Kylonicus Posted April 21, 2005 Posted April 21, 2005 I would like to know how particle detectors work, if anyone could tell me, because I think there is a way to manipulate the uncertanity principle to produce energy, and I need a way to observe the particles so it changes their actions.
swansont Posted April 22, 2005 Posted April 22, 2005 That's a rather open-ended question. There are lots of kinds of particle detectors. Cloud and spark chambers, scintillation counters and multi-channel plates, just to name a few. It depends on what you are trying to detect and what informaton you are tying to obtain.
swansont Posted April 23, 2005 Posted April 23, 2005 I am trying to observe electrons. And what information are you trying to get? You have electron multipliers, which will amplify the signal from a single electron in a cascade the electron hits a dynode, which ejects several elelctrons, and these are accelerated to a second stage, which emits more electrons, etc. The signal size can give some information about the electron energy. A microchannel plate works in a similar fashion, but the micro-channels also localize the position of the electron. But I don't think you get as good information about the energy. Faraday cups measure current, but not individual electrons. You can have a fluorescent material on a screen with a photomultiplier (or several, for position information) Cloud chambers use a supersaturated vapor that condenses when a charged particle passes through and leaves a track (also bubble chambers). You put a magnetic field on it and the track curvature tells you information about the energy, if you already know the charge and mass. Geiger tubes amplify ionizations of a gas with a bias voltage that cause secondary ionizations.
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