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We detail the calibration of the D-dot probes used on the Los Alamos National Laboratory DARHT Axis 1 LIA compensation cans (CCs). We hope this will serve not only as a record of this calibration, but also as a guide on how to perform similar calibrations on other systems where D-dots are deployed. Although a simple measurement, its difficulty lies in the fact that the same geometry used when fielded must be used during calibration, the ultimate goal being to measure the capacitance between the probe sensor and the component whose voltage one intends to measure. Because of its linearity with voltage, this can be done at a lower voltage than during fielding, the only caveat being that this lower voltage pulse must still provide enough signal to noise. After a brief summary of our results, we include a description of a compensation can, the D-dot probe and its operation. We then provide 3D simulation results of the capacitance of this probe to the high voltage bushing under test inside of the compensation can. Finally, we describe our calibration setup and discuss our results.
An all solid-state kicker modulator for the Dual-Axis Radiographic Hydrodynamic Test facility (DARHT-2) has been designed and tested. This kicker modulator uses multiple solid-state modules stacked in an inductive-adder configuration where the energy
RADMON is a small radiation monitor designed and assembled by students of the University of Turku and the University of Helsinki. It is flown on-board Aalto-1, a 3-unit CubeSat in low Earth orbit at about 500 km altitude. The detector unit of the ins
We measure the detection efficiency of single-photon detectors at wavelengths near 851 nm and 1533.6 nm. We investigate the spatial uniformity of one free-space-coupled single-photon avalanche diode and present a comparison between fusion-spliced and
Monitoring the dose delivered during proton and carbon ion therapy is still a matter of research. Among the possible solutions, several exploit the measurement of the single photon emission from nuclear decays induced by the irradiation. To fully cha
We report the operation of a cold-atom inertial sensor which continuously captures the rotation signal. Using a joint interrogation scheme, where we simultaneously prepare a cold-atom source and operate an atom interferometer (AI) enables us to elimi