Geant4 Developers
Geant4 Developers
Release 10.5
Geant4 Collaboration
1 Introduction 3
1.1 How to use this manual . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 3
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2.7.3 Macro Commands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 26
2.7.4 Example Macro File . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 31
2.8 How to Make an Executable Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
2.8.1 Using CMake to Build Applications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 32
2.8.2 Using Geant4Make to build Applications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 40
2.9 How to Set Up an Interactive Session . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
2.9.1 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
2.9.2 A Short Description of Available Interfaces . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 42
2.9.3 How to Select Interface in Your Applications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 44
2.10 How to Execute a Program . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
2.10.1 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
2.10.2 ‘Hard-coded’ Batch Mode . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 45
2.10.3 Batch Mode with Macro File . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 46
2.10.4 Interactive Mode Driven by Command Lines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 47
2.10.5 General Case . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 48
2.11 How to Visualize the Detector and Events . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
2.11.1 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
2.11.2 Visualization Drivers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
2.11.3 How to Incorporate Visualization Drivers into an Executable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 51
2.11.4 Writing the main() Method to Include Visualization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 52
2.11.5 Sample Visualization Sessions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
2.11.6 For More Information on GEANT4 Visualization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 53
3 Toolkit Fundamentals 55
3.1 Class Categories and Domains . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
3.1.1 What is a class category? . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
3.1.2 Class categories in GEANT4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 55
3.2 Global Usage Classes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
3.2.1 Signature of GEANT4 classes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 57
3.2.2 The HEPRandom module in CLHEP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 58
3.2.3 The HEPNumerics module . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
3.2.4 General management classes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 61
3.3 System of units . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
3.3.1 Basic units . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
3.3.2 Input your data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 63
3.3.3 Output your data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64
3.3.4 Introduce new units . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64
3.3.5 Print the list of units . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 64
3.4 Run . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
3.4.1 Basic concept of Run . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 65
3.4.2 GEANT4 as a state machine . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
3.4.3 User’s hook for state change . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 67
3.4.4 Customizing the Run Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 68
3.4.5 Managing worker thread . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
3.5 Event . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
3.5.1 Representation of an event . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
3.5.2 Structure of an event . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
3.5.3 Mandates of G4EventManager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 70
3.5.4 Stacking mechanism . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
3.6 Event Generator Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
3.6.1 Structure of a primary event . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 71
3.6.2 Interface to a primary generator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 72
3.6.3 Event overlap using multiple generators . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74
3.7 Event Biasing Techniques . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74
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3.7.1 Scoring, Geometrical Importance Sampling and Weight Roulette . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 74
3.7.2 Physics Based Biasing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 82
3.7.3 Adjoint/Reverse Monte Carlo . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 85
3.7.4 Generic Biasing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 90
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4.9.3 Drawing scores . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 187
4.9.4 Writing scores to a file . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 187
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5.9.3 Geometry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 258
7 Control 271
7.1 Built-in Commands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 271
7.2 User Interface - Defining New Commands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 271
7.2.1 G4UImessenger . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 271
7.2.2 G4UIcommand and its derived classes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 272
7.2.3 An example messenger . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 276
7.2.4 How to control the output of G4cout/G4cerr . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 279
8 Visualization 281
8.1 Introduction to Visualization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 281
8.1.1 What Can be Visualized . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 281
8.1.2 You have a Choice of Visualization Drivers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 281
8.1.3 Choose the Driver that Meets Your Needs . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 283
8.1.4 Controlling Visualization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 284
8.1.5 Visualization Details . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 284
8.2 Adding Visualization to Your Executable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 285
8.2.1 Installing Visualization Drivers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 285
8.2.2 How to Realize Visualization Drivers in an Executable . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 285
8.2.3 Visualization Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 286
8.2.4 How to Write the main() Function . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 286
8.3 The Visualization Drivers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 288
8.3.1 Availability of drivers on the supported systems . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 288
8.3.2 OpenGL . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 289
8.3.3 Qt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 290
8.3.4 OpenInventor . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 290
8.3.5 OpenInventor Extended Viewer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 291
8.3.6 HepRepFile . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 292
8.3.7 HepRepXML . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 293
8.3.8 DAWN . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 295
8.3.9 Remote Visualization with the DAWN-Network Driver . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 295
8.3.10 VRML . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 296
8.3.11 RayTracer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 298
8.3.12 gMocren . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 298
8.3.13 Wt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 299
8.3.14 Visualization of detector geometry tree . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 302
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8.3.15 GAG Tree . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 303
8.3.16 XML Tree . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 303
8.4 Controlling Visualization from Commands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 304
8.4.1 Scene, scene handler, and viewer . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 305
8.4.2 Create a scene handler and a viewer: /vis/open command . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 306
8.4.3 Create an empty scene: /vis/scene/create command . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 306
8.4.4 Visualization of a physical volume: /vis/drawVolume command . . . . . . . . . . . . . 306
8.4.5 Visualization of a logical volume: /vis/drawLogicalVolume command . . . . . . . . 307
8.4.6 Visualization of trajectories: /vis/scene/add/trajectories command . . . . . . . 307
8.4.7 Visualization of hits: /vis/scene/add/hits command . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 308
8.4.8 Visualization of fields: /vis/scene/add/magneticField command . . . . . . . . . 309
8.4.9 Visualization of Scored Data . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 309
8.4.10 Additional attributes for Hits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 309
8.4.11 Basic camera workings: /vis/viewer/ commands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 310
8.4.12 Declare the end of visualization for flushing: /vis/viewer/flush command . . . . . . 312
8.4.13 End of Event Action and End of Run Action: /vis/scene/endOfEventAction and
/vis/scene/endOfRunAction commands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 312
8.4.14 HepRep Attributes for Trajectories . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 313
8.4.15 How to save a view. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 313
8.4.16 How to save a view to an image file . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 313
8.4.17 Culling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 315
8.4.18 Cut view . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 315
8.4.19 Multithreading commands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 316
8.5 Controlling Visualization from Compiled Code . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 316
8.5.1 G4VVisManager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 316
8.5.2 Visualization of detector components . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 317
8.5.3 Visualization of trajectories . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 317
8.5.4 Enhanced trajectory drawing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 318
8.5.5 HepRep Attributes for Trajectories . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 318
8.5.6 Visualization of hits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 318
8.5.7 HepRep Attributes for Hits . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 321
8.5.8 Visualization of text . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 321
8.5.9 Visualization of polylines and tracking steps . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 321
8.5.10 Visualization User Actions . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 322
8.5.11 Standalone Visualization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 323
8.5.12 Drawing a solid as a cloud of points . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 324
8.6 Visualization Attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 325
8.6.1 Visibility . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 325
8.6.2 Colour . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 326
8.6.3 Forcing attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 328
8.6.4 Other attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 329
8.6.5 Constructors of G4VisAttributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 329
8.6.6 How to assign G4VisAttributes to a logical volume . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 330
8.6.7 Additional User-Defined Attributes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 330
8.7 Enhanced Trajectory Drawing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 331
8.7.1 Default Configuration . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 331
8.7.2 Trajectory Drawing Models . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 332
8.7.3 Controlling from Commands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 333
8.7.4 Controlling from Compiled Code . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 335
8.7.5 Drawing by time . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 335
8.8 Trajectory Filtering . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 336
8.8.1 Controlling from Commands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 337
8.8.2 Example commands . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 337
8.8.3 Hit and Digi Filtering . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 338
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8.9 Polylines, Markers and Text . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 338
8.9.1 Polylines . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 338
8.9.2 Markers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 339
8.9.3 Text . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 340
8.10 Making a Movie . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 341
8.10.1 Using /vis/viewer/interpolate . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 342
8.10.2 OGLX . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 342
8.10.3 Qt . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 343
8.10.4 DAWNFILE . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 343
8.10.5 RayTracerX . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 344
8.11 Debugging geometry with vis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 344
8.11.1 Using advanced vis tools . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 345
9 Analysis 349
9.1 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 349
9.2 Analysis Manager Classes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 349
9.2.1 Analysis Manager . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 350
9.2.2 Files handling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 350
9.2.3 Histograms . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 351
9.2.4 Profiles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 357
9.2.5 Plotting . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 360
9.2.6 Ntuples . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 361
9.2.7 Parallel Processing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 362
9.2.8 Coexistence of Several Managers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 363
9.2.9 Supported Features and Limitations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 364
9.3 Analysis Reader Classes . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 364
9.3.1 Analysis Reader . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 365
9.3.2 File handling . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 365
9.3.3 Histograms and Profiles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 366
9.3.4 Ntuples . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 366
9.4 Accumulables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 367
9.4.1 G4Accumulable<T> . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 367
9.4.2 User defined accumulables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 369
9.5 g4tools . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 370
9.5.1 g4tools package . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 370
9.5.2 User API . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 371
10 Examples 375
10.1 Introduction . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 375
10.2 Basic Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 375
10.2.1 Basic Examples Summary . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 375
10.2.2 Basic Examples Macros . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 378
10.2.3 Multi-threading . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 379
10.2.4 Example B1 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 379
10.2.5 Example B2 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 380
10.2.6 Example B3 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 381
10.2.7 Example B4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 382
10.2.8 Example B5 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 383
10.3 Extended Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 385
10.3.1 Analysis . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 385
10.3.2 Biasing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 385
10.3.3 Common . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 386
10.3.4 Electromagnetic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 386
10.3.5 Error Propagation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 387
vii
10.3.6 Event Generator . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 387
10.3.7 Exotic Physics . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 387
10.3.8 Fields . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 388
10.3.9 Geant3 to Geant4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 388
10.3.10 Geometry . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 388
10.3.11 Hadronic . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 388
10.3.12 Medical Applications . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 388
10.3.13 Optical Photons . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 389
10.3.14 Parallel Computing . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 389
10.3.15 Parameterisations . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 390
10.3.16 Persistency . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 390
10.3.17 Physics lists . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 390
10.3.18 Polarisation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 390
10.3.19 Radioactive Decay . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 390
10.3.20 Run & Event . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 391
10.3.21 Visualization . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 391
10.4 Advanced Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 391
10.5 Novice Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 392
11 Appendix 393
11.1 CLHEP Foundation Library . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 393
11.1.1 Origin and current situation of CLHEP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 393
11.1.2 GEANT4 and CLHEP . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 393
11.2 Geant4Config.cmake CMake Config File . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 393
11.2.1 CMake Build System: Geant4Config.cmake . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 393
11.2.2 Building an Application against a Build of GEANT4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 398
11.3 GNUMake System: Makefiles and Environment Variables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 398
11.3.1 Geant4Make System . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 398
11.3.2 Environment variables . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 399
11.3.3 Linking External Libraries with GEANT4 . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 402
11.4 Development and Debug Tools . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 404
11.4.1 Unix/Linux . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 404
11.4.2 Windows . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 404
11.5 Python Interface . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 405
11.5.1 Installation . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 405
11.5.2 Using Geant4Py . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 405
11.5.3 Site-modules . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 406
11.5.4 Examples . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 407
11.6 GEANT4 Material Database . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 408
11.6.1 Simple Materials (Elements) . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 408
11.6.2 NIST Compounds . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 410
11.6.3 HEP and Nuclear Materials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 422
11.6.4 Space (ISS) Materials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 423
11.6.5 Bio-Chemical Materials . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 423
11.7 Transportation in Magnetic Field - Further Details . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 425
11.7.1 The challenge of integrating all tracks . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 425
11.7.2 Using preset thresholds for killing loopers . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 426
11.7.3 Fine grained control of the parameters for killing looping particles . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 427
Bibliography 433
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Book For Application Developers, Release 10.5
CONTENTS 1
Book For Application Developers, Release 10.5
2 CONTENTS
CHAPTER
ONE
INTRODUCTION
A very basic introduction to GEANT4 is presented in Section Getting Started with Geant4 - Running a Simple Example.
