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Particle detector

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
(Redirected fromRadiation detector)
Device used to detect, track, and/or identify ionising particles
This article is about detection of ionizing radiation. For detection of non-ionizing particles, seeparticle counter.

In experimental and appliedparticle physics,nuclear physics, andnuclear engineering, aparticle detector, also known as aradiation detector, is a device used to detect, track, and/or identify ionizingparticles, such as those produced bynuclear decay,cosmic radiation, or reactions in aparticle accelerator. Detectors can measure the particle energy and other attributes such as momentum, spin, charge, particle type, in addition to merely registering the presence of the particle.

Examples and types

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Summary of particle detector types

Many of the detectors invented and used so far are ionization detectors (of whichgaseous ionization detectors andsemiconductor detectors are most typical) andscintillation detectors; but other, completely different principles have also been applied, likeČerenkov light and transition radiation.

Cloud chambers visualizeparticles by creating asupersaturated layer ofvapor.Particles passing through this region create cloud tracks similar tocondensation trails of planes
Recording of a bubble chamber at CERN

Historical examples

Detectors for radiation protection

The following types of particle detector are widely used for radiation protection, and are commercially produced in large quantities for general use within the nuclear, medical, and environmental fields.

Commonly used detectors for particle and nuclear physics

Modern detectors

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Main article:Hermetic detector

Modern detectors in particle physics combine several of the above elements in layers much like anonion.

Research particle detectors

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Detectors designed for modern accelerators are huge, both in size and in cost. The termcounter is often used instead ofdetector when the detector counts the particles but does not resolve its energy or ionization. Particle detectors can also usually track ionizing radiation (high energyphotons or even visiblelight). If their main purpose is radiation measurement, they are calledradiation detectors, but as photons are also (massless) particles, the termparticle detector is still correct.

At colliders

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Under construction

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Without colliders

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On spacecraft

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Theoretical Models of Particle Detectors

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Beyond their experimental implementations, theoretical models of particle detectors are also of great importance to theoretical physics. These models consider localized non-relativistic quantum systems coupled to a quantum field.[1] They receive the name of particle detectors because when the non-relativistic quantum system is measured in an excited state, one can claim to have detected a particle.[2][3] The first instance of particle detector models in the literature dates from the 80's, where a particle in a box was introduced byW. G. Unruh in order to probe a quantum field around a black hole.[2] Shortly after,Bryce DeWitt proposed a simplification of the model,[4] giving rise to theUnruh-DeWitt detector model.

Beyond their applications to theoretical physics, particle detector models are related to experimental fields such asquantum optics, where atoms can be used as detectors for the quantum electromagnetic field via the light-matter interaction. From a conceptual side, particle detectors also allow one to formally define the concept of particles without relying on asymptotic states, or representations of a quantum field theory. AsM. Scully puts it, from an operational viewpoint one can state that "a particle is what a particle detector detects",[5] which in essence defines a particle as the detection of excitations of a quantum field.

See also

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References

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  1. ^Martín-Martínez, Eduardo; Montero, Miguel; del Rey, Marco (2013-03-25)."Wavepacket detection with the Unruh-DeWitt model".Physical Review D.87 (6): 064038.arXiv:1207.3248.Bibcode:2013PhRvD..87f4038M.doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.87.064038.S2CID 19334396.
  2. ^abUnruh, W. G. (1976-08-15)."Notes on black-hole evaporation".Physical Review D.14 (4):870–892.Bibcode:1976PhRvD..14..870U.doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.14.870.
  3. ^Unruh, William G.; Wald, Robert M. (1984-03-15)."What happens when an accelerating observer detects a Rindler particle".Physical Review D.29 (6):1047–1056.Bibcode:1984PhRvD..29.1047U.doi:10.1103/PhysRevD.29.1047.
  4. ^Irvine, J M (May 1980)."General Relativity – An Einstein Centenary Survey".Physics Bulletin.31 (4): 140.doi:10.1088/0031-9112/31/4/029.ISSN 0031-9112.
  5. ^Scully, Marlan O. (2009), Muga, Gonzalo; Ruschhaupt, Andreas; del Campo, Adolfo (eds.),"The Time-Dependent Schrödinger Equation Revisited: Quantum Optical and Classical Maxwell Routes to Schrödinger's Wave Equation",Time in Quantum Mechanics - Vol. 2, Lecture Notes in Physics, vol. 789, Berlin, Heidelberg: Springer, pp. 15–24,doi:10.1007/978-3-642-03174-8_2,ISBN 978-3-642-03174-8, retrieved2022-08-19

Further reading

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Filmstrips
  • "Radiation detectors". H. M. Stone Productions, Schloat. Tarrytown, N.Y., Prentice-Hall Media, 1972.
General Information
  • Grupen, C. (June 28 – July 10, 1999). "Physics of Particle Detection".AIP Conference Proceedings, Instrumentation in Elementary Particle Physics, VIII. Vol. 536. Istanbul: Dordrecht, D. Reidel Publishing Co. pp. 3–34.arXiv:physics/9906063.doi:10.1063/1.1361756.
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