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Gamma ray beams for Nuclear Astrophysics: first results of tests and simulations of the ELISSA array

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Published 22 March 2017 © 2017 IOP Publishing Ltd and Sissa Medialab srl
, , The 3rd ELIMED Workshop MEDical and Multidisciplinary Applications of Laser-Driven Ion Beams at ELI-Beamlines (III ELIMED) Citation M. La Cognata et al 2017 JINST 12 C03079 DOI 10.1088/1748-0221/12/03/C03079

1748-0221/12/03/C03079

Abstract

The Extreme Light Infrastructure-Nuclear Physics (ELI-NP) facility, under construction in Magurele near Bucharest in Romania, will provide high-intensity and high-resolution gamma ray beams that can be used to address hotly debated problems in nuclear astrophysics. For this purpose, a silicon strip detector array (named ELISSA) will be realized in a common effort by ELI-NP and INFN-LNS (Catania, Italy), in order to measure excitation functions and angular distributions over a wide energy and angular range. A prototype of ELISSA was built and tested at Laboratori Nazionali del Sud (INFN-LNS) in Catania with the support of ELI-NP. On this occasion, we carried out experiments with alpha sources and with a 11 MeV 7Li beam. Thanks to our approach, the first results of those tests show up a very good energy resolution (better than 1%) and very good position resolution, of the order of 1 mm. Below 1 MeV, a resolution of the order of 6 mm is found, still good enough for the measurement of angular distribution and the kinematical identification of the reactions induced on the target by gamma beams.

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10.1088/1748-0221/12/03/C03079