Paper
3 February 2004 A concept for a high-energy gamma-ray polarimeter
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
We present a concept for an imaging gamma-ray polarimeter operating from ~50 MeV to ~1 GeV. Such an instrument would be valuable for the study of high-energy pulsars, active galactic nuclei, supernova remnants, and gamma-ray bursts. The concept makes use of pixelized gas micro-well detectors, under development at Goddard Space Flight Center, to record the electron-positron tracks from pair-production events in a large gas volume. Pixelized micro-well detectors have the potential to form large-volume 3-D track imagers with ~100 μm (rms) position resolution at moderate cost. The combination of high spatial resolution and a continuous low-density gas medium permits many thousands of measurements per radiation length, allowing the particle tracks to be imaged accurately before multiple scattering masks their original directions. The polarization of the incoming radiation may then be determined from the azimuthal distribution of the electron-positron pairs. We have performed Geant4 simulations of these processes to estimate the polarization sensitivity of a simple telescope geometry at 100 MeV.
© (2004) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Peter Forbes Bloser, Stanley D. Hunter, Gerardo O. Depaola, and Francesco Longo "A concept for a high-energy gamma-ray polarimeter", Proc. SPIE 5165, X-Ray and Gamma-Ray Instrumentation for Astronomy XIII, (3 February 2004); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.505838
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CITATIONS
Cited by 18 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Polarization

Sensors

Gamma radiation

Electrons

Polarimetry

Telescopes

Electronics

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