It is a recipe for writing and running a simple GEANT4 application program. New users of GEANT4 should read this
chapter first. It is strongly recommended that this chapter be read in conjunction with a GEANT4 system installed and
running on your computer. It is helpful to run the provided examples as they are discussed in the manual. To install
the GEANT4 system on your computer, please refer to the Installation Guide for Setting up Geant4 in Your Computing
Environment.
Section Toolkit Fundamentals discusses general GEANT4 issues such as class categories and the physical units system.
It goes on to discuss runs and events, which are the basic units of a simulation.
Section Detector Definition and Response describes how to construct a detector from customized materials and geo-
metric shapes, and embed it in electromagnetic fields. It also describes how to make the detector sensitive to particles
passing through it and how to store this information.
How particles are propagated through a material is treated in Section Tracking and Physics. The GEANT4 “philosophy”
of particle tracking is presented along with summaries of the physics processes provided by the toolkit. The definition
and implementation of GEANT4 particles is discussed and a list of particle properties is provided.
Section User Actions is a description of the “user hooks” by which the simulation code may be customized to perform
special tasks.
Section Control provides a summary of the commands available to the user to control the execution of the simulation.
After Chapter 2, Chapters 6 and 7 are of foremost importance to the new application developer.
The display of detector geometry, tracks and events may be incorporated into a simulation application by using the
tools described in Section Visualization.
Section Examples provides a set of basic, novice, extended and advanced simulation codes which may be compiled
and run “as is” from the GEANT4 source code. These examples may be used as educational tools or as base code from
which more complex applications are developed.
3
Book For Application Developers, Release 10.5
4 Chapter 1. Introduction
CHAPTER
TWO
The contents of main() will vary according to the needs of a given simulation application and therefore must be
supplied by the user. The GEANT4 toolkit does not provide a main() method, but a sample is provided here as a
guide to the beginning user. Listing 2.1 is the simplest example of main() required to build a simulation program.
#include "ExG4DetectorConstruction01.hh"
#include "ExG4PhysicsList00.hh"
#include "ExG4ActionInitialization01.hh"
int main()
{
// construct the default run manager
G4RunManager* runManager = new G4RunManager;
// initialize G4 kernel
runManager->Initialize();
// start a run
int numberOfEvent = 3;
runManager->BeamOn(numberOfEvent);
// job termination
delete runManager;
return 0;
}
The main() method is implemented by two toolkit classes, G4RunManager and G4UImanager, and three classes,
ExG4DetectorConstruction01, ExG4PhysicsList00 and ExG4ActionInitialization01, which
5
Book For Application Developers, Release 10.5
are derived from toolkit classes. Each of these are explained in the following sections.
2.1.2 G4RunManager
The first thing main() must do is create an instance of the G4RunManager class. This is the only manager class
in the GEANT4 kernel which should be explicitly constructed in the user’s main(). It controls the flow of the
program and manages the event loop(s) within a run. If the user wants to make the simulation code multi-threaded,
G4MTRunManager should be instantiated instead of G4RunManager.
When G4RunManager is created, the other major manager classes are also created. They are deleted automatically
when G4RunManager is deleted. The run manager is also responsible for managing initialization procedures, in-
cluding methods in the user initialization classes. Through these the run manager must be given all the information
necessary to build and run the simulation, including
1. how the detector should be constructed,
2. all the particles and all the physics processes to be simulated,
3. how the primary particle(s) in an event should be produced, and
4. any additional requirements of the simulation.
In the sample main() the lines
runManager->SetUserInitialization(new ExG4DetectorConstruction01);
runManager->SetUserInitialization(new ExG4PhysicsList00);
runManager->SetUserInitialization(new ExG4ActionInitialization01);
create objects which specify the detector geometry, physics processes and primary particle, respectively, and pass their
pointers to the run manager. ExG4DetectorConstruction01 is an example of a user initialization class which
is derived from G4VUserDetectorConstruction. This is where the user describes the entire detector setup,
including
• its geometry,
• the materials used in its construction,
• a definition of its sensitive regions and
• the readout schemes of the sensitive regions.
Similarly ExG4PhysicsList01 is derived from G4VUserPhysicsList and requires the user to define
• the particles to be used in the simulation,
• all the physics processes to be simulated.
User can also override the default implementation for
• the range cuts for these particles and
Also ExG4ActionInitialization01 is derived from G4VUserActionInitialization and requires the
user to define
• so-called user action classes (see next section) that are invoked during the simulation,
• which includes one mandatory user action to define the primary particles.
The next instruction
runManager->Initialize();
performs the detector construction, creates the physics processes, calculates cross sections and otherwise sets up the
run. The final run manager method in main()
int numberOfEvent = 3;
runManager->beamOn(numberOfEvent);
begins a run of three sequentially processed events. The beamOn() method may be invoked any number of times
within main() with each invocation representing a separate run. Once a run has begun neither the detector setup nor
the physics processes may be changed. They may be changed between runs, however, as described in Customizing the
Run Manager. More information on G4RunManager in general is found in Run.
As mentioned above, other manager classes are created when the run manager is created. One of these is the user
interface manager, G4UImanager. In main() a pointer to the interface manager must be obtained
G4UImanager* UI = G4UImanager::getUIpointer();
in order for the user to issue commands to the program. In the present example the applyCommand() method is
called three times to direct the program to print out information at the run, event and tracking levels of simulation.
A wide range of commands is available which allows the user detailed control of the simulation. A list of these
commands can be found in Built-in Commands.
User Classes
There are two kinds of user classes, user initialization classes and user action classes. User initialization classes are
used during the initialization phase, while user action classes are used during the run. User initialization classes should
be directly set to G4RunManager through SetUserInitialization() method, while user action classes
should be defined in G4VUserActionInitialization class.
All three user initialization classes are mandatory. They must be derived from the abstract base classes provided by
GEANT4:
• G4VUserDetectorConstruction
• G4VUserPhysicsList
• G4VUserActionInitialization
GEANT4 does not provide default behavior for these classes. G4RunManager checks for the existence of these
mandatory classes when the Initialize() and BeamOn() methods are invoked.
As mentioned in the previous section, G4VUserDetectorConstruction requires the user to define the de-
tector and G4VUserPhysicsList requires the user to define the physics. Detector definition will be discussed
in Sections How to Define a Detector Geometry and How to Specify Materials in the Detector. Physics def-
inition will be discussed in How to Specify Particles and How to Specify Physics Processes. The user action
G4VUserPrimaryGeneratorAction requires that the initial event state be defined. Primary event generation
will be discussed in How to Make an Executable Program.
G4VUserActionInitialization should include at least one mandatory user action class
G4VUserPrimaryGeneratorAction. All user action classes are described in the next section.
GEANT4 provides a category named intercoms. G4UImanager is the manager class of this category. Using the
functionalities of this category, you can invoke set methods of class objects of which you do not know the pointer. In
Listing 2.3, the verbosities of various GEANT4 manager classes are set. Detailed mechanism description and usage of
intercoms will be given in the next chapter, with a list of available commands. Command submission can be done all
through the application.
#ifdef G4UI_USE
#include "G4VisExecutive.hh"
#endif
#include "ExG4DetectorConstruction01.hh"
#include "ExG4PhysicsList00.hh"
#include "ExG4PrimaryGeneratorAction01.hh"
int main()
{
// construct the default run manager
G4RunManager* runManager = new G4RunManager;
// initialize G4 kernel
runManager->Initialize();
if ( argc == 1 ) {
// interactive mode : define UI session
#ifdef G4UI_USE
G4UIExecutive* ui = new G4UIExecutive(argc, argv);
UImanager->ApplyCommand("/control/execute init.mac");
ui->SessionStart();
delete ui;
#endif
}
else {
// batch mode
G4String command = "/control/execute ";
G4String fileName = argv[1];
UImanager->ApplyCommand(command+fileName);
}
// job termination
delete runManager;
return 0;
}
Although not yet included in the above examples, output streams will be needed. G4cout and G4cerr are iostream
objects defined by GEANT4. The usage of these objects is exactly the same as the ordinary cout and cerr, except that
the output streams will be handled by G4UImanager. Thus, output strings may be displayed on another window or
stored in a file. Manipulation of these output streams will be described in How to control the output of G4cout/G4cerr.
These objects should be used instead of the ordinary cout and cerr.
A detector geometry in GEANT4 is made of a number of volumes. The largest volume is called the World volume. It
must contain, with some margin, all other volumes in the detector geometry. The other volumes are created and placed
inside previous volumes, included in the World volume. The most simple (and efficient) shape to describe the World
is a box.
Each volume is created by describing its shape and its physical characteristics, and then placing it inside a containing
volume.
When a volume is placed within another volume, we call the former volume the daughter volume and the latter the
mother volume. The coordinate system used to specify where the daughter volume is placed, is the coordinate system
of the mother volume.
To describe a volume’s shape, we use the concept of a solid. A solid is a geometrical object that has a shape and
specific values for each of that shape’s dimensions. A cube with a side of 10 centimeters and a cylinder of radius 30
cm and length 75 cm are examples of solids.
To describe a volume’s full properties, we use a logical volume. It includes the geometrical properties of the solid,
and adds physical characteristics: the material of the volume; whether it contains any sensitive detector elements; the
magnetic field; etc.
We have yet to describe how to position the volume. To do this you create a physical volume, which places a copy of
the logical volume inside a larger, containing, volume.
To create a simple box, you only need to define its name and its extent along each of the Cartesian axes.
G4Box* worldBox
= new G4Box("World", world_hx, world_hy, world_hz);
This creates a box named “World” with the extent from -3.0 meters to +3.0 meters along the X axis, from -1.0 to 1.0
meters in Y, and from -1.0 to 1.0 meters in Z. Note that the G4Box constructor takes as arguments the halves of the
total box size.
It is also very simple to create a cylinder. To do this, you can use the G4Tubs class.
G4Tubs* trackerTube
= new G4Tubs("Tracker",
innerRadius,
outerRadius,
hz,
startAngle,
spanningAngle);
This creates a full cylinder, named “Tracker”, of radius 60 centimeters and length 50 cm (the hz parameter represents
the half length in Z).
To create a logical volume, you must start with a solid and a material. So, using the box created above, you can create
a simple logical volume filled with argon gas (see How to Specify Materials in the Detector) by entering:
G4LogicalVolume* worldLog
= new G4LogicalVolume(worldBox, Ar, "World");
G4LogicalVolume* trackerLog
= new G4LogicalVolume(trackerTube, Al, "Tracker");
How do you place a volume? You start with a logical volume, and then you decide the already existing volume inside
of which to place it. Then you decide where to place its center within that volume, and how to rotate it. Once you have
made these decisions, you can create a physical volume, which is the placed instance of the volume, and embodies all
of these attributes.
You create a physical volume starting with your logical volume. A physical volume is simply a placed instance of the
logical volume. This instance must be placed inside a mother logical volume. For simplicity it is unrotated:
G4VPhysicalVolume* trackerPhys
= new G4PVPlacement(0, // no rotation
G4ThreeVector(pos_x, pos_y, pos_z),
// translation position
trackerLog, // its logical volume
"Tracker", // its name
worldLog, // its mother (logical) volume
false, // no boolean operations
0); // its copy number
This places the logical volume trackerLog at the origin of the mother volume worldLog, shifted by one meter
along X and unrotated. The resulting physical volume is named “Tracker” and has a copy number of 0.
