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Featured researches published by Haoli Shi.


Astroparticle Physics | 2016

A crosstalk and non-uniformity correction method for the space-borne Compton polarimeter POLAR

Hualin Xiao; Wojtek Hajdas; Bobing Wu; N. Produit; Tianwei Bao; T. Batsch; F. Cadoux; Junying Chai; Yongwei Dong; M. N. Kong; Siwei Kong; D. Rybka; Catherine Leluc; Lu Li; Jiangtao Liu; Xin Liu; R. Marcinkowski; Mercedes Paniccia; M. Pohl; D. Rapin; Haoli Shi; Liming Song; Jianchao Sun; Jacek Szabelski; Ruijie Wang; X. Wen; Hanhui Xu; Laiyu Zhang; Li Zhang; Shuang-Nan Zhang

Abstract In spite of extensive observations and numerous theoretical studies in the past decades several key questions related with Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRB) emission mechanisms are still to be answered. Precise detection of the GRB polarization carried out by dedicated instruments can provide new data and be an ultimate tool to unveil their real nature. A novel space-borne Compton polarimeter POLAR onboard the Chinese space station TG2 is designed to measure linear polarization of gamma-rays arriving from GRB prompt emissions. POLAR uses plastics scintillator bars (PS) as gamma-ray detectors and multi-anode photomultipliers (MAPMTs) for readout of the scintillation light. Inherent properties of such detection systems are crosstalk and non-uniformity. The crosstalk smears recorded energy over multiple channels making both non-uniformity corrections and energy calibration more difficult. Rigorous extraction of polarization observables requires to take such effects properly into account. We studied influence of the crosstalk on energy depositions during laboratory measurements with X-ray beams. A relation between genuine and recorded energy was deduced using an introduced model of data analysis. It postulates that both the crosstalk and non-uniformities can be described with a single matrix obtained in calibrations with mono-energetic X- and gamma-rays. Necessary corrections are introduced using matrix based equations allowing for proper evaluation of the measured GRB spectra. Validity of the method was established during dedicated experimental tests. The same approach can be also applied in space utilizing POLAR internal calibration sources. The introduced model is general and with some adjustments well suitable for data analysis from other MAPMT-based instruments.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2018

Design and construction of the POLAR detector

N. Produit; Tianwei Bao; T. Batsch; T. Bernasconi; I. Britvich; F. Cadoux; I. Cernuda; Junying Chai; Yongwei Dong; N. Gauvin; Wojtek Hajdas; Merlin Kole; M. N. Kong; R. Kramert; Li Li; Jing Liu; X. Liu; R. Marcinkowski; S. Orsi; M. Pohl; D. Rapin; D. Rybka; A. Rutczynska; Haoli Shi; P. Socha; Jianchao Sun; Longlong Song; Jacek Szabelski; I. Traseira; Hualin Xiao

Abstract The POLAR detector is a space based Gamma Ray Burst (GRB) polarimeter with a wide field of view, which covers almost half the sky. The instrument uses Compton scattering of gamma rays on a plastic scintillator hodoscope to measure the polarization of the incoming photons. The instrument has been successfully launched on board of the Chinese space laboratory Tiangong 2 on September 15, 2016. The construction of the instrument components is described in this article. Details are provided on problems encountered during the construction phase and their solutions. Initial performance of the instrument in orbit is as expected from ground tests and Monte Carlo simulation.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2014

The POLAR gamma-ray burst polarimeter onboard the Chinese Spacelab

S. Orsi; F. Cadoux; Catherine Leluc; Mercedes Paniccia; M. Pohl; D. Rapin; N. Gauvin; N. Produit; Tianwei Bao; Junying Chai; Yongwei Dong; M. N. Kong; Li Lu; Jiangtao Liu; Xin Liu; Haoli Shi; Jianchao Sun; Ruijie Wang; X. Wen; Bobing Wu; Hualin Xiao; Hanhui Xu; Li Zhang; Laiyu Zhang; Shuang-Nan Zhang; Yongjie Zhang; Ilia Britvich; Wojtek Hajdas; Radoslaw Marcinkowski; D. Rybka

