A Pa UNITED STATES. November 1956 [TISE Issuance Date] David Sarnoff Research Center Princeton, New Jersey

Similar documents
CHAPTER 9 POSITION SENSITIVE PHOTOMULTIPLIER TUBES

High-]FrequencyElectric Field Measurement Using a Toroidal Antenna

Measurements of MeV Photon Flashes in Petawatt Laser Experiments

High Explosive Radio Telemetry System. Federal Manufacturing & Technologies. R. Johnson, FM&T; B. Mclaughlin, FM&T;

SECONDARY ELECTRON DETECTION

22/ HASL-109 THE ATTENUATION OF NATURAL ENVIRONMENTAL RADIATION BY AN AUTOMOBILE

UNITED STATES ATOMIC ENERGY COMMISSION PULSE AMPLIFIERS USING TRANSISTOR CIRCUITS. January 23, 1958 *

PROCEEDINGS OF A SYMPOSIUM HELD AT THE CAVENDISH LABORATORY, CAMBRIDGE, Edited by

PHOTOMULTIPLIER TUBE SATURATION INDICATOR. Jeffery F. Ruch P.O. Box 79 West Mifflin, PA. David J. Urban. West Mifflin, PA DISCLAIMER

INFRARED MEASUREMENTS OF THE SYNTHETIC DIAMOND WINDOW OF A 110 GHz HIGH POWER GYROTRON

Measurements of edge density profile modifications during IBW on TFTR

The ACT External HEPA Push-Through Filter Assembly. A. A. Frigo, S. G. Wiedmeyer, D. E. Preuss, E. F. Bielick, and R. F. Malecha

RF Time Measuring Technique With Picosecond Resolution and Its Possible Applications at JLab. A. Margaryan

THE 110 GHz MICROWAVE HEATING SYSTEM ON THE DIII D TOKAMAK

APPLICATION NOTE

Tutorial: designing a converging-beam electron gun and focusing solenoid with Trak and PerMag

MAGNETRON DEVELOPMENT. R.R.Moats

Experiment 10. The Speed of Light c Introduction Apparatus

Ground-based optical auroral measurements

AN IN-LINE POWER MONITOR FOR HE11 LOW LOSS TRANSMISSION LINES

($E.. DISCLAIMER. b C

Page 1. Ground-based optical auroral measurements. Background. CCD All-sky Camera with filterwheel. Image intensifier

A simple and compact high-voltage switch mode power supply for streak cameras

8854 Photomultiplier. 129-mm (5-inch) Diameter, 14-stage QUANTACON TM Type Having a Bialkali Photocathode and High- Gain Gallium-Phosphide Dynodes

DISCLAIMER. Portions of this document may be illegible in electronic image products. Images are produced from the best available original document.

LOS ALAMOS SCIENTIFIC LABORATORY. of the University of California. Threading and Assembly of. Soft Delta-Stabilized Plutonium Parts

k SLAC-PUB-7583 July 1997 Co/vF PULSE TRANSFORMER R&D FOR NLC KLYSTRON PULSE MODULATOR*

DETECTORS Important characteristics: 1) Wavelength response 2) Quantum response how light is detected 3) Sensitivity 4) Frequency of response

THE MEASURED PERFORMANCE OF A 170 GHz REMOTE STEERING LAUNCHER

GA A22712 DIII D ICRF HIGH VOLTAGE POWER SUPPLY REGULATOR UPGRADE

Figure Cutaway view of the Phasitron tube, which is used as the modulator and upon which the operation of the GE f-m transmitter is based.

Los Alamos. Low-Field Magnetic Resonance Imaging of. David M. Schmidt, Michelle A. Espy, P-21

CHAPTER 11 HPD (Hybrid Photo-Detector)

Scintillation Counters

' Institut fuer Kernphysik, Strahlenzentrum, JLU Giessen, Germany 3

A. ABSORPTION OF X = 4880 A LASER BEAM BY ARGON IONS

Physics 4BL: Electricity and Magnetism Lab manual. UCLA Department of Physics and Astronomy

(Refer Slide Time: 00:10)

Meshing Challenges in Simulating the Induced Currents in Vacuum Phototriode

STP-PT-032 BUCKLING OF CYLINDRICAL, THIN WALL, TRAILER TRUCK TANKS AND ASME SECTION XII

D. F. Spencer R. Aryaeinejad E. L. Reber. October 2001

Notes on the VPPEM electron optics

Report on Ghosting in LL94 RAR Data

DEVELOPMENT OF THE PULSE TRANSFORMER FOR NLC KLYSTRON PULSE MODULATOR* Abstract

Scintillators as an external trigger for cathode strip chambers

EARTH-POTENTIAL ELECTRODES PERMAFROST AND TUNDRA

UCRL-ID Broad-Band Characterization of the Complex Permittivity and Permeability of Materials. Carlos A. Avalle