An exception exists to the rule that a physical volume must be placed inside a mother volume. That exception is for
the World volume, which is the largest volume created, and which contains all other volumes. This volume obviously
cannot be contained in any other. Instead, it must be created as a G4PVPlacement with a null mother pointer. It
also must be unrotated, and it must be placed at the origin of the global coordinate system.
Generally, it is best to choose a simple solid as the World volume, the G4Box solid type is used in all basic examples.
In GEANT4, the rotation matrix associated to a placed physical volume represents the rotation of the reference system
of this volume with respect to its mother.
A rotation matrix is normally constructed as in CLHEP, by instantiating the identity matrix and then applying a rotation
to it. This is also demonstrated in Example B3.
In nature, general materials (chemical compounds, mixtures) are made of elements, and elements are made of isotopes.
Therefore, these are the three main classes designed in GEANT4. Each of these classes has a table as a static data
member, which is for keeping track of the instances created of the respective classes. All three objects automatically
register themselves into the corresponding table on construction, and should never be deleted in user code.
The G4Element class describes the properties of the atoms:
• atomic number,
• number of nucleons,
• atomic mass,
• shell energy,
• as well as quantities such as cross sections per atom, etc.
The G4Material class describes the macroscopic properties of matter:
• density,
• state,
• temperature,
• pressure,
• as well as macroscopic quantities like radiation length, mean free path, dE/dx, etc.
The G4Material class is the one which is visible to the rest of the toolkit, and is used by the tracking, the geometry,
and the physics. It contains all the information relative to the eventual elements and isotopes of which it is made, at
the same time hiding the implementation details.
In the example below, liquid argon is created, by specifying its name, density, mass per mole, and atomic number.
The pointer to the material, lAr, will be used to specify the matter of which a given logical volume is made:
G4LogicalVolume* myLbox = new G4LogicalVolume(aBox,lAr,"Lbox",0,0,0);
In the example below, the water, H2O, is built from its components, by specifying the number of atoms in the molecule.
a = 1.01*g/mole;
(continues on next page)
a = 16.00*g/mole;
G4Element* elO = new G4Element(name="Oxygen" ,symbol="O" , z= 8., a);
density = 1.000*g/cm3;
G4Material* H2O = new G4Material(name="Water",density,ncomponents=2);
H2O->AddElement(elH, natoms=2);
H2O->AddElement(elO, natoms=1);
In the example below, air is built from nitrogen and oxygen, by giving the fractional mass of each component.
Listing 2.9: Creating air by defining the fractional mass of its compo-
nents.
G4double z, a, fractionmass, density;
G4String name, symbol;
G4int ncomponents;
a = 14.01*g/mole;
G4Element* elN = new G4Element(name="Nitrogen",symbol="N" , z= 7., a);
a = 16.00*g/mole;
G4Element* elO = new G4Element(name="Oxygen" ,symbol="O" , z= 8., a);
density = 1.290*mg/cm3;
G4Material* Air = new G4Material(name="Air ",density,ncomponents=2);
Air->AddElement(elN, fractionmass=70*perCent);
Air->AddElement(elO, fractionmass=30*perCent);
In the example below, air and water are accessed via the GEANT4 material database.
Listing 2.10: Defining air and water from the internal GEANT4 database.
G4NistManager* man = G4NistManager::Instance();
It is possible to build new material on base of an existing “base” material. This feature is useful for electromagnetic
physics allowing to peak up for the derived material all correction data and precomputed tables of stopping powers
and cross sections of the base material. In the example below, two methods how to create water with unusual density
are shown.
density = 1.03*mg/cm3;
G4NistManager* man = G4NistManager::Instance();
G4Material* water2 = man->BuildMaterialWithNewDensity("Water_1.03","G4_WATER",density);
In GEANT4 examples you with find all possible ways to build a material.
G4VUserPhysicsList is one of the mandatory user base classes described in How to Define the main() Program.
Within this class all particles and physics processes to be used in your simulation must be defined. The range cut-off
parameter should also be defined in this class.
The user must create a class derived from G4VuserPhysicsList and implement the following pure virtual meth-
ods:
ConstructParticle(); // construction of particles
ConstructProcess(); // construct processes and register them to particles
The user may also want to override the default implementation of the following virtual method:
SetCuts(); // setting a range cut value for all particles
This section provides some simple examples of the ConstructParticle() and SetCuts() methods. For
information on ConstructProcess() methods, please see How to Specify Physics Processes.
• resonant particles with very short lifetimes, such as vector mesons and delta baryons
• nuclei, such as deuteron, alpha, and heavy ions (including hyper-nuclei)
• quarks, di-quarks, and gluon
Each particle is represented by its own class, which is derived from G4ParticleDefinition. (Exception: G4Ions
represents all heavy nuclei. Please see Particles.) Particles are organized into six major categories:
• lepton,
• meson,
• baryon,
• boson,
• shortlived and
• ion,
each of which is defined in a corresponding sub-directory under geant4/source/particles. There is also a
corresponding granular library for each particle category.
G4ParticleDefinition has properties which characterize individual particles, such as, name, mass,
charge, spin, and so on. Most of these properties are “read-only” and can not be changed directly.
G4ParticlePropertyTable is used to retrieve (load) particle property of G4ParticleDefinition into
(from) G4ParticlePropertyData.
Each particle class type represents an individual particle type, and each class has a single object. This object can be
accessed by using the static method of each class. There are some exceptions to this rule; please see Particles for
details.
For example, the class G4Electron represents the electron and the member G4Electron::theInstance
points its only object. The pointer to this object is available through the static methods
G4Electron::ElectronDefinition(). G4Electron::Definition().
More than 100 types of particles are provided by default, to be used in various physics processes. In normal applica-
tions, users will not need to define their own particles.
The unique object for each particle class is created when its static method to get the pointer is called at the first time.
Because particles are dynamic objects and should be instantiated before initialization of physics processes, you must
explicitly invoke static methods of all particle classes required by your program at the initialization step. (NOTE: The
particle object was static and created automatically before 8.0 release)
Dictionary of Particles
The G4ParticleTable class is provided as a dictionary of particles. Various utility methods are provided, such as:
FindParticle(G4String name); // find the particle by name
FindParticle(G4int PDGencoding) // find the particle by PDG encoding .
Particles are registered automatically during construction. The user has no control over particle registration.
Constructing Particles
ConstructParticle() is a pure virtual method, in which the static member functions for all the particles you
require should be called. This ensures that objects of these particles are created.
Warning: You must define “ALL PARTICLE TYPES” which are used in your application, except for heavy ions.
“ALL PARTICLE TYPES” means not only primary particles, but also all other particles which may appear as
secondaries generated by physics processes you use. Beginning with GEANT4 version 8.0, you should keep this
rule strictly because all particle definitions are revised to “non-static” objects.
For example, suppose you need a proton and a geantino, which is a virtual particle used for simulation and which does
not interact with materials. The ConstructParticle() method is implemented as below:
Due to the large number of pre-defined particles in GEANT4, it is cumbersome to list all the particles by this method.
If you want all the particles in a GEANT4 particle category, there are six utility classes, corresponding to each of the
particle categories, which perform this function:
• G4BosonConstructor
• G4LeptonConstructor
• G4MesonConstructor
• G4BaryonConstructor
• G4IonConstructor
• G4ShortlivedConstructor.
An example of this is shown in ExN05PhysicsList, listed below.
To avoid infrared divergence, some electromagnetic processes require a threshold below which no secondary will
be generated. Because of this requirement, gammas, electrons and positrons require production threshold. This
threshold should be defined as a distance, or range cut-off, which is internally converted to an energy for individ-
ual materials. The range threshold should be defined in the initialization phase using the SetCuts() method of
G4VUserPhysicsList. Cuts per Region discusses threshold and tracking cuts in detail.
Production threshold values should be defined in SetCuts() which is a virtual method of the
G4VUserPhysicsList. Construction of particles, materials, and processes should precede the invocation of
SetCuts(). G4RunManager takes care of this sequence in usual applications.
This range cut value is converted threshold energies for each material and for each particle type (i.e. electron, positron
and gamma) so that the particle with threshold energy stops (or is absorbed) after traveling the range cut distance.
In addition, from the 9.3 release ,this range cut value is applied to the proton as production thresholds of nuclei for
hadron elastic processes. In this case, the range cut value does not means the distance of traveling. Threshold energies
are calculated by a simple formula from the cut in range.
Note that the upper limit of the threshold energy is defined as 10 GeV. If you want to set higher threshold energy, you
can change the limit by using “/cuts/setMaxCutEnergy” command before setting the range cut.
The idea of a “unique cut value in range” is one of the important features of GEANT4 and is used to handle cut values
in a coherent manner. For most applications, users need to determine only one cut value in range, and apply this value
to gammas, electrons and positrons alike. (and proton too)
The default implementation of SetCuts() method provides a defaultCutValue member as the unique range
cut-off value for all particle types. The defaultCutValue is set to 1.0 mm by default. User can change this
value by SetDefaultCutValue() The “/run/setCut” command may be used to change the default cut value
interactively.
Warning: DO NOT change cut values inside the event loop. Cut values may however be changed between runs.
It is possible to set different range cut values for gammas, electrons and positrons by using SetCutValue() methods
(or using “/run/setCutForAGivenParticle” command). However, user must be careful with physics outputs because
GEANT4 processes (especially energy loss) are designed to conform to the “unique cut value in range” scheme.
Beginning with GEANT4 version 5.1, it is now possible to set production thresholds for each geometrical region. This
new functionality is described in Cuts per Region.
Physics processes describe how particles interact with materials. GEANT4 provides seven major categories of pro-
cesses:
• electromagnetic,
• hadronic,
• transportation,
• decay,
• optical,
• photolepton_hadron, and
• parameterisation.
All physics processes are derived from the G4VProcess base class. Its virtual methods
• AtRestDoIt,
• AlongStepDoIt, and
• PostStepDoIt
and the corresponding methods
• AtRestGetPhysicalInteractionLength,
• AlongStepGetPhysicalInteractionLength, and
• PostStepGetPhysicalInteractionLength
describe the behavior of a physics process when they are implemented in a derived class. The details of these methods
are described in Physics Processes.
The following are specialized base classes to be used for simple processes:
G4VAtRestProcess Processes with only AtRestDoIt
G4VContinuousProcess Processes with only AlongStepDoIt
G4VDiscreteProcess processes with only PostStepDoIt
Another 4 virtual classes, such as G4VContinuousDiscreteProcess, are provided for complex processes.
The G4ProcessManager class contains a list of processes that a particle can undertake. It has information on the
order of invocation of the processes, as well as which kind of DoIt method is valid for each process in the list. A
G4ProcessManager object corresponds to each particle and is attached to the G4ParticleDefiniton class.
In order to validate processes, they should be registered with the particle’s G4ProcessManager. Process ordering
information is included by using the AddProcess() and SetProcessOrdering() methods. For registration of
simple processes, the AddAtRestProcess(), AddContinuousProcess() and AddDiscreteProcess()
methods may be used.
G4ProcessManager is able to turn some processes on or off during a run by using the ActivateProcess()
and InActivateProcess() methods. These methods are valid only after process registration is complete, so they
must not be used in the PreInit phase.
The G4VUserPhysicsList class creates and attaches G4ProcessManager objects to all particle classes defined
in the ConstructParticle() method.
G4VUserPhysicsList is the base class for a “mandatory user class” (see How to Define the main() Program), in
which all physics processes and all particles required in a simulation must be registered. The user must create a class
derived from G4VUserPhysicsList and implement the pure virtual method ConstructProcess().
For example, if just the G4Geantino particle class is required, only the transportation process need be registered.
The ConstructProcess() method would then be implemented as follows:
Here, the AddTransportation() method is provided in the G4VUserPhysicsList class to register the
G4Transportation class with all particle classes. The G4Transportation class (and/or related classes) de-
scribes the particle motion in space and time. It is the mandatory process for tracking particles.
