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Acoustic test setup at south pole. IceCube Collaboration Meeting, Berkeley, March 2005. Motivation. Evalution of acoustic detection needs acoustic parameters of south polar ice. Absorption length ≈ few km temperature dependant depth dependant Speed of sound / refraction
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Acoustic test setup at south pole IceCube Collaboration Meeting, Berkeley, March 2005
Motivation Evalution of acoustic detection needs acoustic parameters of south polar ice • Absorption length • ≈ few km • temperature dependant depth dependant • Speed of sound / refraction • vice≫ vwater larger signals ( Pmax∞ vice2) • density dependant refraction of surface noise • Noise level • determines energy threshold • Background events • few signal events/year few transient events or good suppression
Setup • Use IceCube • 3 distant holes • down to 400 m • 7 levels per hole • sensors • transmitters • auxiliary • Surface digitization • String PCs • DAQ • Power • Fiber LAN
Acoustic stage • In all three holes • at the same height do measurement in same layer • sensor and transmitter at each stage reduce systematic error in redundant setup • Sensor module and transmitter module • close together check with low signals • standard pressure housing • 10 cm diameter steel tube • end caps with commercial penetrators • String support • own steel cable • avoid signal shielding by IceCube cable need spacer • Auxiliary devices • temperature or pressure senors • commercial hydrophones
Acoustic stage: sensor • Sensor module • based on existing design • PZT5 piezoceramics plus amplifier directly coupled to steel tube • three channels per module local coincidences directional information • Power supply • cable losses use larger supply voltage ±5V generated in module
Acoustic stage: transmitter • Active element • piezoceramic transducer signals ≥ 1000 V possible • no orientation possible ring-shaped ceramic azimuthal symmetry • broad resonance large pressure amplitude • directly coupled to the ice calculable system • HV Signals • Problem: cable capacitance down in the ice • use LC-circuits sine bursts and pulses
Cables • Sensors • differential signals 3×2 (twisted pairs) • power supply 1×2 • Transmitters • signal 1×2 • power supply 1×2 • Option 1: flexible outdoor robot cable • 6×2, 8×2 … 16×2 twisted pairs • 0.51 mm2 (ATW24), 100 Ohmloss: < 2 dB/100m • used for moving parts at -40 deg • ≈ 6€ / m (8×2 one cable) • Option 2: use cheap ethernet cables • 4×2 twisted pairs • 0.52 mm2 (ATW24), 100 Ohmloss: < 2 dB/100m • two free pairs from transmitter use for auxiliary sensors • tested for -20 deg test at lower temperatures • ≈ 0.3 € / m (4×2 two cables)
String PC • Limitations • cable costs • cable losses • DAQ at top of each string • String PC • DAQ board(s) • Power supply • Fiber LAN switch • only used for data handling slow CPU, small disk • buried in snow waterproof container
String PC: DAQ • DAQ requirements • Low sampling rates • low data rates • use of the shelf DAQ • Proposal: NI-DAQ 6259 • 16 differential inputs two cards per strings • 1.25 MHz single channel • 1.0 MHz multichannel 83.3 kHz per channel • digital and analog triggering • variable gain: ± 50 mV to ± 10 V large dynamic range • 4 differential outputs transmitter signals
String PC: Power supply • Power consumption • Wire resistance: AWG24 (0.5mm2), 500m 86 ohm / pair • Sensor • ± 5V / 30mA per amplifier ~ 1W / 100mA per module • cable loss (86ohm, 0.1A) ΔU = 8.6V • Transmitter • +5V / 200mA, ~ 1W per module • cable loss (86ohm, 0.2A) ΔU = 17.2V • Power Supply: TXL Series • Uin = 86V-264 VAC 50/60Hz • size 99x82x35 mm fits into standard PC housing • sensors: TXL 035-1515D Uout = ±15V / 1.3A • transmitters: TXL Series, TXL 060-24S Uout = 24V / 2.5A • Total: ~15 W per string
Cargo cables, PCs, DAQ Sensor and transmitter modules total cargo need ≤ 5m3 Manpower deployment: trained person at the spot commissioning: DAQ connection and setup, primary testing one person, two weeks Deployment separate deployment deployment with string possible only affecting the last 400 m OMs are in safe depth find best solution with IceCube deployment responsibles Interference with IceCube Acoustic signals 1 km above IceCube < 10 mPa signal at OMs Electric signals low voltage (±5Vpp) High voltage generated localy low duty cycle (≤ 1%). DAQ, power supply seperate from IceCube no interference expected Constraints from IceCube
Summary • all components are available and tested • reasonable cost and time scale • major activities at all other neutrino telescopes • go for pole season 05/06