ADJUSTABLE CUTTING TOOL HOLDER INVENTORS WILLIAM LEE STEINHOUR Goneaway Lane Glenarm, Illinois DREW WEST

Evaluation of Roof Bolting Requirements Based on In-Mine Roof Bolter Drilling

Measurement of the FD camera light collection efficiency and uniformity

IB2-1 HIGH AVERAGE POWER TESTS OF A CROSSED-FIELD CLOSING SWITCH>:< Robin J. Harvey and Robert W. Holly

RCA REVIEW. A Quarterly Journal of Radio Progress Published in July, October, January and April of Each Year by

A Practical Guide to Free Energy Devices

Guide to SPEX Optical Spectrometer

GA A22776 THE DESIGN AND PERFORMANCE OF WAVEGUIDE TRANSMISSION LINE COMPONENTS FOR PLASMA ELECTRON CYCLOTRON HEATING (ECH) SYSTEMS

Hardware-in-the-Loop Testing of Wireless Systems in Realistic Environments

M Y F I R T A T V S Y S T E M By Luiz Amaral PY1LL/AC2BR

OPTI510R: Photonics. Khanh Kieu College of Optical Sciences, University of Arizona Meinel building R.626

CORRECTED RMS ERROR AND EFFECTIVE NUMBER OF BITS FOR SINEWAVE ADC TESTS

Performance of Image Intensifiers in Radiographic Systems

GA A24030 ECE RADIOMETER UPGRADE ON THE DIII D TOKAMAK

Performance of Keck Adaptive Optics with Sodium Laser Guide Stars

Detector And Front-End Electronics Of A Fissile Mass Flow Monitoring System

Five-beam Fabry-Perot velocimeter

High collection efficiency MCPs for photon counting detectors

PERFORMANCE OF THE 110 GHz SYSTEM ON THE DIII D TOKAMAK

The Absolute Detection Efficiency of Vacuum Electron Multipliers, to kev Protons and Ar + Ions.

Secondary Electron Detector

83092 Photomultiplier Family

GA A22574 ADVANTAGES OF TRAVELING WAVE RESONANT ANTENNAS FOR FAST WAVE HEATING SYSTEMS

Design of Kickerhiurnper Magnet and PF'N for PAR

Vertex Detector Mechanics

Introduction to Radar Systems. Radar Antennas. MIT Lincoln Laboratory. Radar Antennas - 1 PRH 6/18/02

Estimation of the Loss in the ECH Transmission Lines for ITER

A Multilevel Voltage-Source Converter System with Balanced DC Voltages' Abstract

Components of Optical Instruments

Armlication For United States Patent For HOT CELL SHIELD PLUG EXTRACTION APPARATUS. Philip A. Knapp Moore, ID. and. Larry K. Manhart Pingree, ID

Application of Ultrasonic Guided Waves for Characterization of Defects in Pipeline of Nuclear Power Plants. Younho Cho

DST-2000C. Direction Sensing Tachometer INSTRUCTION MANUAL

Design and Application of a Quadrupole Detector for Low-Voltage Scanning Electron Mcroscopy

Franck-Hertz measurement of the excitation energy of mercury

A REGULATED POWER SUPPLY FOR THE FILAMENTS OF A HIGH POWER GYROTRON

Accelerator and Fusion Research Division Lawrence Berkeley Laboratory University of California Berkeley, CA 94720

GA A SOLID-STATE HIGH VOLTAGE MODULATOR WITH OUTPUT CONTROL UTILIZING SERIES-CONNECTED IGBTs by J.F. TOOKER and P. HUYNH

Introduction to Radar Systems. The Radar Equation. MIT Lincoln Laboratory _P_1Y.ppt ODonnell

Status of the large area MCP-PMT in China

Magnetron. Physical construction of a magnetron

Lecture 12 OPTICAL DETECTORS

Franck-Hertz measurement of the excitation energy of mercury

Office europeen des Publication number : EUROPEAN PATENT APPLICATION

Optical Pumping Control Unit

Specification of APS Corrector Magnet Power Supplies from Closed Orbit Feedback Considerations.

