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Muography is a well estabilished method to obtain 3D images of large objects (e.g. volcanoes and large buildings) without any additional particle source, taking advantage of the presence of cosmic muons. The underlying principle of muography is the measurement of individual muon tracks and the determination of their absorption or scattering. These processes depend on the material that they have travelled through. The novel method discussed is based on the measurement of the muon tracks and of the corresponding particles those were produced by the muons themselves in the investigated target. As muons pass through matter they interact with matter by ionization, bremsstrahlung, pair production and nuclear interactions. Our experimental setup is designed in a way to measure both the primary muons and the created secondaries (mostly electrons and gammas). The tracks of the muons are determined by a special kind of Multi-Wire Proportional Chambers (MWPC) called CCC (Close Cathode Chamber). The secondary particles produced in the target are measured by four plastic scintillators placed around the target. The CCC chambers and the scintillators are used in coincidence in order to gather data about muons those passed through the target. As cross sections of the described processes vary by the density and the atomic number of materials this technique could be used to investigate the material content of the target.
A new imaging technique for $alpha$-particles using a fast optical camera focused on a thin scintillator is presented. As $alpha$-particles interact in a thin layer of LYSO fast scintillator, they produce a localized flash of light. The light is coll
Neutron production in lead by cosmic muons has been studied with a Gadolinium doped liquid scintillator detector. The detector was installed next to the Muon-Induced Neutron Indirect Detection EXperiment (MINIDEX), permanently located in the Tubingen
ArgoNeuT, or Argon Neutrino Test, is a 170 liter liquid argon time projection chamber designed to collect neutrino interactions from the NuMI beam at Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory. ArgoNeuT operated in the NuMI low-energy beam line directly u
The X-ARAPUCA device is the baseline choice for the photon detection system of the first far detector module of the DUNE experiment. We present the results of the first complete characterization of a small scale X-ARAPUCA prototype, which is a slice
We have developed a novel technique for the measurement of the avalanche fluctuation of gaseous detectors using a UV laser. The technique is simple and requires a short data-taking time of about ten minutes. Furthermore, it is applicable for relative