Electron Accelerator for Detector Characterization with Incident Particle Energies Between 0.1 to 1 MeV Construction and Experimental Result Updates

ORAL

Abstract

Neutron decay provides a mechanism for studying the fundamental properties of the weak nuclear force. Modern neutron decay experiments require accurate energy reconstruction, which must be corrected for energy loss due to bremsstrahlung radiation during detection. A linear, pulsed electron accelerator was designed using Autodesk Inventor and Kassiopeia and is being constructed at the Triangle Universities Nuclear Laboratory (TUNL) in Durham, North Carolina. The completed accelerator will be mounted inside a pressure vessel filled with insulating gas to allow the accelerator to reach a peak energy of 1MeV. The accelerator will be used to study bremsstrahlung production and characterize semiconductor detectors used to study Nab experiment at the Spallation Neutron Source at the Oak Ridge National Laboratory. Much progress has been made in building the accelerator and setting up the experiment. Construction, design, and experimental result updates and developments will be presented and discussed.

Presenters

  • William Charles McCray

    North Carolina State University

Authors

  • William Charles McCray

    North Carolina State University

  • Joseph Fry

    North Carolina State University

  • Nathan Washecheck

    North Carolina State University

  • Benjamin Ewing

    North Carolina State University

  • Justin Crow

    North Carolina State University

  • Adem Bektic

    North Carolina State University

  • RJ Taylor

    North Carolina State University

  • McKenna R Sleeth

    North Carolina State University

  • Chris Westerfeldt

    Triangle Universities Nuclear Laboratory

  • Albert Young

    North Carolina State University