MainPage:Nuclear:Summer2012:PrototypeSimulation

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This is the page for the simulations Laura is doing in GEMC.

June14 1b m n1.png

A few notes about the simulation:

  • The PMT window is 100% efficient, so all photons that hit the surface are detected as hits.
  • The aerogel has a refractive index of 1.03
  • The "MillipMylar" (a material written by Marco to simulate the Mylar lining in the prototype) lining of the box is not diffusely reflective
  • User inputs such as particle type, momentum and position, as well as the number of particle events can be changed in the executable file (exe.s); geometry parameters are changed in the perl script (build_summer.pl).


Number of Tiles

A number of runs were preformed to study the effect of the number of aerogel tiles (or thickness of a single aerogel tile) has on the efficiency of the detector (ie. how many photons are detected). It can be seen from the plot below (Figure 1) that the relationship is incredibly linear, as would be expected. Further runs will study at what point the thickness of the aerogel becomes detrimental to the efficiency (ie. the light produced inside the aerogel is absorbed without escaping the aerogel).

Aerogel 6cm.jpg


Particle Momentum vs. Number of Detected Photons

Similar to simulations run summer 2011 using the Fortran Monte Carlo program SimCherenkov, I used this GEMC simulation to study the momentum threshold of the incident particle for aerogel of index 1.03. The results seem to be consistent with the behavior seen from the SimCherenkov simulation.

Below is a plot of the number of detected photons vs. the momentum of the incident particle for Kaons, Pion, Muons and Protons at low GeV. File:Momentum2.pdf

Position of Incident Particle

Simulations are underway to study the effect of the position of the incident particle on the total number of photons detected. Preliminary results (below) show that there is a threshold at which the efficiency drastically diminishes, most likely because the angle at which the particle enters the detector exceeds the path through the aerogel.

Angle1.jpg


Progress Reports

| June 27, 2012 || File:27June.pdf