ANSI IEEE 309-1999 Standard Test Procedures and Basis for Geiger-Mueller Counters (ANSI N42.3 1999).pdf
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1、Recognized as anAmerican National Standard (ANSI)The Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc.347 East 47th Street, New York, NY 10017-2394, USACopyright 1999 by the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers, Inc.All rights reserved. Published 4 June 1999. Printed in the United
2、 States of America.Print: ISBN 0-7381-1656-4 SH94739PDF: ISBN 0-7381-1657-2 SS94739No part of this publication may be reproduced in any form, in an electronic retrieval system or otherwise, without the prior written per-mission of the publisher.IEEE Std 309-1999N42-3-1999(R2006)(Revision of IEEE Std
3、 309-1970ANSI N43-1969)IEEE Standard Test Procedures and Basis for Geiger-Mueller CountersSponsorNuclear Instruments and Detectors Committeeof theIEEE Nuclear and Plasma Sciences Society Approved 12 May 1999American National Standards InstituteReaffirmed 30 March 2006Approved 18 March 1999IEEE-SA St
4、andards BoardAbstract: Test procedures for Geiger-Mueller counters that are used for the detection of ionizing radiationare presented so that they have the same meaning to both manufacturers and users. Also included isinformation on bases (i.e., connections) for the counters. Keywords: gas counter,
5、Geiger-Mueller, radiation detectorsIEEE Standardsdocuments are developed within the IEEE Societies and the Standards Coordinating Com-mittees of the IEEE Standards Association (IEEE-SA) Standards Board. Members of the committees servevoluntarily and without compensation. They are not necessarily mem
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17、ion.Copyright 1999 IEEE. All rights reserved.iiiIntroduction(This introduction is not part of IEEE Std 309-1999/ANSI N42.3-1999, IEEE Standard Test Procedures and Bases forGeiger-Mueller Counters.)This standard is a revision of the 1970 version. It presents standard test procedures for Geiger-Muelle
18、rcounters that are used for the detection of ionizing radiation. Also included is information on standard andtypical bases for the counters. This revision has been approved by the Nuclear Instruments and DetectorsCommittee (NIDCom) of the IEEE Nuclear and Plasma Sciences Society and by the Accredite
19、d StandardsCommittee N42 on Nuclear Instrumentation of the American National Standards Institute (ANSI) for whichthe IEEE serves as the Secretariat.These detectors, originally announced by Geiger and Mller in 1928, represented a major step forward in thedetection and counting of individual radioacti
20、ve events. The amplitude of the output signal is independent ofthe energy of the event. Therefore, when only the counting of radioactive events is required, without regardfor the type of radiation or its energy, Geiger-Mueller counters are useful. The output signal is large enoughto operate a scaler
21、 without additional amplification, the regulation requirements of the power supply can befar less than that required for the solid state detectors, and, unlike germanium detectors, no cryostat isrequired.The principal attributes of the Geiger-Mueller counters are their low cost and simplicity, which
22、 accounts fortheir wide usage in many applications. Ionization chambers and the subsequently developed scintillationcounter and semiconductor radiation detectors are capable of distinguishing between different types of radi-ation and their energies and can therefore be used for spectroscopy as well
23、as for counting. The scintillationand semiconductor detectors, because they are solid rather than a gas, are highly efficient for the detection ofgamma rays. The principal attributes of the scintillation counters are high efficiency and moderate energyresolution; whereas, the semiconductor detectors
24、 have outstanding energy resolution.Ionization chambers, scintillation counters, and semiconductor detectors are dealt with in other standardspublications.An excellent description of Geiger-Mueller counters and their operation is provided in Chapter 7 of Glenn F.Knolls book, Radiation Detection and
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