Secondary electron emission studied by secondary electron energy loss coincidence spectroscopy (SE2ELCS)Įmission of secondary electrons is of importance in many branches of fundamental and applied science. This resolution depends directly on the signal propagation properties of the target device and the maximum available clock frequency, therefore it is expected to improve considerably on higher-end FPGAs. This method has been validated with a low-end Xilinx Spartan-3E and provided coincidence resolutions lower than 6 ns. The method requires low device resources and no specific peripherals in order to resolve coincident digital pulses within a time window of a few nanoseconds. We developed a new FPGA-based method for coincidence detection in positron emission tomography. Sportelli, Giancarlo Belcari, Nicola Guerra, Pedro Santos, Andres International Nuclear Information System (INIS) Low-resource synchronous coincidence processor for positron emission tomography We also discuss stacking analyses that will also be useful with future experiments such as IceCube-Gen2. Assuming that the cosmic-ray loading factor is âˆ❁0 and the Lorentz factor distribution is lognormal, we calculate the probability of neutrino detection from EE by current and future neutrino detectors, and we find that the quasi-simultaneous detection of high-energy neutrinos, gamma-rays, and GWs is possible with future instruments or even with current instruments for nearby SGRBs having EE. We estimate high-energy neutrino fluences from prompt emission, extended emission (EE), X-ray flares, and plateau emission, and we show that neutrino signals associated with the EE are the most promising. Short gamma-ray bursts (SGRBs) are believed to originate from mergers of compact star binaries involving neutron stars. We investigate current and future prospects for coincident detection of high-energy neutrinos and gravitational waves (GWs). Murase, Kohta Mészáros, Peter [Department of Physics, Pennsylvania State University, University Park, PA 16802 (United States) Kiuchi, Kenta [Center for Gravitational Physics, Yukawa Institute for Theoretical Physics, Kyoto, Kyoto 606-8502 (Japan) High-energy Neutrino Emission from Short Gamma-Ray Bursts: Prospects for Coincident Detection with Gravitational WavesĮnergy Technology Data Exchange (ETDEWEB)