POLAR is a joint European-Chinese experiment aimed at a precise measurement of hard X-ray polarization (50-500 keV) of the prompt emission of Gamma-Ray Bursts. The main aim is a better understanding of the geometry of astrophysical sources and of the X-ray emission mechanisms. POLAR is a compact Compton polarimeter characterized by a large modulation factor, effective area, and field of view. It consists of 1600 low-Z plastic scintillator bars read out by 25 at-panel multi-anode photomultipliers. The incoming X-rays undergo Compton scattering in the bars and produce a modulation pattern; experiments with polarized synchrotron radiation and GEANT4 Monte Carlo simulations have shown that the polarization degree and angle can be retrieved from this pattern with the accuracy necessary for identifying the GRB mechanism. The flight model of POLAR is currently under construction in Geneva. The POLAR instrument will be placed onboard the Chinese spacelab TG-2, scheduled for launch in low Earth orbit in 2015. The main milestones of the space qualification campaign will be described in the paper.


Astroparticle Physics | 2018

In-flight energy calibration of the space-borne Compton polarimeter POLAR

Hualin Xiao; Wojtek Hajdas; Bobing Wu; N. Produit; Tianwei Bao; T. Bernasconi; F. Cadoux; Yongwei Dong; Ken Egli; N. Gauvin; Merlin Kole; Reinhold Kramert; Siwei Kong; Lu Li; Zhengheng Li; Jiangtao Liu; Xin Liu; Radoslaw Marcinkowski; D. Rybka; M. Pohl; Haoli Shi; Liming Song; Jianchao Sun; Shaolin Xiong; Jacek Szabelski; Patryk Socha; Ruijie Wang; X. Wen; X. Wu; Laiyu Zhang

POLAR is a compact wide-field space-borne detector for precise measurements of the linear polarisation of hard X-rays emitted from gamma-ray burst and solar flares in the energy range of 50 keV to 500 keV. It consists of a 40 x 40 array of plastic scintillator bars used as a detection material. POLAR was launched into a low Earth orbit on-board the Chinese space-lab TG-2 on September 15, 2016. To achieve high accuracies in polarisation measurements it is essential to perform a precise energy calibration both before and during the flight. Such calibrations are performed with four low activity Na-22 radioactive sources placed inside the instrument. Energy conversion factors are related to Compton edge positions from the collinear annihilation photons from the sources. This paper presents the main principles of the in-flight calibration, describes studies of the method based on Monte Carlo simulations and its laboratory verification, and provides some observation results based on the in-flight data analysis


nuclear science symposium and medical imaging conference | 2016

POLAR: Final calibration and in-flight performance of a dedicated GRB polarimeter

Merlin Kole; Tianwei Bao; T. Batsch; T. Bernasconi; F. Cadoux; Junying Chai; Yongwei Dong; N. Gauvin; Wojtek Hajdas; J.J. He; M. N. Kong; Siwei Kong; C. Lechanoine-Leluc; Li Li; Zuhao Li; J. T. Liu; X. Liu; R. Marcinkowski; S. Orsi; M. Pohl; N. Produit; D. Rapin; A. Rutczynska; D. Rybka; Haoli Shi; Longlong Song; Jianchao Sun; Jacek Szabelski; Ruijie Wang; Yuanhao Wang

Gamma-ray polarimetry is a new powerful tool to study the processes responsible for the emission from astrophysical sources and the environments in which this emission takes place. Few successful polarimetric measurements have however been performed thus far in the gamma-ray energy band due to the difficulties involved. POLAR is a dedicated polarimeter designed to perform high precision measurements of the polarization of the emission from gamma-ray burst in the 50-500 keV energy range. This new polarimeter is expected to detect approximately 50 gamma-ray bursts per year while performing high precision polarization measurements on approximately 10 bursts per year. The instrument was launched into lower earth orbit as part of the second Chinese space lab, the Tiangong-2, on September 15th 2016 and has been taking data successfully since being switched on one week after. The instrument uses a segmented scintillator array consisting of 1600 plastic scintillator bars, read out by 25 flat-panel multi-anode photomultipliers, to measure the Compton scattering angles of incoming photons. The small segmentation and relatively large uniform effective area allow the instrument to measure the polarization of a large number of transient events, such as gamma-ray bursts, with an unprecedented precision during its two year life-time. The final flight model underwent detailed calibration prior to launch as well as intensive space qualification tests, a summary of which will be presented in this paper. The instrument design will be discussed first followed by an overview of the on-ground tests, finally the in-orbit behavior as measured during the first weeks of the mission will be presented.


