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Study of silicon photomultipliers for the readout of scintillator crystals in the proposed GRIPS γ-ray astronomy mission

Among the top priorities for high-energy astronomy in the coming decade are sensitive surveys in the hard X-ray/soft γ-ray (10-600 keV) and medium-energy γ-ray (0.2-80 MeV) bands. Historically, observations in the soft and medium energy γ-ray bands have been conducted using detectors based on inorganic scintillators read out by photo-multiplier tubes (PMTs). These observations were limited by the modest energy and time resolution of traditional scintillator materials (e.g. NaI and CsI), and by the demands on mission resources imposed by the bulky, fragile, high-voltage PMTs. Recent technological advances in the development of both new scintillator materials (e.g. LaBr3:Ce, L(Y)SO) and new scintillation light readout devices (e.g. Silicon Photo-Multipliers) promise to greatly improve the observational capabilities of future scintillator-based γ--ray telescopes, while retaining the relative simplicity, reliability, large collection volumes, and low-cost of scintillator instruments. We present initial results of a study on the use of silicon photomultipliers in the calorimeter module design of the proposed GRIPS astrophysics mission.

preprint2013arXivOpen access

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