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Dive into the research topics where John R. Macri is active.

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Featured researches published by John R. Macri.


Astrophysical Journal Supplement Series | 1993

Instrument description and performance of the Imaging Gamma-Ray Telescope COMPTEL aboard the Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory

V. Schoenfelder; H. Aarts; K. Bennett; de H. Boer; J. Clear; W. Collmar; Alanna Connors; A. Deerenberg; R. Diehl; von A. Dordrecht; den J.W. Herder; W. Hermsen; Marc Kippen; L. Kuiper; Giselher G. Lichti; J. A. Lockwood; John R. Macri; Mark L. McConnell; Derek W. Morris; Rudolf Paul Much; J. Ryan; G. Simpson; M. Snelling; G. Stacy; H. Steinle; A. W. Strong; B. N. Swanenburg; B. G. Taylor; de C.P. Vries; C. Winkler

The imaging Compton telescope COMPTEL is one of the four instruments on board the Compton Gamma-Ray Observatory (GRO), which was launched on 1991 April 5 by the space shuttle Atlantis into an Earth orbit of 450 km altitude. COMPTEL is exploring the 1-30 MeV energy range with an angular resolution (1σ) between 1° and 2° within a large field of view of about 1 steradian. Its energy resolution (8.8% FWHM at 1.27 MeV) makes it a powerful gamma-ray line spectrometer. Its effective area (for on-axis incidence) varies between 10 and 50 cm 2 depending on energy and event selections. Within a 14 day observation period COMPTEL is able to detect sources which are about 20 times weaker than the Crab. The measurement principle of COMPTEL also allows the measurements of solar neutrons


IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 1984

The Imaging Compton Telescope Comptel on the Gamma Ray Observatory

V. Schönfelder; R. Diehl; Giselher G. Lichti; H. Steinle; B. N. Swanenburg; A. J. M. Deerenberg; H. Aarts; J. A. Lockwood; W. R. Webber; John R. Macri; J. Ryan; G. Simpson; B. G. Taylor; K. Bennett; M. Snelling

This instrument is based on a newly established concept of ¿-ray detection in the very difficult 1-30 MeV range. It employs the unique feature of a two-step interaction of the y-ray: a Compton scattering collision in a first detector followed by an interaction in a second detector element. COMPTEL has been designed to perform a very sensitive survey of the y-ray sky. Extreme care has been taken to minimize background so that the detection limits of COMPTEL will be dominated by source counting statistics. It combines a wide field of view (about 1 steradian) with a good angular resolution. The design criteria of COMPTEL and the perforrmance of a Science Model are described.


nuclear science symposium and medical imaging conference | 1995

Signal generation in CdZnTe strip detectors

Louis-Andre Hamel; John R. Macri; C.M. Stahle; James L. Odom; F. Birsa; Peter K. Shu; F.P. Doty

The energy resolution of CdTe and CdZnTe detectors is usually limited by the poor transport properties of holes. Devices segmented into small pixels have been observed to exhibit improved energy resolutions. Simulations have shown that this small pixel effect is due to the fact that small pixels are mostly sensitive to carriers moving close to the pixel, within a distance of the order of the pixel size. In this paper, signals are calculated for CdZnTe strip detectors in order to determine to what extent a similar small electrode effect is produced by strips. The free carrier density distributions following the absorption of a /spl gamma/-ray are calculated by solving the continuity equations. Combined with the strip weighting field, this provides the signal induced in the strip. Simulations are made for various detector geometries and for both the anode and cathode strips. Simulated signals are compared with actual signals measured on CdZnTe detectors.