nuclear science symposium and medical imaging conference | 2015

POLAR trigger — Experimental verification

R. Marcinkowski; Wojtek Hajdas; Hualin Xiao; D. Rybka; Ismael Traseira Rodriguez; Merlin Kole; N. Produit; C. Lechanoine-Leluc; S. Orsi; M. Pohl; Mercedes Paniccia; D. Rapin; Tianwei Bao; Junying Chai; Yongwei Dong; M. N. Kong; Lu Li; Jiangtao Liu; Xin Liu; Haoli Shi; Jianchao Sun; Ruijie Wang; X. Wen; Bobing Wu; Hanhui Xu; Li Zhang; Laiyu Zhang; Shuang-Nan Zhang; Xiaofeng Zhang; Yongjie Zhang

POLAR is a space-borne instrument designed for measurements of the polarization of the prompt hard X- and gamma-ray emission from the Gamma Ray Bursts (GRB). POLAR consists of 25 identical Detection Modules equipped with Front-End Electronics (FEE) units. This paper describes: design, strategy and verification process of the POLAR trigger mechanism.


nuclear science symposium and medical imaging conference | 2015

Calibration of gamma-ray burst polarimeter POLAR

Hualin Xiao; Wojtek Hajdas; Tianwei Bao; T. Batsch; T. Bernasconi; I. Cernuda; Junying Chai; Yongwei Dong; N. Gauvin; Merlin Kole; M. N. Kong; Siwei Kong; Li Li; J. T. Liu; X. Liu; R. Marcinkowski; S. Orsi; M. Pohl; N. Produit; D. Rapin; A. Rutczynska; D. Rybka; Haoli Shi; Longlong Song; Jianchao Sun; Jacek Szabelski; Bobing Wu; Ruijie Wang; X. Wen; H. H. Xu

Gamma Ray Bursts (GRBs) are the strongest explosions in the universe which might be associated with creation of black holes. Magnetic field structure and burst dynamics may influence polarization of the emitted gamma-rays. Precise polarization detection can be an ultimate tool to unveil the true GRB mechanism. POLAR is a space-borne Compton scattering detector for precise measurements of the GRB polarization. It consists of a 40×40 array of plastic scintillator bars read out by 25 multi-anode PMTs (MaPMTs). It is scheduled to be launched into space in 2016 onboard of the Chinese space laboratory TG2. We present a dedicated methodology for POLAR calibration and some calibration results based on the combined use of the laboratory radioactive sources and polarized X-ray beams from the European Synchrotron Radiation Facility. They include calibration of the energy response, computation of the energy conversion factor vs. high voltage as well as determination of the threshold values, crosstalk contributions and polarization modulation factors.


nuclear science symposium and medical imaging conference | 2013

Development of the Central Task Processing Unit for space-borne Gamma-Ray Burst polarimeter, POLAR

Dominik Rybka; R. Marcinkowski; Wojtek Hajdas; I. Britvitch; Ismael Traseira Rodriguez; N. Gauvin; N. Produit; D. Rapin; M. Pohl; S. Orsi; C. Lechanoine-Leluc; Mercedes Paniccia; T. Batsch; A. Rutczynska; Jacek Szabelski; A. Zwolinska; Tomasz Krakowski; Tianwei Bao; Junying Chai; Yongwei Dong; M. N. Kong; Lu Li; Jiangtao Liu; Xin Liu; Haoli Shi; Jianchao Sun; Ruijie Wang; X. Wen; Bobing Wu; Hualin Xiao