In the ConstructProcess() method, physics processes should be created and registered with each particle’s
instance of G4ProcessManager.
An example of process registration is given in the G4VUserPhysicsList::AddTransportation() method.
Registration in G4ProcessManager is a complex procedure for other processes and particles because the relations
between processes are crucial for some processes. In order to ease registration procedures, G4PhysicsListHelper is
provided. Users do not care about type of processes (i.e. AtRest and/or Discrete and/or Continuous ) or ordering
parameters.
An example of electromagnetic process registration for the gamma is shown below
void MyPhysicsList::ConstructEM()
{
// Get pointer to G4PhysicsListHelper
G4PhysicsListHelper* ph = G4PhysicsListHelper::GetPhysicsListHelper();
G4VuserPrimaryGeneratorAction is one of the mandatory classes available for deriving your own concrete
class. In your concrete class, you have to specify how a primary event should be generated. Actual generation of
primary particles will be done by concrete classes of G4VPrimaryGenerator, explained in the following sub-
section. Your G4VUserPrimaryGeneratorAction concrete class just arranges the way primary particles are
generated.
#ifndef ExG4PrimaryGeneratorAction01_h
#define ExG4PrimaryGeneratorAction01_h 1
#include "G4VUserPrimaryGeneratorAction.hh"
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class G4ParticleGun;
class G4Event;
// methods
virtual void GeneratePrimaries(G4Event*);
private:
// data members
G4ParticleGun* fParticleGun; //pointer a to G4 service class
};
#endif
//////////////////////////////////
// ExG4PrimaryGeneratorAction01.cc
//////////////////////////////////
#include "ExG4PrimaryGeneratorAction01.hh"
#include "G4Event.hh"
#include "G4ParticleGun.hh"
#include "G4ParticleTable.hh"
#include "G4ParticleDefinition.hh"
//....oooOO0OOooo........oooOO0OOooo........oooOO0OOooo........oooOO0OOooo......
ExG4PrimaryGeneratorAction01::ExG4PrimaryGeneratorAction01(
const G4String& particleName,
G4double energy,
G4ThreeVector position,
G4ThreeVector momentumDirection)
: G4VUserPrimaryGeneratorAction(),
fParticleGun(0)
{
G4int nofParticles = 1;
fParticleGun = new G4ParticleGun(nofParticles);
//....oooOO0OOooo........oooOO0OOooo........oooOO0OOooo........oooOO0OOooo......
ExG4PrimaryGeneratorAction01::~ExG4PrimaryGeneratorAction01()
{
delete fParticleGun;
}
(continues on next page)
//....oooOO0OOooo........oooOO0OOooo........oooOO0OOooo........oooOO0OOooo......
fParticleGun->GeneratePrimaryVertex(anEvent);
}
//....oooOO0OOooo........oooOO0OOooo........oooOO0OOooo........oooOO0OOooo......
In the constructor of your G4VUserPrimaryGeneratorAction, you should instantiate the primary generator(s).
If necessary, you need to set some initial conditions for the generator(s).
In ExG4PrimaryGeneratorAction01, G4ParticleGun is constructed to use as the actual primary particle generator.
Methods of G4ParticleGun are described in the following section. Please note that the primary generator object(s)
you construct in your G4VUserPrimaryGeneratorAction concrete class must be deleted in your destructor.
Generation of an event
2.6.2 G4VPrimaryGenerator
GEANT4 provides three G4VPrimaryGenerator concrete classes. Among these G4ParticleGun and
G4GeneralParticleSource will be discussed here. The third one is G4HEPEvtInterface, which will be
discussed in Event Generator Interface.
G4ParticleGun
G4ParticleGun is a generator provided by GEANT4. This class generates primary particle(s) with a given mo-
mentum and position. It does not provide any sort of randomizing. The constructor of G4ParticleGun takes an
integer which causes the generation of one or more primaries of exactly same kinematics. It is a rather frequent user
requirement to generate a primary with randomized energy, momentum, and/or position. Such randomization can be
achieved by invoking various set methods provided by G4ParticleGun. The invocation of these methods should be
implemented in the generatePrimaries() method of your concrete G4VUserPrimaryGeneratorAction
class before invoking generatePrimaryVertex() of G4ParticleGun. GEANT4 provides various random
number generation methods with various distributions (see Global Usage Classes).
The following methods are provided by G4ParticleGun, and all of them can be invoked from the
generatePrimaries() method in your concrete G4VUserPrimaryGeneratorAction class.
• void SetParticleDefinition(G4ParticleDefinition*)
• void SetParticleMomentum(G4ParticleMomentum)
• void SetParticleMomentumDirection(G4ThreeVector)
• void SetParticleEnergy(G4double)
• void SetParticleTime(G4double)
• void SetParticlePosition(G4ThreeVector)
• void SetParticlePolarization(G4ThreeVector)
• void SetNumberOfParticles(G4int)
G4GeneralParticleSource
For many applications G4ParticleGun is a suitable particle generator. However if you want to generate primary
particles in more sophisticated manner, you can utilize G4GeneralParticleSource, the GEANT4 General Par-
ticle Source module (GPS), discussed in the next section ( General Particle Source).
2.7.1 Introduction
The G4GeneralParticleSource (GPS) is part of the GEANT4 toolkit for Monte-Carlo, high-energy particle
transport. Specifically, it allows the specifications of the spectral, spatial and angular distribution of the primary
source particles. An overview of the GPS class structure is presented here. Configuration covers the configuration of
GPS for a user application, and Macro Commands describes the macro command interface. Example Macro File gives
an example input file to guide the first time user.
G4GeneralParticleSource is used exactly the same way as G4ParticleGun in a GEANT4 application. In
existing applications one can simply change your PrimaryGeneratorAction by globally replacing G4ParticleGun
with G4GeneralParticleSource. GPS may be configured via command line, or macro based, input. The
experienced user may also hard-code distributions using the methods and classes of the GPS that are described in
more detail in a technical note1 .
The class diagram of GPS is shown in Fig. 2.1. As of version 10.01, a split-class mechanism was introduced to
reduce memory usage in multithreaded mode. The G4GeneralParticleSourceData class is a thread-safe
singleton which provides access to the source information for the G4GeneralParticleSource class. The
G4GeneralParticleSourceData class can have multiple instantiations of the G4SingleParticleSource
class, each with independent positional, angular and energy distributions as well as incident particle types. To the user,
this change should be transparent.
2.7.2 Configuration
GPS allows the user to control the following characteristics of primary particles:
• Spatial sampling: on simple 2D or 3D surfaces such as discs, spheres, and boxes.
• Angular distribution: unidirectional, isotropic, cosine-law, beam or arbitrary (user defined).
• Spectrum: linear, exponential, power-law, Gaussian, blackbody, or piece-wise fits to data.
• Multiple sources: multiple independent sources can be used in the same run.
As noted above, G4GeneralParticleSource is used exactly the same way as G4ParticleGun in a GEANT4
application, and may be substituted for the latter by “global search and replace” in existing application source code.
1 General purpose Source Particle Module for GEANT4/SPARSET: Technical Note, UoS-GSPM-Tech, Issue 1.1, C Ferguson, February 2000.
Position Distribution
The position distribution can be defined by using several basic shapes to contain the starting positions of the particles.
The easiest source distribution to define is a point source. One could also define planar sources, where the particles
emanate from circles, annuli, ellipses, squares or rectangles. There are also methods for defining 1D or 2D accelerator
beam spots. The five planes are oriented in the x-y plane. To define a circle one gives the radius, for an annulus one
gives the inner and outer radii, and for an ellipse, a square or a rectangle one gives the half-lengths in x and y.
More complicated still, one can define surface or volume sources where the input particles can be confined to ei-
ther the surface of a three dimensional shape or to within its entire volume. The four 3D shapes used within
G4GeneralParticleSource are sphere, ellipsoid, cylinder and parallelepiped. A sphere can be defined simply by spec-
ifying the radius. Ellipsoids are defined by giving their half-lengths in x, y and z. Cylinders are defined such that the
axis is parallel to the z-axis, the user is therefore required to give the radius and the z half-length. Parallelepipeds are
defined by giving x, y and z half-lengths, plus the angles 𝛼, 𝜃, and 𝜑 (Fig. 2.2).
To allow easy definition of the sources, the planes and shapes are assumed to be orientated in a particular direction
to the coordinate axes, as described above. For more general applications, the user may supply two vectors (x’ and a
vector in the plane x’-y’) to rotate the co-ordinate axes of the shape with respect to the overall co-ordinate system (Fig.
2.3). The rotation matrix is automatically calculated within G4GeneralParticleSource. The starting points of particles
are always distributed homogeneously over the 2D or 3D surfaces, although biasing can change this.
Fig. 2.3: An illustration of the use of rotation matrices. A cylinder is defined with its axis parallel to the z-axis (black
lines), but the definition of 2 vectors can rotate it into the frame given by x’, y’, z’ (red lines).
Angular Distribution
The angular distribution is used to control the directions in which the particles emanate from/incident upon the source
point. In general there are three main choices, isotropic, cosine-law or user-defined. In addition there are options for
specifying parallel beam as well as diverse accelerator beams. The isotropic distribution represents what would be
seen from a uniform 4𝜋 flux. The cosine-law represents the distribution seen at a plane from a uniform 2𝜋 flux.
It is possible to bias (Biasing) both 𝜃 and 𝜑 for any of the predefined distributions, including setting lower and upper
limits to 𝜃 and 𝜑. User-defined distributions cannot be additionally biased (any bias should obviously be incorporated
into the user definition).
Incident with zenith angle 𝜃 = 0 means the particle is travelling along the -z axis. It is important to bear this in mind
when specifying user-defined co-ordinates for angular distributions. The user must be careful to rotate the co-ordinate
axes of the angular distribution if they have rotated the position distribution (Fig. 2.3).
The user defined distribution requires the user to enter a histogram in either 𝜃 or 𝜑 or both. The user-defined distribution
may be specified either with respect to the coordinate axes or with respect to the surface-normal of a shape or volume.
For the surface-normal distribution, 𝜃 should only be defined between 0 and 𝜋/2, not the usual 0 to 𝜋 range.
The top-level /gps/direction command uses direction cosines to specify the primary particle direction, as fol-
lows:
𝑃𝑥 = − sin 𝜃 cos 𝜑
𝑃𝑦 = − sin 𝜃 sin 𝜑 (2.1)
𝑃𝑧 = − cos 𝜃
Energy Distribution
The energy of the input particles can be set to follow several built-in functions or a user-defined one, as shown in Table
2.1. The user can bias any of the pre-defined energy distributions in order to speed up the simulation (user-defined
distributions are already biased, by construction).
There is also the option for the user to define a histogram in energy (“User”) or energy per nucleon (“Epn”) or to give
an arbitrary point-wise spectrum (“Arb”) that can be fit with various simple functions. The data for histograms or point
spectra must be provided in ascending bin (abscissa) order. The point-wise spectrum may be differential (as with a
binned histogram) or integral (a cumulative distribution function). If integral, the data must satisfy 𝑠(𝑒1) ≥ 𝑠(𝑒2) for
𝑒1 < 𝑒2 when entered; this is not validated by the GPS code. The maximum energy of an integral spectrum is defined
by the last-but-one data point, because GPS converts to a differential spectrum internally.
Unlike the other spectral distributions it has proved difficult to integrate indefinitely the black-body spectrum and this
has lead to an alternative approach. Instead it has been decided to use the black-body formula to create a 10,000 bin
histogram and then to produce random energies from this.
