Performance of a miniature mechanically cooled HPGe gamma-spectrometer for space applications

We report on the development of a miniaturized HPGe gamma-spectrometer for space applications. The instrument is designed around a 158 cm3 intrinsically pure Ge crystal in the closed-end coaxial configuration, cooled by a Thales RM3 miniature Stirling cycle electric cooler. To compensate the noise i...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of instrumentation 2018-01, Vol.13 (1), p.T01002-T01002, Article T01002
Hauptverfasser: Kondratjev, V., Pchelintsev, A., Jakovlevs, O., Sokolov, A., Gostilo, V., Owens, A.
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:We report on the development of a miniaturized HPGe gamma-spectrometer for space applications. The instrument is designed around a 158 cm3 intrinsically pure Ge crystal in the closed-end coaxial configuration, cooled by a Thales RM3 miniature Stirling cycle electric cooler. To compensate the noise induced by the mechanical cooler the digital procession of the spectrometric signals with low frequency reject filter (LFR) is applied. The complete spectrometer assembly has a mass of 3.1 kg and consumes less than 10 W under working operation. The spectrometer was tested under a number of operating conditions in a specially designed chamber, which simulates the space environment. With the mechanical cooler switched off, FWHM energy resolutions of 1.5 keV and 2.2 keV were obtained at 122 keV and 1333 keV, respectively, at the nominal operating temperature of 90 K. When the cooler was switched on the energy resolutions degraded to 2.5 keV and 4 keV respectively. However, with the LFR filter switched in, the resolutions improved significantly to 1.8 keV and 2.4 keV.
ISSN:1748-0221
1748-0221
DOI:10.1088/1748-0221/13/01/T01002