POLAR, a joint European-Chinese experiment, is a novel compact space-borne Compton polarimeter conceived and optimized for detection of the prompt emission of Gamma-Ray Bursts (GRB) and precise measurements of polarization in the hard X-ray energy range 50-500 keV. The complete instrument consists of two parts: internal one, placed inside spacelab and the detector itself, placed outside spacelab, called respectively IBOX and OBOX. The OBOX constitutes of 25 frontend electronic modules (FEE), high voltage and low voltage power supplies and the Central Task Processing Unit. The main functions of Central Task Processing Unit system are defined as follows: communication and transfer of data to IBOX, communication with all frontends, analysis of trigger signals and generation of global trigger signals, data acquisition, synchronizing of all frontends and control of power supplies. The functional requirements are fulfilled by three individual FPGA chips named respectively to their functions: Concentrator, Trigger and CPU. This article presents description of the Central Task Processing Unit hardware design and brief introduction to main components of the firmware developed for this device. Ongoing integration activities of the device with the complete POLAR instrument proved that all basic functions are working correctly. The qualification model of the instrument has been constructed and currently undergoes verification and validation tests in view of planned flight onboard the Chinese spacelab TG-2 scheduled for 2015.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

POLAR: the first dedicated gamma-ray burst polarization experiment

Tianwei Bao; T. Batsch; I. Britvitch; F. Cadoux; Junying Chai; Yongwei Dong; N. Gauvin; Wojtek Hajdas; M. N. Kong; C. Lechanoine-Leluc; Lu Li; Jiangtao Liu; Xin Liu; Radoslaw Marcinkowski; S. Orsi; M. Pohl; N. Produit; D. Rapin; A. Rutczynska; D. Rybka; Haoli Shi; Jianchao Sun; Jacek Szabelski; Ruijie Wang; X. Wen; Bobing Wu; Hualin Xiao; H. H. Xu; Li Zhang; Laiyu Zhang

POLAR is a Gamma-Ray Burst (GRB) polarization experiment in the energy range 50-500 keV. Detection principle of the gamma-ray polarization is based on the anisotropy of the Compton scattering. POLAR consists of 1600 low-Z plastic scintillator bars, read out by 25 flat-panel multianode photomultipliers. Simulations and experiments have shown that the polarization degree and angle can be retrieved from the modulation curves with the required accuracy. POLAR can reach a minimum detectable polarization of about 10%(3-sigma level) for several strongest GRB detections per year. Construction and assembly of the Qualification Model (QM) are ongoing, in view of a flight onboard of the Chinese Spacelab TG-2 scheduled for 2014.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2018

In-orbit instrument performance study and calibration for POLAR polarization measurements

Zhengheng Li; Merlin Kole; Jianchao Sun; Liming Song; N. Produit; Bobing Wu; Tianwei Bao; T. Bernasconi; F. Cadoux; Yongwei Dong; Minzi Feng; N. Gauvin; Wojtek Hajdas; Hancheng Li; Lu Li; Xin Liu; R. Marcinkowski; M. Pohl; D. Rybka; Haoli Shi; Jacek Szabelski; T. Tymieniecka; Ruijie Wang; Yuanhao Wang; X. Wen; X. Wu; Shaolin Xiong; A. Zwolinska; Li Zhang; Laiyu Zhang

Abstract POLAR is a compact space-borne detector designed to perform reliable measurements of the polarization for transient sources like Gamma-Ray Bursts in the energy range 50–500 keV. The instrument works based on the Compton Scattering principle with the plastic scintillators as the main detection material along with the multi-anode photomultiplier tube. POLAR has been launched successfully onboard the Chinese space laboratory TG-2 on 15th September, 2016. In order to reliably reconstruct the polarization information a highly detailed understanding of the instrument is required for both data analysis and Monte Carlo studies. For this purpose a full study of the in-orbit performance was performed in order to obtain the instrument calibration parameters such as noise, pedestal, gain nonlinearity of the electronics, threshold, crosstalk and gain, as well as the effect of temperature on the above parameters. Furthermore the relationship between gain and high voltage of the multi-anode photomultiplier tube has been studied and the errors on all measurement values are presented. Finally the typical systematic error on polarization measurements of Gamma-Ray Bursts due to the measurement error of the calibration parameters are estimated using Monte Carlo simulations.

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Jianchao Sun

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Tianwei Bao

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Yongwei Dong

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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D. Rybka

Warsaw University of Technology

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D. Rapin

University of Geneva

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Bobing Wu

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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Junying Chai

Chinese Academy of Sciences

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