electronics done by François Thurel, mechanics by René Chagnon, software by David Fernandez Carreiras, written by Petra Pernot
This "section topograph" stroboscopic shutter can be used for frequencies from 1 to 40 Hz. The corresponding experimental set-up is shown on figure 1.

The slit can be placed also behind the stroboscope just before the sample. The shutter consists of a tungsten cylinder with a fixed thin slit along its 16 mm long diameter. Various slit apertures have been drilled in different cylinders: 1 mm, 0.5 mm and 0.25 mm. The cylinder is rotated using a step-by-step motor. An encoder fixed on the motor delivers an electric signal equal to half of the stroboscope frequency. This reference signal is then transformed according to the experiment and depending on the sample, and is shifted as a function of the investigated moment of the period. The main advantage of this stroboscope is related to its mechanical simplicity. Mechanically induced jitters are reduced, and the time precision achieved is better than 1% of the period. The stroboscope has to be placed in the blue box of the Experimental hutch on the HMONO goniometer. Both vertical and horizontal attachment (i.e. vertical or horizontal sections) are possible accordingly to the demand of a given experiment. The real view of the installed stroboscope is on fig.2.

The motor and encoder cables are visible as well as the red tube delivering the Nitrogen gas which keeps the slit reasonably clear.
The "strobo" motor is defined in HDIFFR, having 400 steps per turn, i.e. per 360 degrees. Its 'steady state rate' in config define the speed of the motor and consequently the stroboscopic frequency. Example: if equal to 400, the motor speed is one turn per second, two stroboscopic pulses (slit passes twice in one turn) are delivered. Corresponding DPAP2 is located in 04 cupboard in the bottom rack, DPAP2 is second from the left, fig.3. The DPAP2 current should be BB0 and no limit switches set.

The encoder has 500 steps per turn, i.e. per 360 degrees. It delivers signal each time the index passes (once per turn). The encoder cable description with the real connection in the Experimental and Control hutch respectively on PP2 panel are shown in fig.4.

The encoder cable enter on the "Add On" carte, mounted on the "Line Driver" carte, which generates a pulse on the leading edge of EITHER of the signals of Gate Out 1 and 2 from VCT6 carte. The "Line Driver" carte is mounted on the top of the 03 cupboard and should be powered if some actions from it is expected (red led ON). The carte VCT6 used has the MCT6 carte and on this MCT6 carte are re-directed Gate out and Gate out 2 towards the outputs TTL 1 and 2. The schematic drawing of the "Line Driver" connections with the VCT6 carte together with the real views of these devices is presented in figure 5. Usually, the 'stroboscopic' VCT6 carte is the second VCT6 defined on crate 193, address: fe7ca100, server: id19/Vct6193_1. Consequently, on the VCT6 carte the stripe A8 should be OFF (first defined VCT6 on a crate has the stripe A8 ON). Other modifications on the VCT6 carte are:

Before (or after) the experiment with a given cylinder slit mounted on the stroboscope, the distance between the index of the encoder and the first opening of the slit (second opening is 250 'traits' further) should be measured in time units for a given motor speed and inverted into encoder step units (independent on the motor speed). A two channel oscilloscope is needed to perform this measurement: one channel to record the index signal (coming from the "Line Driver"), second channel to record the signal for example from a diode placed behind the rotating stroboscope or from a detector (monitor near to HMONO does the job if powered). The timing of the cylindrical stroboscope is schematically described on fig.6 with various experimental times explained in examples.

The exceed file CALCUL_STROBO.xls allows a quick calculations of the experimental parameters. It is installed on PC CHEOPS in the Control hutch, dir: F/strobo. Figure 7 shows an example of this file.

Synchronization macro "id19strobo" is saved on EUROPA in directory umacros. In any Spec session it can be called by 'udo id19strobo' command.
After 'strobosetup' command three questions are asked:
The synchronization starts with the parameters defined in strobosetup after 'strobostart' command. Note that the motor of the stroboscope should turn (in other Spec version that this one used for strobosetup) in order to deliver some signals to electronics.
Generally, what should be done before starting any strobo-game: