6 Timing Measurements 295

6.1 Introduction 295

6.2 Time Pick-Off Techniques 300

6.3 Time Interval Measuring Devices 320

6.4 Timing Performance of Different Detectors 330

References 345

7 Position Sensing 349

7.1 Position Readout Concepts 349

7.2 Individual Readout 353

7.3 Charge Division Method 357

7.4 Risetime Method 373

7.5 Delay-Line Method 375

References 380

8 Pulse-Shape Discrimination 383

8.1 Principles of Pulse-Shape Discrimination 383

8.2 Amplitude-Based Methods 386

8.3 Zero-Crossing Method 393

8.4 Risetime Measurement Method 399

8.5 Comparison of Pulse-Shape Discrimination Methods 401

References 404

9 Introduction to Digital Signals and Systems 407

9.1 Background 407

9.2 Digital Signals 408

9.3 ADCs 414

9.4 Digital Signal Processing 418

References 438

10 Digital Radiation Measurement Systems 441

10.1 Digital Systems 441

10.2 Energy Spectroscopy Applications 448

10.3 Pulse Timing Applications 472

10.4 Digital Pulse-Shape Discrimination 483

References 498

Index 503
MOHAMMAD NAKHOSTIN earned his PhD in 2008 from the department of Quantum Science and Energy Engineering at the Tohoku University, Sendai, Japan, where he worked as assistant professor till 2010. He is currently a research fellow at the University of Surrey, UK. He has worked on the development of gaseous, semiconductor, and scintillation detectors and their readout electronics systems for a wide range of applications from plasma neutron diagnosis to medical imaging.