Similarly, the broken power-law for cosmic diffuse gamma rays makes generating an indefinite integral CDF problem-
atic. Instead, the minimum and maximum energies specified by the user are used to construct a definite-integral CDF
from which random energies are selected.
Biasing
The user can bias distributions by entering a histogram. It is the random numbers from which the quantities are picked
that are biased and so one only needs a histogram from 0 to 1. Great care must be taken when using this option, as the
way a quantity is calculated will affect how the biasing works, as discussed below. Bias histograms are entered in the
same way as other user-defined histograms.
When creating biasing histograms it is important to bear in mind the way quantities are generated from those numbers.
For example let us compare the biasing of a 𝜃 distribution with that of a 𝜑 distribution. Let us divide the 𝜃 and 𝜑 ranges
up into 10 bins, and then decide we want to restrict the generated values to the first and last bins. This gives a new 𝜑
range of 0 to 0.628 and 5.655 to 6.283. Since 𝜑 is calculated using 𝜑 = 2𝜋 × RNDM, this simple biasing will work
correctly.
If we now look at 𝜃, we expect to select values in the two ranges 0 to 0.314 (for 0 ≤ RNDM ≤ 0.1) and 2.827 to 3.142
(for 0 ≤ RNDM ≤ 0.9). However, the polar angle 𝜃 is calculated from the formula 𝜃 = arccos(1 − 2 × RNDM).
From this, we see that 0.1 gives a 𝜃 of 0.644 and a RNDM of 0.9 gives a 𝜃 of 2.498. This means that the above
will not bias the distribution as the user had wished. The user must therefore take into account the method used to
generate random quantities when trying to apply a biasing scheme to them. Some quantities such as x, y, z and 𝜑 will
be relatively easy to bias, but others may require more thought.
User-Defined Histograms
The user can define histograms for several reasons: angular distributions in either 𝜃 or 𝜑; energy distributions; energy
per nucleon distributions; or biasing of x, y, z, 𝜃, 𝜑, or energy. Even though the reasons may be different the approach
is the same.
To choose a histogram the command /gps/hist/type is used (Macro Commands). If one wanted to enter an
angular distribution one would type “theta” or “phi” as the argument. The histogram is loaded, one bin at a time,
by using the /gps/hist/point command, followed by its two arguments the upper boundary of the bin and the
weight (or area) of the bin. Histograms are therefore differential functions.
Currently histograms are limited to 1024 bins. The first value of each user input data pair is treated as the upper edge
of the histogram bin and the second value is the bin content. The exception is the very first data pair the user input
whose first value is the treated as the lower edge of the first bin of the histogram, and the second value is not used.
This rule applies to all distribution histograms, as well as histograms for biasing.
The user has to be aware of the limitations of histograms. For example, in general 𝜃 is defined between 0 and 𝜋 and 𝜑
is defined between 0 and 2𝜋, so histograms defined outside of these limits may not give the user what they want (see
also Biasing).
G4GeneralParticleSource can be configured by typing commands from the /gps command directory tree, or
including the /gps commands in a g4macro file.
Energy spectra
# Macro test2.g4mac
/control/verbose 0
/tracking/verbose 0
/event/verbose 0
/gps/verbose 2
/gps/particle gamma
/gps/pos/type Plane
/gps/pos/shape Square
/gps/pos/centre 1 2 1 cm
/gps/pos/halfx 2 cm
/gps/pos/halfy 2 cm
/gps/ang/type cos
/gps/ene/type Lin
/gps/ene/min 2 MeV
/gps/ene/max 10 MeV
/gps/ene/gradient 1
/gps/ene/intercept 1
/run/beamOn 10000
The above macro defines a planar source, square in shape, 4 cm by 4 cm and centred at (1,2,1) cm. By default the
normal of this plane is the z-axis. The angular distribution is to follow the cosine-law. The energy spectrum is linear,
with gradient and intercept equal to 1, and extends from 2 to 10 MeV. 10,000 primaries are to be generated.
The standard GEANT4 output should show that the primary particles start from between 1, 0, 1 and 3, 4, 1 (in cm) and
have energies between 2 and 10 MeV, as shown in Fig. 2.4, in which we plotted the actual energy, position and angular
distributions of the primary particles generated by the above macro file.
Fig. 2.4: Energy, position and angular distributions of the primary particles as generated by the macro file shown
above.
The code for the user examples in Geant4 is placed in the subdirectory examples of the main GEANT4 source
package. This directory is installed to the share/Geant4-G4VERSION/examples (where G4VERSION is the
GEANT4 version number) subdirectory under the installation prefix. In the following sections, a quick overview will
be given on how to build a concrete example, “ExampleB1”, which is part of the GEANT4 distribution, using CMake
and the older, and now deprecated, Geant4Make system.
which is designed for use with the CMake find_package command. Building a GEANT4 application using CMake
therefore involves writing a CMakeLists.txt script using this and other CMake commands to locate GEANT4 and
describe the build of your client application. Whilst it requires a bit of effort to write the script, CMake provides a
very friendly yet powerful tool, especially if you are working on multiple platforms. It is therefore the method we
recommend for building GEANT4 applications.
We’ll use Basic Example B1, which you may find in the GEANT4 source directory under examples/basic/B1,
to demonstrate the use of CMake to build a GEANT4 application. You’ll find links to the latest CMake documentation
for the commands used throughout, so please follow these for further information. The application sources and scripts
are arranged in the following directory structure:
+- B1/
+- CMakeLists.txt
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Here, exampleB1.cc contains main() for the application, with include/ and src/ containing the implemen-
tation class headers and sources respectively. This arrangement of source files is not mandatory when building with
CMake, apart from the location of the CMakeLists.txt file in the root directory of the application.
The text file CMakeLists.txt is the CMake script containing commands which describe how to build the exam-
pleB1 application
# (1)
cmake_minimum_required(VERSION 2.6 FATAL_ERROR)
project(B1)
# (2)
option(WITH_GEANT4_UIVIS "Build example with Geant4 UI and Vis drivers" ON)
if(WITH_GEANT4_UIVIS)
find_package(Geant4 REQUIRED ui_all vis_all)
else()
find_package(Geant4 REQUIRED)
endif()
# (3)
include(${Geant4_USE_FILE})
include_directories(${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR}/include)
# (4)
file(GLOB sources ${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR}/src/*.cc)
file(GLOB headers ${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR}/include/*.hh)
# (5)
add_executable(exampleB1 exampleB1.cc ${sources} ${headers})
target_link_libraries(exampleB1 ${Geant4_LIBRARIES})
# (6)
set(EXAMPLEB1_SCRIPTS
exampleB1.in
exampleB1.out
init_vis.mac
run1.mac
run2.mac
vis.mac
)
foreach(_script ${EXAMPLEB1_SCRIPTS})
configure_file(
${PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR}/${_script}
${PROJECT_BINARY_DIR}/${_script}
COPYONLY
)
endforeach()
# (7)
install(TARGETS exampleB1 DESTINATION bin)
For clarity, the above listing has stripped out the main comments (CMake comments begin with a “#”) you’ll find in
the actual file to highlight each distinct task:
1. Basic Configuration
The cmake_minimum_required command simply ensures we’re using a suitable version of CMake.
Though the build of GEANT4 itself requires CMake 3.3 and we recommend this version for your own projects,
Geant4Config.cmake can support the 2.6 and 2.8 series. The project command sets the name of the
project and enables and configures C and C++ compilers.
2. Find and Configure GEANT4
The aforementioned find_package command is used to locate and configure GEANT4 (we’ll see how to
specify the location later when we run CMake), the REQUIRED argument being supplied so that CMake will
fail with an error if it cannot find GEANT4. The option command specifies a boolean variable which defaults
to ON, and which can be set when running CMake via a -D command line argument, or toggled in the CMake
GUI interfaces. We wrap the calls to find_package in a conditional block on the option value. This allows
us to configure the use of GEANT4 UI and Visualization drivers by exampleB1 via the ui_all vis_all
“component” arguments to find_package. These components and their usage is described later.
3. Configure the Project to Use GEANT4 and B1 Headers
To automatically configure the header path, and force setting of compiler flags and compiler definitions needed
for compiling against GEANT4, we use the include command to load a CMake script supplied by GEANT4.
The CMake variable named Geant4_USE_FILE is set to the path to this module when GEANT4 is located
by find_package. We use the include_directories command to add the B1 header directory to the
compiler’s header search path. The CMake variable PROJECT_SOURCE_DIR points to the top level directory
of the project and is set by the earlier call to the project command.
4. List the Sources to Build the Application
Use the globbing functionality of the file command to prepare lists of the B1 source and header files.
Note however that CMake globbing is only used here as a convenience. The expansion of the glob only
happens when CMake is run, so if you later add or remove files, the generated build scripts will not know a
change has taken place. Kitware strongly recommend listing sources explicitly as CMake automatically
makes the build depend on the CMakeLists.txt file. This means that if you explicitly list the sources in
CMakeLists.txt, any changes you make will be automatically picked when you rebuild. This is most useful
when you are working on a project with sources under version control and multiple contributors.
5. Define and Link the Executable
The add_executable command defines the build of an application, outputting an executable named by its
first argument, with the sources following. Note that we add the headers to the list of sources so that they will
appear in IDEs like Xcode.
After adding the executable, we use the target_link_libraries command to link it with the GEANT4
libraries. The Geant4_LIBRARIES variable is set by find_package when GEANT4 is located, and is a
list of all the libraries needed to link against to use GEANT4.
6. Copy any Runtime Scripts to the Build Directory
Because we want to support out of source builds so that we won’t mix CMake generated files with our actual
sources, we copy any scripts used by the B1 application to the build directory. We use foreach to loop over
the list of scripts we constructed, and configure_file to perform the actual copy.
Here, the CMake variable PROJECT_BINARY_DIR is set by the earlier call to the project command and
points to the directory where we run CMake to configure the build.
7. If Required, Install the Executable
Use the install command to create an install target that will install the executable to a bin directory under
CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX.
If you don’t intend your application to be installable, i.e. you only want to use it locally when built, you can
leave this out.
This sequence of commands is the most basic needed to compile and link an application with GEANT4, and is easily
extendable to more involved use cases such as platform specific configuration or using other third party packages (via
find_package).
With the CMake script in place, using it to build an application is a two step process. First CMake is run to generate
buildscripts to describe the build. By default, these will be Makefiles on Unix platforms, and Visual Studio solutions
on Windows, but you can generate scripts for other tools like Xcode and Eclipse if you wish. Second, the buildscripts
are run by the chosen build tool to compile and link the application.
A key concept with CMake is that we generate the buildscripts and run the build in a separate directory, the so-called
build directory, from the directory in which the sources reside, the so-called source directory. This is the exact same
technique we used when building GEANT4 itself. Whilst this may seem awkward to begin with, it is a very useful
technique to employ. It prevents mixing of CMake generated files with those of your application, and allows you to
have multiple builds against a single source without having to clean up, reconfigure and rebuild.
We’ll illustrate this configure and build process on Linux/macOS using Makefiles, and on Windows using Visual
Studio. The example script and GEANT4’s Geant4Config.cmake script are vanilla CMake, so you should be able
to use other Generators (such as Xcode and Eclipse) without issue.
We’ll assume, for illustration only, that you’ve copied the exampleB1 sources into a directory under your home area
so that we have:
+- /home/you/B1/
+- CMakeLists.txt
+- exampleB1.cc
+- include/
+- src/
+- ...
Here, our source directory is /home/you/B1, in other words the directory holding the CMakeLists.txt file.
Let’s also assume that you have already installed GEANT4 in your home area under, for illustration only, /home/
you/geant4-install.
Our first step is to create a build directory in which build the example. We will create this alongside our B1 source
directory as follows:
$ cd $HOME
$ mkdir B1-build
We now change to this build directory and run CMake to generate the Makefiles needed to build the B1 application.
