Towards a response function for the COSI anticoincidence system: preliminary results from Geant4 simulations
Alex Ciabattoni, Valentina Fioretti, John Tomsick, Andreas Zoglauer,, Pierre Jean, Daniel Alvarez Franco, Peter von Ballmoos, Andrea Bulgarelli,, Cristian Vignali, Nicol\`o Parmiggiani, Gabriele Panebianco, Luca, Castaldini

TL;DR
This paper develops a response function for the COSI anticoincidence system using Geant4 simulations to improve the realism of background event modeling, aiming to optimize the instrument's performance for the upcoming NASA mission.
Contribution
It introduces a response function approach that encodes optical physics effects, reducing computational load while enhancing simulation accuracy for the COSI ACS.
Findings
Verification of Geant4 optical physics against analytical models
Comparison with laboratory measurements using PMTs
Successful implementation of light yield correction
Abstract
The Compton Spectrometer and Imager (COSI) is an upcoming NASA Small Explorer satellite mission scheduled for launch in 2027 and designed to conduct an all-sky survey in the energy range of 0.2-5 MeV. Its instrument consists of an array of germanium detectors surrounded on four sides and underneath by active shields that work as anticoincidence system (ACS) to reduce the contribution of background events in the detectors. These shields are composed of bismuth germanium oxide (BGO), a scintillator material, coupled with Silicon photomultipliers, aimed to collect optical photons produced from interaction of ionizing particles in the BGO and convert them into an electric signal. The reference simulation framework for COSI is MEGAlib, a set of software tools based on the Geant4 toolkit. The interaction point of the incoming radiation, the design of the ACS modules and the BGO surface…
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