Abstract: A nuclear spectrometer employs asymmetrical weighting functions to optimize energy resolution and throughput. Photons striking a semi-conductor detector generate current which is amplified, converted to a voltage step, and fed to a fast analog-to-digital converter (ADC) for pile-up rejection and a slow ADC whose output is examined for low-energy pile-up, slope corrected, and buffered for photon energy measurement. Pile-up is detected with a unique pair of leading and trailing weighting functions whose outputs have sharp rising and falling edges respectively, nearly independent of photon energy. Digital triangular shaping is used to locate the step in the buffer. Asymmetry of the triangular response is used to reject very low-energy pile-up. The step is also rejected if the average noise nearby exceeds a threshold.
Type:
Grant
Filed:
May 20, 1994
Date of Patent:
February 28, 1995
Assignee:
Princeton Gamma Tech, Inc.
Inventors:
Richard B. Mott, Charles G. Waldman, Daniel E. Ungar
Abstract: A nuclear spectrometer employs asymmetrical weighting functions to optimize energy resolution and throughput. Photons striking a semi-conductor detector generate current which is amplified, converted to a voltage step, and fed to a fast analog-to-digital converter (ADC) for pile-up rejection and a slow ADC whose output is examined for low-energy pile-up, slope corrected, and buffered for photon energy measurement. Pile-up is detected with a unique pair of leading and trailing weighting functions whose outputs have sharp rising and falling edges respectively, nearly independent of photon energy. Digital triangular shaping is used to locate the step in the buffer. Asymmetry of the triangular response is used to reject very low-energy pile-up. The step is also rejected if the average noise nearby exceeds a threshold.
Type:
Grant
Filed:
May 20, 1993
Date of Patent:
September 20, 1994
Assignee:
Princeton Gamma Tech, Inc.
Inventors:
Richard B. Mott, Charles G. Waldman, Daniel E. Ungar
Abstract: A computer graphics apparatus and a method for allowing the comparison of two or more digitally-stored images on a raster-scan display device, such as a cathode ray tube (CRT), by use of arithmetic or Boolean logic operations performed on the picture elements (pixels) in each image which are to be superimposed at a given display pixel on the CRT. The invention provides the features of color lookup tables, continuous zoom and roam logic and high-speed processing in a computer graphics apparatus for digital image comparison.
Abstract: A coaxial gamma ray detector is fabricated using intrinsic semiconductor material in a geometry whereby full depletion of electrical carriers is prevented within a small region proximate the point of electrical contact thereby allowing greater biasing potentials across the detector and, consequently, providing reduced electronic noise and increased energy resolution.