The time cut of 0.02<t<0.4 was used for the US measurements to select the fusion events in the upstream layer. The first 20 ns was avoided due to the prompt beam muon background, while the long time was excluded to remove the fusion events in the downstream layer.
For these measurements, we had two main choices of background run in
most cases: BG1, a pure H2 target, and BG2, a standard emission target
with 20 T
D2 DS (see Table 8.2). Fortunately, thanks to
a good signal-to-background ratio and the high yielding US fusion, the
effect of background choice is small.
Examples of the US fusion data with the background are illustrated in
Figs. 8.7 and 8.8 for 3 T
and 14
T
cases, respectively. Notice the differences in the peak width
and the extent of the lower energy tail, both due to
particle
energy loss in the D2 layer.
To determine the
yield, we typically used at least two different
energy cuts. The energy cut efficiency corrections were done using a
dedicated Monte Carlo code, which will be discussed later. Si yield for
the US fusion measurements with different backgrounds are given in
Table 8.4. When the effects due to different background
subtractions are larger than the statistical errors, we considered the
former as a measure of the systematic uncertainty. These cases are
indicated with * in the table.
Runs with target ID=II-2, II-3, and II-4, were performed consecutively in
identical conditions (except US thickness), hence the relative yields are
more reliable than other separate runs.