TY - GEN
T1 - CERBERUS: A Multi-Purpose Spectrometer and Alignment Station at SNS
AU - Frost, Matthew
AU - Brown, Jesse
AU - Gallmeier, Franz X.
AU - Garlea, Vasile Ovidiu (Ovi)
AU - Guber, Klaus H.
AU - Ramirez-Cuesta, Anibal (Timmy)
AU - Schmitt, Kyle
PY - 2022
Y1 - 2022
N2 - In order to maximally utilize the existing beam ports at the Spallation Neutron Source, development and installation of a new neutron instrument is proposed at beam port 16a within building 8700 at Oakridge National Laboratory. Said instrument will provide nominally equal neutron beam access for three main science purposes; (1) as an alignment station for proposed single-crystal spectrometer samples to be run across the facility, (2) as a Near-Infrared (>100meV) filter analyzer spectrometer, nearly identical to that which was previously housed at the Lujan Center in Los Alamos, and (3) as a high-throughput nuclear cross-section measurement station. These three experimental applications would require no substantial technical developments, are complimentary in their technical requirements, and provide a worth-while capability that is infinitely beyond the current use of the 16a beam port at the First Target Station within the SNS complex. All three methods would enhance the facility’s science contributions, while accommodating two niche experiment methods that may not be strong enough to stand on their own.
AB - In order to maximally utilize the existing beam ports at the Spallation Neutron Source, development and installation of a new neutron instrument is proposed at beam port 16a within building 8700 at Oakridge National Laboratory. Said instrument will provide nominally equal neutron beam access for three main science purposes; (1) as an alignment station for proposed single-crystal spectrometer samples to be run across the facility, (2) as a Near-Infrared (>100meV) filter analyzer spectrometer, nearly identical to that which was previously housed at the Lujan Center in Los Alamos, and (3) as a high-throughput nuclear cross-section measurement station. These three experimental applications would require no substantial technical developments, are complimentary in their technical requirements, and provide a worth-while capability that is infinitely beyond the current use of the 16a beam port at the First Target Station within the SNS complex. All three methods would enhance the facility’s science contributions, while accommodating two niche experiment methods that may not be strong enough to stand on their own.
KW - 46 INSTRUMENTATION RELATED TO NUCLEAR SCIENCE AND TECHNOLOGY
U2 - 10.2172/1972574
DO - 10.2172/1972574
M3 - Technical Report
CY - United States
ER -