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Didgitalpunk (talk | contribs) The NIM standard is edit:[one of] the first... the Renatran standard was already described in a paper dated 1967 (see the Renatran section in the page on crate electronics) |
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[[File:Short Nuclear Instrumentation Crate - side view.jpg|thumb|A NIM
The '''Nuclear Instrumentation Module''' (NIM) standard defines mechanical and electrical specifications for [[modular crate electronics|electronics modules]] used in experimental [[particle physics|particle]] and [[nuclear physics
The NIM standard is one of the first (and perhaps the simplest) such
The NIM standard also specifies cabling, connectors, [[Electrical impedance|impedances]] and levels for [[Boolean logic|logic]] signals. The fast logic standard (commonly known as '''NIM logic''') is a current-based logic, negative "true" (at −16
Apart from the above
NIM modules cannot communicate with each other through the crate backplane; this is a feature of later standards such as [[Computer Automated Measurement and Control|CAMAC]] and [[VMEbus]]. As a consequence, NIM-based ADC modules are nowadays uncommon in nuclear and particle physics. NIM is still widely used for amplifiers, discriminators, nuclear pulse generators and other logic modules that do not require digital data communication but benefit from a backplane connector that is better suited for high
==Standard
{| class="wikitable"
|+ NIM standard module connector pin assignments (required by DOE/ER-0457T)
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| 33 || 117 V AC (hot)
| 34 || Power
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| 35 || Reset (scaler)
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| 41 || 117 V AC (neutral)
| 42 || High-quality
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| G ||
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