Development of the 170GHz gyrotron and equatorial launcher for ITER

GA A22583 FAST WAVE ANTENNA ARRAY FEED CIRCUITS TOLERANT OF TIME-VARYING LOADING FOR DIII D

The Light Amplifier Concept

EXPERIMENT 3 THE PHOTOELECTRIC EFFECT

INITIAL RESULTS FROM THE MULTI-MEGAWATT 110 GHz ECH SYSTEM FOR THE DIII D TOKAMAK

cycle to cycle, so errors can be used to update the reference waveforms for future cycles. At A P S, updates are

CERN LIBRARIES, GENEVA

HF Upgrade Studies: Characterization of Photo-Multiplier Tubes

Transcription:

UNCLASSIFIED RIB-17 A Pa, PR I 1958 UNITED STATES ATOMIC ; ^ rc ENERGY INSTRUMENTATION COMMISSION ELECTRONIC DEVICES FOR NUCLEAR PHYSICS; A REPORT ON PHOTOMULTIPLIER TUBE DEVELOPMENT Quarterly Report No. 24 for May 1, 1956July 31, 1956 By M. H. Greenblatt R. M. Matheson A. H. Sommer G. O. Fowler November 1956 [TISE Issuance Date] David Sarnoff Research Center Princeton, New Jersey Technical Information Service Extension, Oak Ridge, Tenn. UNCLASSIFIED

LEGAL NOTICE This report was prepared as an account of Government sponsored work. Neither the United States, nor the Commission, nor any person acting on behalf of the Commission: A. Makes any warranty or representation, express or implied, with respect to the accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of the information contained in this report, or that the use of any information, apparatus, method, or process -disclosed in this report may riot infringe privately owned rights; or B. Assumes any liabilities with respect to the use of, or for damages resulting from the use of any information, apparatus, method, or process disclosed in this report. As used in the above, "person acting on behalf of the Commission" includes any em ployee or contractor of the Commission to the extent that such employee or contractor prepares, handles or distributes, or provides access to, any information pursuant to his employment or contract with the Commission. This report has been reproduced directly from the best available copy. Printed in USA. Price 20 cents. Available from the Office of Technical Serv ices, Department of Commerce, Washington 25, D. C. AEC, Oak Ridge, Term.

RIB-17 Quarterly Report No, 24 Contract W-7405-eng-26 Sub-308 With Atomic Energy Commission For Oak Ridge National Laboratory ELECTRONIC DEVICES FOR NUCLEAR PHYSICS A Report on Photornultiplier Tube Development May l f 1956 - July 31, 1956 Work done by: Technical direction by; M. H. Greenblatt G. A. Norton R» M. Matheson A. H. Soramer G» 0. Powler RCA LABORATORIES DAVID SARNOFP RESEARCH CENTER PRINCETON, N. J. iii

I. Time Resolution Measurements of Existing Multiplier Structures Measurements of transit time spread were continued, using tubes of the H6?91 type described in previous reports* Earlier tests on the 931-A structure had indicated that this structure is as fast as the L-l6 dynode structure, since then, It has become apparent that In addition to the main pulse of electrons there may be a relatively long "tail." This tail of electrons was spread out over more than 1/2 cycle at f>0 me* In order to see more clearly the effect of this tail on the general pulse shape, it was decided to perform the experiment at 20 me. The f> we oscillator and amplifier, which had been used in testing the 6292 multiplier structure, was modified to operate at 20 me. At this frequency, operation of the tube seems completely satisfactory. Detailed measurements on this tube have not yet been taken, but indications are that the 931-A structure is not quite as fast the the L-16 structure. Another type H6?91 tube is being prepared to investigate the dynode structure of the H&934 (3/4 ft dia.) multiplier tube. It is expected that the reduced dimensions of this tube will result in improved high speed performance.

II* Multiplier Structures with Improved Time Resolution Work has been continued on the design of the multiply ing structure for a fast high-gain photomultiplier having a space charge limited output current exceeding one ampere, utilizing central accelerating electrodes at a common high potential, and having transit time dispersion substantially»q less than 3*10 seconds. However, effort on this phase of the project has been reduced during this quarter to devote more time to the improvement of the time resolution in the photocathode-first dynode region. This has been done since lack of time resolution in this latter region is the major factor limiting resolution in present tubes and since, further more, full advantage cannot be obtained from Improved multi plier performance until the time dispersion in the photocathode- first dynode region is substantially reduced. Design modifications have been investigated on the rubber model. Of the considerable number examined, one gave indication of significant improvement in the collection of electrons at the receiving dynode. It is planned to calculate the trajectories obtained with this modification. An alternative approach to obtain improved time resolution Is to reduce the electron path lengths In the multiplier. This may be done by redesign or by simple scaling. Many multiplier structures employ complicated dynodes which are impractical to fabricate at reduced scale. However, a

multiplier structure, designed at these Laboratories for use In a 3/4-inch tube, has the attractive feature that simple cylindrical dynodes are used. The original tube used an Inherently slow first dynode to couple the electrons from the photocathode to the main multiplier structure. Redesign of the early stages of this multiplier has been completed oti the rubber model. A design involving bending of the structure in a fashion similar to the 68lo has been evolved/ Only simple cylindrical dynodes are used. Construction of a large scale model tube to test this design Is underway, A sketch of this tube is shown In Pig, 1, It will be noted that this structure incorporates a double aperture plate* This will be used to check the feasibility of operating the first aperture plate at high potential to reduce transit time in the photocathode region; in particular, it will show whether fields penetrating from the photocathode apace will distort excessively the first to second dynode region.

