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A spectrometer for ultrashort gamma-ray pulses with photon energies greater than 10 MeV.

K T BehmJason M ColeA S JoglekarE GerstmayrJonathan WoodC D BairdT G BlackburnM DuffC HarveyA IldertonS KuschelS P D ManglesM MarklundPaul McKennaC D MurphyZulfikar NajmudinKris PõderC P RidgersG SarriG M SamarinD SymesJ WarwickM ZepfK KrushelnickA G R Thomas
Published in: The Review of scientific instruments (2018)
We present a design for a pixelated scintillator based gamma-ray spectrometer for non-linear inverse Compton scattering experiments. By colliding a laser wakefield accelerated electron beam with a tightly focused, intense laser pulse, gamma-ray photons up to 100 MeV energies and with few femtosecond duration may be produced. To measure the energy spectrum and angular distribution, a 33 × 47 array of cesium-iodide crystals was oriented such that the 47 crystal length axis was parallel to the gamma-ray beam and the 33 crystal length axis was oriented in the vertical direction. Using an iterative deconvolution method similar to the YOGI code, modeling of the scintillator response using GEANT4 and fitting to a quantum Monte Carlo calculated photon spectrum, we are able to extract the gamma ray spectra generated by the inverse Compton interaction.
Keyphrases
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