We pass CMake two arguments
$ cd $HOME/B1-build
$ cmake -DGeant4_DIR=/home/you/geant4-install/lib64/Geant4-G4VERSION $HOME/B1
Here, the first argument points CMake to our install of GEANT4. Specifically, it is the directory holding the
Geant4Config.cmake file that GEANT4 installs to help CMake find and use GEANT4. You should of course
adapt the value of this variable to the location of your actual GEANT4 install. This provides the most specific way to
point CMake to the GEANT4 install you want to use. You may also use the CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH variable, e.g:
$ cd $HOME/B1-build
$ cmake -DCMAKE_PREFIX_PATH=/home/you/geant4-install $HOME/B1
This is most useful for system integrators as it may be extended via the environment or command line with paths to
the install prefixes of additional required software packages.
The second argument to CMake is the path to the source directory of the application we want to build. Here it’s just
the B1 directory as discussed earlier. You should of course adapt the value of that variable to where you copied the B1
source directory.
CMake will now run to configure the build and generate Makefiles and you will see output similar to
$ cmake -DGeant4_DIR=/home/you/geant4-install/lib64/Geant4-G4VERSION $HOME/B1
-- The C compiler identification is GNU 4.9.2
-- The CXX compiler identification is GNU 4.9.2
-- Check for working C compiler: /usr/bin/gcc-4.9
-- Check for working C compiler: /usr/bin/gcc-4.9 -- works
-- Detecting C compiler ABI info
(continues on next page)
The exact output will depend on the UNIX variant and compiler, but the last three lines should be identical to within
the exact path used.
If you now list the contents of you build directory, you can see the files generated:
$ ls
CMakeCache.txt exampleB1.in Makefile vis.mac
CMakeFiles exampleB1.out run1.mac
cmake_install.cmake init_vis.mac run2.mac
Note the Makefile and that all the scripts for running the exampleB1 application we’re about to build have been
copied across. With the Makefile available, we can now build by simply running make:
$ make -jN
CMake generated Makefiles support parallel builds, so N can be set to the number of cores on your machine (e.g. on a
dual core processor, you could set N to 2). When make runs, you should see the output:
$ make
Scanning dependencies of target exampleB1
[ 16%] Building CXX object CMakeFiles/exampleB1.dir/exampleB1.cc.o
[ 33%] Building CXX object CMakeFiles/exampleB1.dir/src/B1PrimaryGeneratorAction.cc.o
[ 50%] Building CXX object CMakeFiles/exampleB1.dir/src/B1EventAction.cc.o
[ 66%] Building CXX object CMakeFiles/exampleB1.dir/src/B1RunAction.cc.o
[ 83%] Building CXX object CMakeFiles/exampleB1.dir/src/B1DetectorConstruction.cc.o
[100%] Building CXX object CMakeFiles/exampleB1.dir/src/B1SteppingAction.cc.o
Linking CXX executable exampleB1
[100%] Built target exampleB1
CMake Unix Makefiles are quite terse, but you can make them more verbose by adding the VERBOSE argument to
make:
$ make VERBOSE=1
If you now list the contents of your build directory you will see the exampleB1 application executable has been
created::
$ ls
CMakeCache.txt exampleB1 init_vis.mac run2.mac
CMakeFiles exampleB1.in Makefile vis.mac
cmake_install.cmake exampleB1.out run1.mac
*************************************************************
(continues on next page)
Note that the exact output shown will depend on how both GEANT4 and your application were configured. Further out-
put and behaviour beyond the Registering graphics systems... line will depend on what UI and Visual-
ization drivers your GEANT4 install supports. If you recall the use of the ui_all vis_all in the find_package
command, this results in all available UI and Visualization drivers being activated in your application. If you didn’t
want any UI or Visualization, you could rerun CMake in your build directory with arguments:
$ cmake -DWITH_GEANT4_UIVIS=OFF .
This would switch the option we set up to false, and result in find_package not activating any UI or Visualiza-
tion for the application. You can easily adapt this pattern to provide options for your application such as additional
components or features.
Once the build is configured, you can edit code for the application in its source directory. You only need to rerun
make in the corresponding build directory to pick up and compile the changes. However, note that due to the use of
CMake globbing to create the source file list, if you add or remove files, you must remember to rerun CMake to pick
up the changes. This is another reason why Kitware recommend listing the sources explicitly.
As with building GEANT4 itself, the simplest system to use for building applications on Windows is a Visual Studio
Developer Command Prompt, which can be started from Start → Visual Studio 2017 → Developer Command Prompt
for VS2017 (similarly for VS2015)
We’ll assume, for illustration only, that you’ve copied the exampleB1 sources into a directory
C:\Users\YourUsername\B1 so that we have:
+- C:\Users\YourUsername\B1
+- CMakeLists.txt
+- exampleB1.cc
+- include\
+- src\
+- ...
Here, our source directory is C:\Users\YourUsername\B1, in other words the directory holding the
CMakeLists.txt file.
Let’s also assume that you have already installed GEANT4 in your home area under, for illustration only,
C:\Users\YourUsername\Geant4-install.
Our first step is to create a build directory in which build the example. We will create this alongside our B1 source
directory as follows, working from the Visual Studio Developer Command Prompt:
> cd %HOMEPATH%
> mkdir B1-build
We now change to this build directory and run CMake to generate the Visual Studio solution needed to build the B1
application. We pass CMake two arguments
> cd %HOMEPATH%\Geant4\B1-build
> cmake -DGeant4_DIR="%HOMEPATH%\Geant4-install\lib\Geant4-G4VERSION" "
˓→%HOMEPATH%\B1"
Here, the first argument points CMake to our install of GEANT4. Specifically, it is the directory holding the
Geant4Config.cmake file that GEANT4 installs to help CMake find and use GEANT4. You should of course
adapt the value of this variable to the location of your actual GEANT4 install. As with the examples above, you can
also use the CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH variable. The second argument is the path to the source directory of the appli-
cation we want to build. Here it’s just the B1 directory as discussed earlier. You should of course adapt it to where you
copied the B1 source directory. In both cases the arguments are quoted in case of the paths containing spaces.
CMake will now run to configure the build and generate Visual Studio solutions and you will see output similar to
-- Building for: Visual Studio 15 2017
-- The C compiler identification is MSVC 19.11.25547.0
-- The CXX compiler identification is MSVC 19.11.25547.0
-- Check for working C compiler: C:/Program Files (x86)/Microsoft Visual Studio/2017/Community/
˓→VC/Tools/MSVC/14.11.25503/bin/Hostx86/x86/cl.exe
-- Check for working C compiler: C:/Program Files (x86)/Microsoft Visual Studio/2017/Community/
˓→VC/Tools/MSVC/14.11.25503/bin/Hostx86/x86/cl.exe -- works
-- Detecting C compiler ABI info
-- Detecting C compiler ABI info - done
-- Check for working CXX compiler: C:/Program Files (x86)/Microsoft Visual Studio/2017/Community/
˓→VC/Tools/MSVC/14.11.25503/bin/Hostx86/x86/cl.exe
-- Check for working CXX compiler: C:/Program Files (x86)/Microsoft Visual Studio/2017/Community/
˓→VC/Tools/MSVC/14.11.25503/bin/Hostx86/x86/cl.exe -- works
-- Detecting CXX compiler ABI info
-- Detecting CXX compiler ABI info - done
-- Detecting CXX compile features
-- Detecting CXX compile features - done
-- Configuring done
-- Generating done
-- Build files have been written to: C:/Users/YourUsername/B1-build
If you now list the contents of you build directory, you can see the files generated:
> dir /B
ALL_BUILD.vcxproj
ALL_BUILD.vcxproj.filters
B1.sln
B1.vcxproj
B1.vcxproj.filters
CMakeCache.txt
CMakeFiles
cmake_install.cmake
exampleB1.in
exampleB1.out
exampleB1.vcxproj
exampleB1.vcxproj.filters
init_vis.mac
INSTALL.vcxproj
INSTALL.vcxproj.filters
run1.mac
run2.mac
vis.mac
ZERO_CHECK.vcxproj
ZERO_CHECK.vcxproj.filters
Note the B1.sln solution file and that all the scripts for running the exampleB1 application we’re about to build have
been copied across. With the solution available, we can now build by running cmake to drive MSBuild:
Solution based builds are quite verbose, but you should not see any errors at the end. In the above, we have built the B1
program in Release mode, meaning that it is optimized and has no debugging symbols. As with building GEANT4
itself, this is chosen to provide optimum performance. If you require debugging information for your application,
simply change the argument to RelWithDebInfo. Note that in both cases you must match the configuration of
your application with that of the GEANT4 install, i.e. if you are building the application in Release mode, then
ensure it uses a Release build of GEANT4. Link and/or runtime errors may result if mixed configurations are used.
After running the build, if we list the contents of the build directory again we see:
> dir /B
ALL_BUILD.vcxproj
ALL_BUILD.vcxproj.filters
B1.sln
B1.vcxproj
B1.vcxproj.filters
CMakeCache.txt
CMakeFiles
cmake_install.cmake
exampleB1.dir
exampleB1.in
exampleB1.out
exampleB1.vcxproj
exampleB1.vcxproj.filters
init_vis.mac
INSTALL.vcxproj
INSTALL.vcxproj.filters
Release
run1.mac
run2.mac
vis.mac
Win32
ZERO_CHECK.vcxproj
ZERO_CHECK.vcxproj.filters
Here, the Release subdirectory contains the executable, and the main build directory contains all the .mac scripts
for running the program. If you build in different modes, the executable for that mode will be in a directory named for
that mode, e.g. RelWithDebInfo/exampleB1.exe. You can now run the application in place:
> .\Release\exampleB1.exe
*************************************************************
Geant4 version Name: geant4-10-05 [MT] (07-December-2018)
<< in Multi-threaded mode >>
Copyright : Geant4 Collaboration
References : NIM A 506 (2003), 250-303
: IEEE-TNS 53 (2006), 270-278
: NIM A 835 (2016), 186-225
WWW : http://geant4.org/
*************************************************************
Note that the exact output shown will depend on how both GEANT4 and your application were configured. Fur-
ther output and behaviour beyond the Registering graphics systems... line will depend on what UI and
Visualization drivers your GEANT4 install supports.
Whilst the Visual Studio Developer Command prompt provides the simplest way to build an application, the generated
Visual Studio Solution file (B1.sln in the above example) may also be opened directly in the Visual Studio IDE. This
provides a more comprehensive development and debugging environment, and you should consult its documentation
if you wish to use this.
One key CMake related item to note goes back to our listing of the headers for the application in the call to
add_executable. Whilst CMake will naturally ignore these for configuring compilation of the application, it
will add them to the Visual Studio Solution. If you do not list them, they will not be editable in the Solution in the
Visual Studio IDE.
Please note that this system is deprecated, meaning that it is no longer supported and may be removed
in future releases without warning. You should migrate your application to be built using CMake via the
Geant4Config.cmake script, or any other build tool of your choice, using the geant4-config program
to query the relevant compiler/linker flags.
Geant4Make is the GEANT4 GNU Make toolchain formerly used to build the toolkit and applications. It is installed
on UNIX systems (except for Cygwin) for backwards compatibility with the GEANT4 Examples and your existing
applications which use a GNUmakefile and the Geant4Make binmake.gmk file. The files for Geant4Make are
installed under:
+- CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX/
+- share/
+- geant4make/
+- geant4make.sh
+- geant4make.csh
+- config/
+- binmake.gmk
+- ...