III. Time Resolution of photocathode-first Dynode System A. Measuring Equipment The measuring equipment, patterned after that used at the University of California, consists of a switch tube from a Western Electric 2? type relay which provides two outputs, one a light pulse having a rise time of the order of one-half millimicrosecond, the other an electrical pulse of similar rise time. Observations of time resolution in the photocathode-f irst dynode space are made by observing, on a high speed oscilloscope, the relative delay which occurs when various portions of the photocathode are exposed to the light pulse. B. Measurements Time dispersion In the photocathode region has been measured in standard 68lo tubes and in tubes with 6810 multi plier structures but incorporating variations of photocathode region geometry. Two tubes with five inch photocathodes have also been measured. Sketches of the electrode geometries of these tubes are shown in pig, 2. flhe measured relative delays in the 6810 type structures are shown in Pig. 3. The structure of the flat cathode 6810 is shown in Pig. 2(a), The special 6810 is shown in Pig. 2(b): the inner section of the cathode was spherical with a radius of 63 ram surrounded by a flat annulus. The structure of H-6720-69 is given in Fig, 2(c), the cathode radius being 30 mm.

In these measurements, the additional cylindrical electrode in front of the aperture plate was operated at aperture plate potential. The five inch tube is shown in Fig, 2(d), It is quite obvious from these measurements that an improvement in time resolution of at least a factor of five is possible by choosing a properly curved cathode* possibly the addition of another electrode such as the cylinder in H-6720-69 will be required to achieve a factor of ten. There Is certainly reason for believing that a factor of ten can be reached with relatively simple changes of electrode structure.

IV* Studies of Collection Efficiency For optimum tube performance, it is essential that not only the time resolution in the photocathode region be improved but also that the collection efficiency be improved. Two tubes to investigate collection and the electron optics in the photocathode region have been completed* These tubes were designed to test the feasibility of examining the shape of the electron beam arising from illumination of various portions of the photocathode by slightly deflecting the beam with an alternating magnetic field and causing it to sweep over a sampling collector placed at the first dynode position, i Fig. 4 shows the electrode geometry of these tubes. One tube has a flat cathode, the other a spherical cathode. Measurements with the first tube indicate that magnetic deflection is a practical tool which will be helpful in the analysis of performance in the photocathode region. The second tube, with a spherical cathode, has just been completed but no measurements have been made. The next step will be to construct similar but more flexible structures and examine their performance with this technique,

' ' ', '. V. 9" Diameter Multiplier Phototube (H6690) " :» i,,?,,j ' '*'<;,'.''''.'. Earlier measurements on 9" tubes (of the type described in Quarterly Reports Nos. 17 and 19) indicated that the effect of the earth's magnetic field causes some non-uniformity in the electron paths so that the electron optical design of the tube could not be evaluated with sufficient accuracy. -;... ^ ^ An arrangement was therefore developed whereby the earth's field could be compensated within a volume of approximately 10 in^, A set of large Helmholtz coils of square cross-section was used in which one ampere ' ' '. produces a field of approximately one gauss* In order to adjust these coils to optimum field conditions, means for measuring magnetic fields as small as 0,05? gauss were required. For this purpose a rotating coil flux meter was built. Fig. 5* A photograph of the meter is shown in The coil consists of 1000 turns of #30 wire wound on a 1-1/2" fora and it rotates at 3600 rpm. This coil generates a voltage of 3 millivolts if it is placed in a magnetic field of 0.1 gauss. Using this flux meter, it was possible to reduce the remanent field below 0.1 gauss within the space of the photocathode to first dynode region. This correction resulted in a great improvement in the uniformity of electron collection over most of the cathode area, provided optimum voltages are applied to the various focusing electrodes.

Utader these optimum conditions, several focusing electrodes have potentials below the first dynode potential. This introduces the possibility that some of the primary photoelectrons may produce secondaries from these electrodes rather than following a direct path to the first dynode. There is no simple means to find out experimentally if this effect occurs. A new tube is now in preparation with a large number of dynodes to obtain higher gain and thus to allow speed measurements similar to those described in the preceding section. These measurements should indicate whether an appreciable portion of the photoelectrons is delayed by intermediate incidence on one or more of the focusing electrodes*

I-/, \(

* he let riwe we 10.

11.

e i I t I t i\ se \ f # \ I 1' i i v w -^» >? it I t t I I \ V M

13. * *i * *» «*»* * * I I 1 1 **«*< 1 *