Forward scattering effects on muon imaging
H. G\'omez, D. Gibert, C. Goy, K. Jourde, Y. Karyotakis, S., Katsanevas, J. Marteau, M. Rosas-Carbajal, A. Tonazzo

TL;DR
This paper investigates how forward scattering of muons affects imaging accuracy, using Monte Carlo simulations to evaluate biases in density reconstructions for large objects in geophysics and archaeology.
Contribution
It provides a comprehensive Monte Carlo simulation framework to quantify forward scattering effects in muon imaging across various geometries and materials.
Findings
Forward scattering introduces significant bias in muon density measurements.
The impact is more pronounced in volcanology applications.
Simulation tools can be adapted for different muon imaging scenarios.
Abstract
Muon imaging is one of the most promising non-invasive techniques for density structure scanning, specially for large objects reaching the kilometre scale. It has already interesting applications in different fields like geophysics or nuclear safety and has been proposed for some others like engineering or archaeology. One of the approaches of this technique is based on the well-known radiography principle, by reconstructing the incident direction of the detected muons after crossing the studied objects. In this case, muons detected after a previous forward scattering on the object surface represent an irreducible background noise, leading to a bias on the measurement and consequently on the reconstruction of the object mean density. Therefore, a prior characterization of this effect represents valuable information to conveniently correct the obtained results. Although the muon…
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