The system is designed to form a self-contained GNUMake system which is configured primarily by environment
variables (though you may manually replace these with Make variables if you prefer). Building a GEANT4 application
using Geant4Make therefore involves configuring your environment followed by writing a GNUmakefile using the
Geant4Make variables and GNUMake modules.
To configure your environment, simply source the relevant configuration script CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX/
share/Geant4-G4VERSION/geant4make/geant4make.(c)sh for your shell. Whilst both scripts can be
sourced interactively, if you are using the C shell and need to source the script inside another script, you must use the
commands:
$ cd CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX/share/Geant4-G4VERSION/geant4make
$ source geant4make.csh
or alternatively
$ source CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX/share/Geant4-G4VERSION/geant4make/geant4make.
˓→csh \
CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX/share/Geant4-G4VERSION/geant4make
In both cases, you should replace CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX with the actual prefix you installed GEANT4 under.
Both of these commands work around a limitation in the C shell which prevents the script locating itself.
Please also note that due to limitations of Geant4Make, you should not rely on the environment variables
it sets for paths into GEANT4 itself. In particular, note that the G4INSTALL variable is not equivalent to
CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX.
Once you have configured your environment, you can start building your application. Geant4Make enforces a specific
organization and naming of your sources in order to simplify the build. We’ll use Basic Example B1, which you
may find in the GEANT4 source directory under examples/basic/B1, as the canonical example again. Here, the
sources are arranged as follows:
+- B1/
+- GNUmakefile
+- exampleB1.cc
+- include/
... headers.hh ...
+- src/
... sources.cc ...
As before, exampleB1.cc contains main() for the application, with include/ and src/ containing the im-
plementation class headers and sources respectively. You must organise your sources in this structure with these
filename extensions to use Geant4Make as it will expect this structure when it tries to build the application.
With this structure in place, the GNUmakefile for exampleB1 is very simple:
name := exampleB1
G4TARGET := $(name)
G4EXLIB := true
.PHONY: all
all: lib bin
include $(G4INSTALL)/config/binmake.gmk
Here, name is set to the application to be built, and it must match the name of the file containing the main()
program without the .cc extension. The rest of the variables are structural to prepare the build, and finally the core
Geant4Make module is included. The G4INSTALL variable is set in the environment by the geant4make script to
point to the root of the Geant4Make directory structure.
With this structure in place, simply run make to build your application:
$ make
If you need extra detail on the build, append CPPVERBOSE=1 to the make command to see a detailed log of the
command executed.
The application executable will be output to $(G4WORKDIR)/bin/$(G4SYSTEM)/exampleB1, where
$(G4SYSTEM) is the system and compiler combination you are running on, e.g. Linux-g++. By default,
$(G4WORKDIR) is set by the geant4make scripts to $(HOME)/geant4_workdir, and also prepends this
directory to your PATH. You can therefore run the application directly once it’s built:
$ exampleB1
If you prefer to keep your application builds separate, then you can set G4WORKDIR in the GNUmakefile before
including binmake.gmk. In this case you would have to run the executable by supplying the full path.
Further documentation of the usage of Geant4Make and syntax and extensions for the GNUMakefile is described in
the FAQ and Appendices of the Geant4 User’s Guide for Application Developers.
Please note that the Geant4Make toolchain is provided purely for convenience and backwards compatibil-
ity. We encourage you to use and migrate your applications to the new CMake and geant4-config tools.
Geant4Make is deprecated from Geant4 10.0.
2.9.1 Introduction
The “intercoms” category provides an expandable command interpreter. It is the key mechanism of GEANT4 to
realize secure user interactions across categories without being annoyed by dependencies among categories. GEANT4
commands can be used in an interactive session, a batch mode with a macro file, or a direct C++ call.
GEANT4 can be controlled by a series of GEANT4 UI commands. The “intercoms” category provides the abstract class
G4UIsession that processes interactive commands. The concrete implementations of (graphical) user interface are
provided in the “interfaces” category. The strategy realize to adopt various user interface tools, and allows GEANT4 to
utilize the state-of-the-art GUI tools such as Motif, Qt, and Java etc. The following interfaces is currently available;
1. Command-line terminal (dumb terminal and tcsh-like terminal)
2. Xm, Qt, Win32, variations of the above terminal by using a Motif, Qt, Windows widgets
3. GAG, a fully graphical user interface and its network extension GainServer of the client/server type.
Implementation of the user sessions (1 and 2) is included in the source/interfaces/basic directory. As for
GAG, the front-end class is included in the source/interfaces/GAG directory, while its partner GUI package
MOMO.jar is available under the environments/MOMO directory. MOMO.jar, Java archive file, contains not only
GAG, but also GGE and other helper packages. Supplementary information is available from the author’s web page
(see URL below).
GAG, GainServer’s client GUI Gain: http://www-geant4.kek.jp/~yoshidah/
G4UIterminal
This interface opens a session on a command-line terminal. G4UIterminal runs on all supported platforms. There
are two kinds of shells, G4UIcsh and G4UItcsh. G4UItcsh supports tcsh-like readline features (cursor and
command completion) and works on Linux on Mac, while G4UIcsh is a plain standard input (cin) shell that works
on all platforms. The following built-in commands are available in G4UIterminal;
cd, pwd change, display the current command directory.
ls, lc list commands and subdirectories in the current directory.
history show previous commands.
!historyID reissue previous command.
?command show current parameter values of the command.
help command show command help.
exit terminate the session.
G4UItcsh supports user-friendly key bindings a-la-tcsh. G4UItcsh runs on Linux and Mac. The following keybind-
ings are supported;
^A move cursor to the top
^B backward cursor ([LEFT] cursor)
^C (except Windows terminal) abort a run ( soft abort ) during event processing. A program will be terminated
while accepting a user command.
^D delete/exit/show matched list
These interfaces are versions of G4UIterminal implemented over libraries Motif, Qt and WIN32 respectively.
G4UIXm uses the Motif XmCommand widget, G4UIQt the Qt dialog widget, and G4UIWin32 the Windows “edit”
component to do the command capturing. These interfaces are useful if working in conjunction with visualization
drivers that use the Xt library, Qt library or the WIN32 one.
A command box is at disposal for entering or recalling GEANT4 commands. Command completion by typing “TAB”
key is available in the command box. The shell commands “exit, cont, help, ls, cd. . . ” are also supported. A menu bar
can be customized through the AddMenu and AddButton method. Ex:
/gui/addMenu test Test
/gui/addButton test Init /run/initialize
/gui/addButton test “Set gun” “/control/execute gun.g4m”
/gui/addButton test “Run one event” “/run/beamOn 1”
G4UIXm runs on Unix/Linux with Motif. G4UIQt run everywhere with Qt. G4UIWin32 runs on Windows.
They are front-end classes of GEANT4 which make connections with their respective graphical user interfaces, GAG
(GEANT4 Adaptive GUI) via pipe, and Gain (GEANT4 adaptive interface for network) via sockets. While GAG must
run on the same system (Windows or Unixen) as a GEANT4 application, Gain can run on a remote system (Windows,
Linux, etc.) in which JRE (Java Runtime Environment) is installed. A GEANT4 application is invoked on a Unix
(Linux) system and behaves as a network server. It opens a port, waiting the connection from the Gain. Gain has
capability to connect to multiple GEANT4 “servers” on Unixen systems at different hosts.
Client GUIs, GAG and Gain have almost similar look-and-feel. So, GAG’s functionalities are briefly explained here.
Please refer to the URL previously mentioned for details.
Using GAG, user can select a command, set its parameters and execute it. It is adaptive, in the sense that it reflects
the internal states of GEANT4 that is a state machine. So, GAG always provides users with the GEANT4 commands
which may be added, deleted, enabled or disabled during a session. GAG does nothing by itself but to play an
intermediate between user and an executable simulation program via pipes. GEANT4’s front-end class G4UIGAG
must be instantiated to communicate with GAG. GAG runs on Linux and Windows. MOMO.jar is supplied in the
GEANT4 source distribution and can be run by a command:
%java -jar /path/to/geant4.10.00/environments/MOMO/MOMO.jar
To choose an interface (G4UIxxx where xxx = terminal,Xm, Win32, Qt, GAG, GainServer) in your
programs, there are two ways.
• Calling G4UIxxx directly:
#include "G4Uixxx.hh"
delete session;
If the user wants to deactivate the default signal handler (soft abort) raised by “Ctr-C”, the false flag can be set
in the second argument of the G4UIterminal constructor like
G4UIsession* session = new G4UIterminal(new G4UItcsh, false).
• Using G4UIExecutive This is more convenient way for choosing a session type, that can select a session at
run-time according to a rule described below.
#include "G4UIExecutive.hh"
delete ui;
G4UIExecutive has several ways to choose a session type. A session is selected in the following rule. Note that
session types are identified by a case-insensitive characters (“qt”, “xm”, “win32”, “gag”, “tcsh”, “csh”).
1. Check the argument of the constructor of G4UIExecutive. You can specify a session like new
G4UIExecutive(argc, argv, "qt");
2. Check environment variables, G4UI_USE_XX (XX= QT, XM, WIN32, GAG, TCSH). Select a session
if the corresponding environment variable is defined. Variables are checked in the order of QT, XM, WIN32,
GAG, TCSH if multiple variables are set.
3. Check ~/.g4session . You can specify the default session type and a session type by each application in
that file. The below shows a sample of .g4session.
tcsh # default session
exampleN03 Qt # (application name / session type)
myapp tcsh
hoge csh
4. Guess the best session type according to build session libraries. The order of the selection is Qt, tcsh, Xm.
In any cases, G4UIExecutive checks if a specified session is build or not. If not, it goes the next step. A terminal
session with csh is the fallback session. If none of specified session is available, then it will be selected.
2.10.1 Introduction
Below is a modified main program of the basic example B1 to represent an application which will run in batch mode.
// Initialize G4 kernel
runManager->Initialize();
(continues on next page)
// start a run
int numberOfEvent = 1000;
runManager->BeamOn(numberOfEvent);
// job termination
delete runManager;
return 0;
}
Even the number of events in the run is ‘frozen’. To change this number you must at least recompile main().
Below is a modified main program of the basic example B1 to represent an application which will run in batch mode,
but reading a file of commands.
// Initialize G4 kernel
runManager->Initialize();
// job termination
delete runManager;
return 0;
}
where exampleB1 is the name of the executable and run1.mac is a macro of commands located in the current
directory, which could look like:
Indeed, you can re-execute your program with different run conditions without recompiling anything.
Note: many G4 category of classes have a verbose flag which controls the level of ‘verbosity’.
Usually verbose=0 means silent. For instance
• /run/verbose is for the RunManager
• /event/verbose is for the EventManager
• /tracking/verbose is for the TrackingManager
• . . . etc. . .
Below is an example of the main program for an application which will run interactively, waiting for command lines
entered from the keyboard.
// Initialize G4 kernel
runManager->Initialize();
// job termination
delete runManager;
return 0;
}
and you can start your session. An example session could be:
Run 5 events:
Idle> /run/beamOn 5
For the meaning of the machine state Idle, see as a state machine.
This mode is useful for running a few events in debug mode and visualizing them. How to include visualization will
be shown in the next, general case, example.
All basic examples in the examples/basic subdirectory of the GEANT4 source distribution have the following
main() structure. The application can be run either in batch or interactive mode.
