30 June 2024 to 4 July 2024
FMDUL
Europe/Lisbon timezone

Session

Detector Systems & Front-End Electronics

3 Jul 2024, 16:50
Main Auditorium (FMDUL)

Main Auditorium

FMDUL

Main Auditorium of the Faculty of Dental Medicine at the University of Lisbon (Faculdade de Medicina Dentária da Universidade de Lisboa)

Presentation materials

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  1. Roberta Pillera (Universita e INFN, Bari (IT))
    03/07/2024, 16:50
    Oral Communication

    NUSES is a pathfinder satellite that will be deployed in a low Earth orbit, designed with new technologies for space-based detectors. The satellite will host two payloads, Terzina and Zirè. Terzina is dedicated to space-based detection of ultra-high-energy extensive air showers, while Zirè focuses on measuring electrons, protons, and light nuclei ranging from a few to hundreds of MeV, as well...

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  2. Riccardo Bolzonella (University of Ferrara and INFN)
    03/07/2024, 17:10
    Oral Communication

    An innovative single-photon detector based on a vacuum tube containing a photocathode, a microchannel plate, and a Timepix4 CMOS ASIC as its read-out anode, is presented. This detector is designed to detect up to 1 billion photons per second over a 7 cm$^2$ active area, achieving simultaneously excellent position and timing resolution of 5-10 $\mu$m and less than $50$ ps. With around $230$...

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  3. Prof. Matteo Porro (European XFEL, Germany and University of Venice, Italy)
    03/07/2024, 17:30
    Oral Communication

    The DSSC camera was developed for photon science applications in the energy range 0.25-6 keV at the European XFEL in Germany. The first 1-Megapixel DSSC camera [1] is available and is successfully used for scientific experiments at the “Spectroscopy and Coherent Scattering” and the “Small Quantum System” instruments of the European XFEL. The detector is currently the fastest existing 2D camera...

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  4. Fabio Acerbi
    03/07/2024, 17:50
    Oral Communication

    Silicon Photomultipliers (SiPMs) are single-photon sensitive detectors that continue to attract increasing interest in several industrial and scientific applications that require fast detection speed, high sensitivity, compactness, insensitivity to magnetic fields and low bias voltages.
    SiPMs are also replacing photomultiplier tubes (PMTs), hybrid photodiodes (HPDs), or other in high-energy...

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