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Description
With the natural resources of earth depleting very fast, the natural resources of other celestial bodies are considered a potential replacement. Thus, there has been rise of space missions constantly and with it the need of more sophisticated spectrometer devices has increased. The most important requirement in such an application

With the natural resources of earth depleting very fast, the natural resources of other celestial bodies are considered a potential replacement. Thus, there has been rise of space missions constantly and with it the need of more sophisticated spectrometer devices has increased. The most important requirement in such an application is low area and power consumption.

To save area, some scintillators have been developed that can resolve both neutrons and gamma events rather than traditional scintillators which can do only one of these and thus, the spacecraft needs two such devices. But with this development, the requirements out of the readout electronics has also increased which now need to discriminate between neutron and gamma events.

This work presents a novel architecture for discriminating such events and compares the results with another approach developed by a partner company. The results show excellent potential in this approach for the neutron-gamma discrimination and the team at ASU is going to expand on this design and build up a working prototype for the complete spectrometer device.
ContributorsGupta, Kush (Author) / Barnaby, Hugh (Thesis advisor) / Hardgrove, Craig (Committee member) / Ozev, Sule (Committee member) / Arizona State University (Publisher)
Created2017