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During the last decades, neutron beam transportation has been a well-known and established subject for designing proper neutron guides. However, sometimes unusual adaptation or adjustments are required out of original projects and after operation beginning of facilities. Inter-center transferring of instrument locations also requires a new approach that is not necessarily described in the literature. Inside these situations, the use of S-shaped guides has not been fully discussed in the literature. From a geometrical analysis, we develop a formalism of construction of a minimal S-shaped guide by only considering the exclusion of the Line-of-Sight. We study this guide model through the wavelength cutoff and the neutron transport efficiency analysis. Here, Monte Carlo simulations using MCSTAS software are applied. By intending to optimize these guide systems, simulations of this study also consider scenarios that have different supermirrors. A formalism to determine wavelength cutoff for unique and variable index guide systems is also developed. Simulation results show a good agreement between theoretical and simulated wavelength cutoff values. In addition, we have found specific configurations that combine efficient neutron transport and lower index values on the convex surfaces of curved guides that form the S-shaped guide.
Neutron transport along guides is governed by the Liouville theorem and the technology involved has advanced in recent decades. Computer simulations have proven to be useful tools in the design and conception of neutron guide systems in facilities. I
In this work we report on the Monte Carlo study performed to understand and reproduce experimental measurements of a new plastic b{eta}-detector with cylindrical geometry. Since energy deposition simulations differ from the experimental measurements
In the UCN{tau} experiment, ultracold neutrons (UCN) are confined by magnetic fields and the Earths gravitational field. Field-trapping mitigates the problem of UCN loss on material surfaces, which caused the largest correction in prior neutron exper
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