Author_Institution :
Univ. of California, Irvine, Irvine, CA, USA
Abstract :
The ARIANNA experiment will observe high-energy cosmogenic neutrino signatures via a large array of autonomous radio listening stations dispersed on the Ross Ice Shelf in Antarctica. Each station in the projected array of 900 stations will contain RF antennas, amplifiers, digitization and real-time triggering circuitry, a CPU with solid-state data storage, and redundant communications paths. Power is provided by both sun and wind. Two prototype stations have been installed, with a hexagonal array of seven stations, with each station 1 km apart, due for deployment over the next two seasons. The station\´s core data acquisition system includes four channels of analog sampling circuits that operate at 2 GHz and achieve over 11 bits of dynamic range. These circuits sample continuously over a 128-sample circular analog storage array. The circuits use a phase-locked loop to generate the 2 GHz internal clocking from a ~30 MHz external clock. Unlike most previous such designs, the high-speed sample clocking is completely synchronous and has very high timing stability, with about 1 ppm RMS jitter. The sampling circuits include the ability to produce a real-time trigger based on pattern-matching of the incoming waveform. Up to 72 patterns can be searched for in parallel, and each pattern looks at 8 consecutive samples, requiring that any or all of the samples be above a high threshold, below a low threshold, in between or a "don\´t care" condition. Each station also includes computing and solid-state event storage, environmental monitoring of voltage and power consumption, wind and temperature conditions, and both long-distance wireless to McMurdo Station and Iridium satellite communications.
Keywords :
analogue-digital conversion; antenna arrays; cosmic ray apparatus; cosmic ray neutrinos; data acquisition; neutrino detection; nuclear electronics; phase locked loops; timing jitter; 2012 voltage environmental monitoring; ARIANNA Antarctic neutrino detector array; CPU; Iridium satellite communications; McMurdo Station; RF antennas; RMS jitter; Ross Ice Shelf; analog sampling circuits; autonomous low-power data acquisition system; autonomous radio listening stations; circular analog storage array; external clock; frequency 2 GHz; hexagonal array; high-energy cosmogenic neutrino signatures; high-speed sample clocking; internal clocking; pattern-matching; phase-locked loop; power consumption; real-time trigger; real-time triggering circuitry; solid-state data storage; timing stability; Astrophysics experiment; Data acquisition;