ieee nuclear science symposium | 2006

Development of a Neutron Scatter Camera for Fission Neutrons

N. C. Mascarenhas; Jim Brennan; Kevin D. Krenz; J.C. Lund; Peter Marleau; Julia Rasmussen; James M. Ryan; John R. Macri

Special nuclear material (SNM) emits high energy radiation during active and passive interrogation. This radiation can be imaged thus allowing visualization of shielded and/or smuggled SNM. Although gamma-ray imaging is appropriate for many cases, neutrons are much more penetrating through hi-Z materials, and are thus preferred in certain scenarios (e.g. weapons grade Pu or HEU smuggled inside a lead pig several inches thick). Techniques for thermal neutron imaging have already been developed, but these approaches only image the moderating material, not the true SNM source. Traditional neutron detectors such as He3 tubes and scintillators simply count neutrons. We are developing an instrument that will directly image the fast fission neutrons from an SNM source using a neutron scatter camera. This technique has been shown to be 10 times more sensitive for solar neutrons over traditional neutron counting techniques. In addition to being a 4pi neutron imager, this instrument will also be an excellent neutron spectrometer, and will be able to differentiate between different types of neutron sources (e.g. fission, gamma-n, cosmic ray, and dd or dt fusion). Our instrument will be able to pinpoint the source location. We will present results from a prototype detector and discuss key parameters that determine detector performance.


Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A-accelerators Spectrometers Detectors and Associated Equipment | 2001

Multi-electrode CZT detector packaging using polymer flip chip bonding

Valentin T. Jordanov; John R. Macri; James E. Clayton; Kipp Larson

Polymer#ip chip bonding has been used to package a multi-electrode CZT detector. During the packaging process the temperature of all components was kept less than 803C. The size of the conductive epoxy eontacts is less than 120 l mi n diameter. Thermal cycling, and random and structural vibration tests indicate reliable detector}substrate interconnection and rugged construction. ( 2001 Elsevier Science B.V. All rights reserved.


nuclear science symposium and medical imaging conference | 1995

Development of an orthogonal-stripe CdZnTe gamma radiation imaging spectrometer

John R. Macri; Boris Apotovsky; Jack F. Butler; Michael L. Cherry; Brian K. Dann; A.D. Drake; F.P. Doty; T. G. Guzik; Kipp Larson; Michelle Mayer; Mark L. McConnell; James M. Ryan

We report performance measurements of a sub-millimeter resolution CdZnTe strip detector developed as a prototype for astronomical instruments operating with good efficiency in the 30-300 keV photon energy range. The prototype is a 1.4 mm thick, 64/spl times/64 contact stripe CdZnTe array of 0.375 mm pitch in both dimensions. Pulse height spectra were recorded in orthogonal-stripe coincidence mode which demonstrate room-temperature energy resolution <10 keV (FWHM) for 122 keV photons with a peak-to-valley ratio >5:1. Good response is also demonstrated at higher energies using a coplanar grid readout configuration. Spatial resolution capabilities finer than the stripe pitch are demonstrated. We present the image of a /sup 133/Ba source viewed through a collimator slit produced by a 4/spl times/4 stripe detector segment. Charge signals from electron and hole collecting contacts are also discussed.


SPIE's 1995 International Symposium on Optical Science, Engineering, and Instrumentation | 1995

Large-area submillimeter resolution CdZnTe strip detector for astronomy

James M. Ryan; John R. Macri; Mark L. McConnell; Brian K. Dann; Michael L. Cherry; T. Gregory Guzik; F.P. Doty; Boris Apotovsky; Jack F. Butler

We report the first performance measurements of a sub-millimeter CdZnTe strip detector developed as a prototype for space-borne astronomical instruments. Strip detector arrays can be used to provide two-dimensional position resolution with fewer electronic channels than pixellated arrays. Arrays of this type and other candidate technologies are under investigation for the position-sensitive backplane detector for a coded-aperture telescope operating in the range of 30 - 300 keV. The prototype is a 1.4 mm thick, 64 multiplied by 64 stripe CdZnTe array of 0.375 mm pitch in both dimensions, approximately one square inch of sensitive area. Pulse height spectra in both single and orthogonal stripe coincidence mode were recorded at several energies. The results are compared to slab- and pixel-geometry detector spectra. The room-temperature energy resolution is less than 10 keV (FWHM) for 122 keV photons with a peak-to-valley ratio greater than 5:1. The response to photons with energies up to 662 keV appears to be considerably improved relative to that of previously reported slab and pixel detectors. We also show that strip detectors can yield spatial and energy resolutions similar to those of pixellated arrays with the same dimensions. Electrostatic effects on the pulse heights, read-out circuit complexity, and issues related to design of space borne instruments are also discussed.


