Project Status: | |
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Author | Mohamed E. Krar (DrKrar@gmail.com) |
Repository | GitHub.com |
Documentation | GitHub.io |
Current version | v"0.9.4-dev" |
Build status: | ||
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Code coverage: |
An officially registered Julia program, provides a set of tools to calculate the geometrical efficiency in a fast and accurate way. The Package models a radiation detector irradiated by a radioactive source. The Package relay directly on numerical evaluation of a closed form analytical formula describing the geometrical efficiency.
The following list describe the state of current feature and planed feature. The checked items represent already present feature.
-
support of widely used detector geometries.
-
cylinder
detectors. -
bore-hole
detectors. -
well-type
detectors.
-
-
support of specialized detector geometries.
-
support of isotropic radioactive sources.
-
point
sources. -
disc
sources. -
cylinder
sources.
-
-
support of anisotropic radioactive sources.
-
point
sources.
-
-
consider more details of the measurement setup.
- the detector effect.
- the end cap effect.
- the medium and absorber effect.
-
combine the effect of the source geometry and composition.
- Julia 1.5 or above.
- QuadGK 2.4 or above, installed automatically during the package installation.
Getting the GeoEfficiency package to work involves two steps:
Just head over to the Julia language download page and choose the suitable binary for your platform to download and install. At the end of this step you should be able to run julia from your system.
Head to to run julia in your browser without any local installation.
GeoEfficiency is registered officially and so the latest stable release can be installed through the Julia package management system just by typing the following into the julia REPL prompt.
julia> import Pkg
julia> Pkg.add("GeoEfficiency")
After installing the package, you can load it to your current workspace by typing the following:
julia> using GeoEfficiency
Now the package is available to use, try typing:
julia> calc()
see also: geoEff()
, calcN()
, batch()
Being error free and accuracy is a highly demanded objective in scientific calculation. Thus, the package is extensively tested method-wise in each supported operating system. Operating system fully supported includes Windows, Linus, Apple OSX.
After installing, the package can be tested in your own system by typing the following into the REPL prompt.
julia> using Test, Pkg
julia> Pkg.test("GeoEfficiency")
The following constructor can be used to construct a specific type of detector
CylDetector
for cylindrical detector,BoreDetector
for bore hole,WellDetector
for well type detector.
While the function Detector
can be used to construct any of the above types. You may try also getDetectors
.
Point
constructor is used to construct an anchoring point of a source. relative to source anchoring point the source position is specified.
For a point source, the anchoring point is the source itself.
The source()
method take input from the console
and return a tuple describing the source.
The efficiency calculation can be done by one of the functions:
geoEff
used with or without argument(s),calc
ask for the required information from theconsole
,calcN
just a repeat of thecalc
functionbatch()
which try to take required information from csv files located in the home directory inside a folder calledGeoEfficiency
.
For more on the function and its methods prefix the name of the function by ?
.
Input from the console
can be numerical expression not just a number.
5/2
;5//2
;pi
;π/2
;exp(2)
;1E-2
;5.2/3
;sin(1)
;sin(1)^2
All are valid expressions.
The package can be used to perform batch calculations by calling one of the
methods of the function batch
. The output results of batch calculations is
found by default in GeoEfficiency\results
folder inside the user home directory.
For example c:\users\yourusername\GeoEfficiency\results\
.
The function batch()
can be called with or without arrangement(s).
The without argument version relay on previously prepared Comma Saved Values
[CSV] files, that can be easily edit by Microsoft Excel, located by default
in the GeoEfficiency
folder.
Those Comma Saved Values [CSV] files are:-
-
Detectors.csv
contains the detectors description (a detector per line
); The line format is:Crystal_Radius Crystal_Length Hole_Radius Hole_Depth -
srcHeights.csv
contains the source heights;Source_Heights -
srcRhos.csv
contains the source off-axis distances;Source_Rhos -
srcRadii.csv
contains the source radii for disc and cylindrical sources;Source_Radii -
srcLengths.csv
contains the source length for cylindrical sources;Source_Lengths
For Comma Saved Values [CSV] files each line represent an entry, the first line is always treated as the header.
The program expect each line to contain one number for all CSV files except for Detectors.csv
each line should contain at least one number or at most four separated numbers.