Abstract

Spatial localization of special nuclear materials (SNM) via their neutron signatures amidst background requires knowledge of the background neutron environment or a means of separating a source from background based on low amounts of information. This requirement has created the need for characterizing the spatial distribution of the cosmogenic neutron background. Neutron scatter cameras have been developed and optimized for rapid detection of high activity sources, but have low imaging efficiency, making it difficult to use them to characterize low rate diffuse sources, such as the neutron background. The Low Intensity Neutron Imaging System (LINIS) is a collimated neutron imager that has been designed and optimized for imaging diffuse cosmogenic neutron background in the energy range of 0.5−15 MeV. LINIS operates using 16 liquid scintillation detectors shielded by ultra-high molecular weight polyethylene cylindrical collimators in a staggered orientation and rotates to 7 discrete positions, giving it roughly 2π sensitivity. LINIS has been characterized using (α,n) and fission neutron sources using two imaging techniques for neutron source localization, simple backprojection and Maximum Likelihood Expectation Maximization.

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