Title :
Spectroscopy With Superconducting
Sensor Microcalorimeters
Author :
Koehler, K.E. ; Bennett, Douglas A. ; Bond, Evelyn M. ; Croce, Mark P. ; Dry, D.E. ; Horansky, Robert D. ; Kotsubo, V. ; Moody, W.A. ; Rabin, Michael W. ; Schmidt, Daniel R. ; Ullom, Joel N. ; Vale, Leila R.
Author_Institution :
Los Alamos Nat. Lab., Los Alamos, NM, USA
Abstract :
The total reaction energy (Q) of individual nuclear decays was measured using microcalorimeters with transition-edge-sensor (TES) thermometers. For alpha-decaying actinides (e.g., U-235, Pu-239, Np-237, Am-241), Q is in the 4-6 MeV range. Nearly all of this energy goes into the relatively light alpha particle, and approximately 100 keV is left over for the much heavier, recoiling daughter atom. Alpha-particle energy spectroscopy with TES-microcalorimeters has shown the ability to simultaneously resolve peaks that overlap in conventional alpha spectroscopy, with resolution now less than 1 keV full-width-at-half-maximum (FWHM) at 5.3 MeV. For total reaction energy spectroscopy, we use the same TES design as our alpha detectors, but embed a small radioactive sample (of about 1 Bq) directly inside an absorber designed to capture all the emitted particles (alpha, recoil nucleus, electrons, X-rays) with near 100% efficiency. We have measured Q-spectra of alpha-decaying isotopes with spectral resolution of 2-3 keV FWHM. For some actinide analytical problems, the Q -spectrum is simpler than the alpha-spectrum: fewer peaks, further apart, and easier to quantify. We will discuss sensor design, methods for embedding radionuclides, and spectral data.
Keywords :
alpha-decay; alpha-particle spectra; calorimeters; particle calorimetry; Am-241; Np-237; Pu-239; Q spectroscopy; Q-spectrum; TES thermometers; TES-microcalorimeters; U-235; actinide analytical problems; alpha detectors; alpha-decaying actinides; alpha-particle energy spectroscopy; conventional alpha spectroscopy; electron volt energy 4 MeV to 6 MeV; embedding radionuclides; individual nuclear decays; light alpha particle; recoiling daughter atom; sensor design; small radioactive sample; spectral data; superconducting sensor microcalorimeters; total reaction energy; transition-edge-sensor; Alpha particles; Detectors; Energy measurement; Energy resolution; Gold; Lattices; Spectroscopy; Bolometers; cryogenics; radiation detectors; spectroscopy; superconducting devices;
Journal_Title :
Nuclear Science, IEEE Transactions on
DOI :
10.1109/TNS.2012.2225639