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A panoramic coded aperture gamma camera for radioactive hotspots localization
A known disadvantage of the coded aperture imaging approach is its limited field-ofview (FOV), which often results insufficient when analysing complex dismantling scenes such as post-accidental scenarios, where multiple measurements are needed to fully characterize the scene. In order to overcome th...
Autores principales: | , , , , , , , |
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Lenguaje: | eng |
Publicado: |
2017
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Materias: | |
Acceso en línea: | https://dx.doi.org/10.1088/1748-0221/12/11/P11010 http://cds.cern.ch/record/2301347 |
Sumario: | A known disadvantage of the coded aperture imaging approach is its limited field-ofview
(FOV), which often results insufficient when analysing complex dismantling scenes such as
post-accidental scenarios, where multiple measurements are needed to fully characterize the scene.
In order to overcome this limitation, a panoramic coded aperture γ-camera prototype has
been developed. The system is based on a 1 mm thick CdTe detector directly bump-bonded
to a Timepix readout chip, developed by the Medipix2 collaboration (256 × 256 pixels, 55 µm
pitch, 14.08 × 14.08 mm2
sensitive area). A MURA pattern coded aperture is used, allowing for
background subtraction without the use of heavy shielding. Such system is then combined with a
USB color camera. The output of each measurement is a semi-spherical image covering a FOV of
360 degrees horizontally and 80 degrees vertically, rendered in spherical coordinates (θ,φ). The
geometrical shapes of the radiation-emitting objects are preserved by first registering and stitching
the optical images captured by the prototype, and applying, subsequently, the same transformations
to their corresponding radiation images.
Panoramic gamma images generated by using the technique proposed in this paper are described
and discussed, along with the main experimental results obtained in laboratories campaigns. |
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