IEEE Transactions on Nuclear Science | 2006

Design and Testing of a Position-Sensitive Plastic Scintillator Detector for Fast Neutron Imaging

Ulisse Bravar; Paul J. Bruillard; Erwin O. Fluckiger; John R. Macri; Mark L. McConnell; Michael Moser; James M. Ryan; Richard S. Woolf

We describe the design and performance of a position sensitive scintillator detector developed for neutron measurements. Several of these detectors are to be used in the assembly of the Fast Neutron Imaging Telescope (FNIT), an instrument with imaging and energy measurement capabilities, sensitive to neutrons in the 2-20 MeV energy range. FNIT was initially conceived to study solar neutrons as a candidate instrument for the Inner Heliospheric Sentinels (IHS) program under formulation at NASA. It is now being adapted to locate Special Nuclear Material (SNM) for homeland security purposes by detecting fission neutrons and reconstructing the image of their source. The detection principle is based on multiple elastic neutron-proton scatterings in organic scintillator. The detector presented here utilizes wavelength-shifting (WLS) fibers, grooved into the plastic scintillator and read out by multianode photomultiplier tubes (MAPMTs) to determine scattering locations. By also measuring the recoil proton and scattered neutrons energies, the direction and energy spectrum of incident neutrons can be determined and discrete sources identified


arXiv: Astrophysics | 2008

POET: POlarimeters for Energetic Transients

J. E. Hill; Mark L. McConnell; Peter F. Bloser; Jason S. Legere; John R. Macri; J. Ryan; S. D. Barthelmy; L. Angelini; Takanori Sakamoto; J. K. Black; Dieter H. Hartmann; Philip Kaaret; Bing Zhang; Kunihito Ioka; Takashi Nakamura; Kenji Toma; Ryo Yamazaki; Xue-Feng Wu

POET (Polarimeters for Energetic Transients) is a Small Explorer mission concept proposed to NASA in January 2008. The principal scientific goal of POET is to measure GRB polarization between 2 and 500 keV. The payload consists of two wide FoV instruments: a Low Energy Polarimeter (LEP) capable of polarization measurements in the energy range from 2-15 keV and a high energy polarimeter (Gamma-Ray Polarimeter Experiment - GRAPE) that will measure polarization in the 60-500 keV energy range. Spectra will be measured from 2 keV up to 1 MeV. The POET spacecraft provides a zenith-pointed platform for maximizing the exposure to deep space. Spacecraft rotation will provide a means of effectively dealing with systematics in the polarization response. POET will provide sufficient sensitivity and sky coverage to measure statistically significant polarization for up to 100 GRBs in a two-year mission. Polarization data will also be obtained for solar flares, pulsars and other sources of astronomical interest.


GAMMA 2001: Gamma-Ray Astrophysics 2001 | 2000

The TIGRE gamma-ray telescope

T. J. O’Neill; D. Bhattacharya; David D. Dixon; M. Polson; R. S. White; A. D. Zych; J. Ryan; Mark L. McConnell; John R. Macri; J. Samimi; Ahmet Oguz Akyuz; W. M. Mahoney; L. Varnell

TIGRE is an advanced telescope for gamma-ray astronomy with a few arcmin resolution. From 0.3 to 10 MeV it is a Compton telescope. Above 1 MeV, its multi-layers of double sided silicon strip detectors allow for Compton recoil electron tracking and the unique determination for incident photon direction. From 10 to 100 MeV the tracking feature is utilized for gamma-ray pair event reconstruction. Here we present TIGRE energy resolutions, background simulations and the development of the electronics readout system.

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Mark L. McConnell

University of New Hampshire

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James M. Ryan

University of New Hampshire

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J. Ryan

University of New Hampshire

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R. S. Miller

University of Alabama in Huntsville

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Michael L. Cherry

Louisiana State University

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Peter F. Bloser

University of New Hampshire

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K. Bennett

European Space Research and Technology Centre

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J. A. Lockwood

University of New Hampshire

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