Login / Signup

Potentialities of CdZnTe Quasi-Hemispherical Detectors for Hard X-ray Spectroscopy of Kaonic Atoms at the DAΦNE Collider.

Leonardo AbbeneAntonino ButtacavoliFabio PrincipatoGaetano GerardiManuele BettelliAndrea ZappettiniMassimiliano BazziMario BragadireanuMichael CargnelliMarco CarminatiAlberto ClozzaGriseld DedaRaffaele Del GrandeLuca De PaolisLaura FabbiettiCarlo FioriniCarlo GuaraldoMihail IliescuMisahiko IwasakiAleksander KhreptakSimone MantiJohann MartonMarco MiliucciPawel MoskalFabrizio NapolitanoSzymon NiedźwieckiHiroaky OhnishiKristian PiscicchiaYuta SadaFrancesco SgaramellaHexi ShiMichalł SilarskiDiana Laura SirghiFlorin SirghiMagdalena SkurzokAntonio SpalloneKairo TohoMarlene TüchlerOton Vazquez DoceChihiro YoshidaJohannes ZmeskalAlessandro ScordoCatalina Curceanu
Published in: Sensors (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
Kaonic atom X-ray spectroscopy is a consolidated technique for investigations on the physics of strong kaon-nucleus/nucleon interaction. Several experiments have been conducted regarding the measurement of soft X-ray emission (<20 keV) from light kaonic atoms (hydrogen, deuterium, and helium). Currently, there have been new research activities within the framework of the SIDDHARTA-2 experiment and EXCALIBUR proposal focusing on performing precise and accurate measurements of hard X-rays (>20 keV) from intermediate kaonic atoms (carbon, aluminum, and sulfur). In this context, we investigated cadmium-zinc-telluride (CdZnTe or CZT) detectors, which have recently demonstrated high-resolution capabilities for hard X-ray and gamma-ray detection. A demonstrator prototype based on a new cadmium-zinc-telluride quasi-hemispherical detector and custom digital pulse processing electronics was developed. The detector covered a detection area of 1 cm 2 with a single readout channel and interesting room-temperature performance with energy resolution of 4.4% (2.6 keV), 3% (3.7 keV), and 1.4% (9.3 keV) FWHM at 59.5, 122.1, and 662 keV, respectively. The results from X-ray measurements at the DAΦNE collider at the INFN National Laboratories of Frascati (Italy) are also presented with particular attention to the effects and rejection of electromagnetic and hadronic background.
Keyphrases