Current Challenges and Perspectives in Resistive Gaseous Detectors: a manifesto from RPC 2012
Diego Gonzalez-Diaz, Archana Sharma

TL;DR
This paper reviews the current state, challenges, and future perspectives of resistive gaseous detectors, especially RPCs, highlighting their reliability, operational advantages, and ongoing developments in the field.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive summary of resistive gaseous detector advancements, perspectives, and challenges discussed during a dedicated workshop, emphasizing the field's progress and future directions.
Findings
RPCs are fully spark-protected with high reliability.
Resistive gaseous detectors operate at high fields beyond 100kV/cm.
The field shows promising developments and collaborative perspectives.
Abstract
Resistive gaseous detectors can be broadly defined as those operated in conditions where virtually no field lines exist that connect any two metallic electrodes sitting at different potential. This condition can be operationally recognized as 'no gas gap being delimited by two metallic electrodes'. Since early 70's, Resistive Plate Chambers (RPCs) are the most successful implementation of this idea, that leads to fully spark-protected gaseous detectors, with solid state-like reliability at working fields beyond 100kV/cm, yet enjoying the general characteristics of gaseous detectors in terms of flexibility, optimization and customization. We present a summary of the status of the field of resistive gaseous detectors as discussed in a dedicated closing session that took place during the XI Workshop for Resistive Plate Chambers and Related Detectors celebrated in Frascati, and especially…
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Taxonomy
TopicsParticle Detector Development and Performance · Radiation Detection and Scintillator Technologies · CCD and CMOS Imaging Sensors