Listing 2.23: The typical main() routine from the examples directory.
int main(int argc,char** argv)
{
// Construct the default run manager
G4RunManager* runManager = new G4RunManager;
// Initialize G4 kernel
runManager->Initialize();
#ifdef G4VIS_USE
(continues on next page)
if (argc!=1) {
// batch mode
G4String command = "/control/execute ";
G4String fileName = argv[1];
UImanager->ApplyCommand(command+fileName);
}
else {
// interactive mode : define UI session
#ifdef G4UI_USE
G4UIExecutive* ui = new G4UIExecutive(argc, argv);
#ifdef G4VIS_USE
UImanager->ApplyCommand("/control/execute init_vis.mac");
#else
UImanager->ApplyCommand("/control/execute init.mac");
#endif
ui->SessionStart();
delete ui;
#endif
}
// Job termination
// Free the store: user actions, physics_list and detector_description are
// owned and deleted by the run manager, so they should not be deleted
// in the main() program !
#ifdef G4VIS_USE
delete visManager;
#endif
delete runManager;
}
Notice that both user interface and visualization systems are under the control of the compiler preprocessor sym-
bols G4UI_USE and G4VIS_USE. GEANT4’s CMake support script automatically adds definitions for these sym-
bols to the compiler flags, unless you set the CMake variables G4UI_NONE and G4VIS_NONE before calling
find_package(Geant4). This provides you with a simple system to control the enabling of the user inter-
face and visualization systems, though you are free to use your own names for the preprocessor symbols if your use
case requires (though you must then add them to the compiler flags yourself). Notice also that, in interactive mode,
few intializations have been put in the macros init_vis.mac, or init_vis.mac, which is executed before the
session start.
The init_vis.mac macro has just added a line with a call to vis.mac:
# Macro file for the initialization phase of example B1
# when running in interactive mode with visualization
#
# Set some default verbose
#
/control/verbose 2
/control/saveHistory
/run/verbose 2
#
# Visualization setting
/control/execute vis.mac
The vis.mac macro defines a minimal setting for drawing volumes and trajectories accumulated for all events of a
given run:
# Macro file for the visualization setting in the initialization phase
# of the B1 example when running in interactive mode
#
#
# Use this open statement to create an OpenGL view:
/vis/open OGL 600x600-0+0
#
# Draw geometry:
/vis/drawVolume
#
# Specify view angle:
/vis/viewer/set/viewpointThetaPhi 90. 180.
#
# Draw smooth trajectories at end of event, showing trajectory points
# as markers 2 pixels wide:
/vis/scene/add/trajectories smooth
#
# To superimpose all of the events from a given run:
/vis/scene/endOfEventAction accumulate
#
# Re-establish auto refreshing and verbosity:
/vis/viewer/set/autoRefresh true
/vis/verbose warnings
#
# For file-based drivers, use this to create an empty detector view:
#/vis/viewer/flush
Also, this example demonstrates that you can read and execute a macro from another macro or interactively:
Idle> /control/execute mySubMacro.mac
2.11.1 Introduction
This section briefly explains how to perform GEANT4 Visualization. The description here is based on the sample
program examples/basic/B1. More details are given in Visualization.
The GEANT4 visualization system was developed in response to a diverse set of requirements:
1. Quick response to study geometries, trajectories and hits
2. High-quality output for publications
3. Flexible camera control to debug complex geometries
4. Tools to show volume overlap errors in detector geometries
5. Interactive picking to get more information on visualized objects
No one graphics system is ideal for all of these requirements, and many of the large software frameworks into which
GEANT4 has been incorporated already have their own visualization systems, so GEANT4 visualization was designed
around an abstract interface that supports a diverse family of graphics systems. Some of these graphics systems use
a graphics library compiled with GEANT4, such as OpenGL, Qt or OpenInventor, while others involve a separate
application, such as HepRApp or DAWN.
You need not use all visualization drivers. You can select those suitable to your purposes. In the following, for
simplicity, we assume that the GEANT4 libraries are built with the Qt driver.
If you build GEANT4 using the standard CMake procedure, you include Qt by setting GEANT4_USE_QT to ON.
In order to use the the Qt driver, you need the OpenGL library, which is installed in many platforms by default and
CMake will find it. (If you wish to “do-it-yourself”, see Installing Visualization Drivers.) The makefiles then set
appropriate C-pre-processor flags to select appropriate code at compilation time.
If you are using multithreaded mode, from GEANT4 version 10.2 event drawing is performed by a separate thread and
you may need to optimise this with special /vis/multithreading commands - see Multithreading commands.
Most GEANT4 examples already incorporate visualization drivers. If you want to include visualization in your own
GEANT4 application, you need to instantiate and initialize a subclass of G4VisManager that implements the pure
virtual function RegisterGraphicsSystems().
The provided class G4VisExecutive can handle all of this work for you. G4VisExecutive is sensitive to the
G4VIS_... variables (that you either set by hand or that are set for you by GNUMake or CMake configuration). See
any of the GEANT4 examples for how to use G4VisExecutive.
If you really want to write your own subclass, rather than use G4VisExecutive, you may do so. You will see how
to do this by looking at G4VisExecutive.icc. This subclass must be compiled in the user’s domain to force the
loading of appropriate libraries in the right order. A typical extract is:
...
RegisterGraphicsSystem (new G4DAWNFILE);
...
#ifdef G4VIS_USE_OPENGLX
RegisterGraphicsSystem (new G4OpenGLImmediateX);
RegisterGraphicsSystem (new G4OpenGLStoredX);
#endif
...
The G4VisExecutive takes ownership of all registered graphics systems, and will delete them when it is deleted
at the end of the user’s job (see below).
If you wish to use G4VisExecutive but register an additional graphics system, XXX say, you may do so either
before or after initializing:
visManager->RegisterGraphicsSytem(new XXX);
visManager->Initialize();
Now we explain how to write a visualization manager and the main() function for GEANT4 visualization. In order
that your GEANT4 executable is able to perform visualization, you must instantiate and initialize your Visualization
Manager in the main() function. The typical main() function available for visualization is written in the following
style:
.....
.....
.....
// Job termination
#ifdef G4VIS_USE
delete visManager;
#endif
.....
return 0;
}
In the instantiation, initialization, and deletion of the Visualization Manager, the use of the macro G4VIS_USE is
recommended as it is set automatically by the CMake and GNUmake support scripts. This allows one easily to
build an executable without visualization, if required, without changing the code (but remember you have to force
recompilation whenever you change the environment). Note that it is your responsibility to delete the instantiated
Visualization Manager by yourself. A complete description of a sample main() function is described in examples/
basic/B1/exampleB1.cc.
Most GEANT4 examples include a vis.mac. Run that macro to see a typical visualization. Read the comments in the
macro to learn a little bit about some visualization commands. The vis.mac also includes commented-out optional
visualization commands. By uncommenting some of these, you can see additional visualization features.
THREE
TOOLKIT FUNDAMENTALS
In the design of a large software system such as GEANT4, it is essential to partition it into smaller logical units. This
makes the design well organized and easier to develop. Once the logical units are defined independent to each other
as much as possible, they can be developed in parallel without serious interference.
In object-oriented analysis and design methodology by Grady Booch [Booch1994], class categories are used to create
logical units. They are defined as “clusters of classes that are themselves cohesive, but are loosely coupled relative
to other clusters.” This means that a class category contains classes which have a close relationship (for example, the
“has-a” relation). However, relationships between classes which belong to different class categories are weak, i.e.,
only limited classes of these have “uses” relations. The class categories and their relations are presented by a class
category diagram. The class category diagram designed for GEANT4 is shown in the figure below (Fig. 3.1). Each box
in the figure represents a class category, and a “uses” relation by a straight line. The circle at an end of a straight line
means the class category which has this circle uses the other category.
The file organization of the GEANT4 codes follows basically the structure of this class category. This User’s Manual
is also organized according to class categories.
In the development and maintenance of GEANT4, one software team will be assigned to a class category. This team
will have a responsibility to develop and maintain all classes belonging to the class category.
The following is a brief summary of the role of each class category in GEANT4.
1. Run and Event
These are categories related to the generation of events, interfaces to event generators, and any secondary parti-
cles produced. Their roles are principally to provide particles to be tracked to the Tracking Management.
2. Tracking and Track
These are categories related to propagating a particle by analyzing the factors limiting the step and applying the
relevant physics processes. The important aspect of the design was that a generalized GEANT4 physics process
(or interaction) could perform actions, along a tracking step, either localized in space, or in time, or distributed
in space and time (and all the possible combinations that could be built from these cases).
3. Geometry and Magnetic Field
These categories manage the geometrical definition of a detector (solid modeling) and the computation of dis-
tances to solids (also in a magnetic field). The GEANT4 geometry solid modeler is based on the ISO STEP
standard and it is fully compliant with it. A key feature of the GEANT4 geometry is that the volume definitions
are independent of the solid representation. By this abstract interface for the G4 solids, the tracking compo-
nent works identically for various representations. The treatment of the propagation in the presence of fields
55
Book For Application Developers, Release 10.5
has been provided within specified accuracy. An OO design allows to exchange different numerical algorithms
and/or different fields (not only B-field), without affecting any other component of the toolkit.
4. Particle Definition and Matter
These two categories manage the the definition of materials and particles.
5. Physics
This category manages all physics processes participating in the interactions of particles in matter. The abstract
interface of physics processes allows multiple implementations of physics models per interaction or per channel.
Models can be selected by energy range, particle type, material, etc. Data encapsulation and polymorphism make
it possible to give transparent access to the cross sections (independently of the choice of reading from an ascii
file, or of interpolating from a tabulated set, or of computing analytically from a formula). Electromagnetic and
hadronic physics were handled in a uniform way in such a design, opening up the physics to the users.
6. Hits and Digitization
These two categories manage the creation of hits and their use for the digitization phase. The basic design and
implementation of the Hits and Digi had been realized, and also several prototypes, test cases and scenarios
had been developed before the alpha-release. Volumes (not necessarily the ones used by the tracking) are
aggregated in sensitive detectors, while hits collections represent the logical read out of the detector. Different
ways of creating and managing hits collections had been delivered and tested, notably for both single hits and
calorimetry hits types. In all cases, hits collections had been successfully stored into and retrieved from an
Object Data Base Management System.
7. Visualization
This manages the visualization of solids, trajectories and hits, and interacts with underlying graphical libraries
(the Visualization class category). The basic and most frequently used graphics functionality had been imple-
mented already by the alpha-release. The OO design of the visualization component allowed us to develop
several drivers independently, such as for OpenGL, Qt and OpenInventor (for X11 and Windows), DAWN,
Postscript (via DAWN) and VRML.
8. Interfaces
This category handles the production of the graphical user interface (GUI) and the interactions with external
software (OODBMS, reconstruction etc.).
The “global” category in GEANT4 collects all classes, types, structures and constants which are considered of general
use within the GEANT4 toolkit. This category also defines the interface with third-party software libraries (CLHEP,
STL, etc.) and system-related types, by defining, where appropriate, typedefs according to the GEANT4 code
conventions.
In order to keep an homogeneous naming style, and according to the GEANT4 coding style conventions, each class
part of the GEANT4 kernel has its name beginning with the prefix G4, e.g., G4VHit, G4GeometryManager,
G4ProcessVector, etc. Instead of the raw C types, G4 types are used within the GEANT4 code. For the basic
numeric types (int, float, double, etc.), different compilers and different platforms provide different value
ranges. In order to assure portability, the use of G4int, G4float, G4double, G4bool, globally defined, is
preferable. G4 types implement the right generic type for a given architecture.
Basic types
The following classes are typedefs to the corresponding classes of the CLHEP (Computing Library for High
Energy Physics) distribution. For more detailed documentation please refer to the CLHEP documentation.
• G4ThreeVector, G4RotationMatrix, G4LorentzVector and G4LorentzRotation:
Vector classes: defining 3-component (x,y,z) vector entities, rotation of such objects as 3x3 matrices, 4-
component (x,y,z,t) vector entities and their rotation as 4x4 matrices.
• G4Plane3D, G4Transform3D, G4Normal3D, G4Point3D, G4Scale3D, and G4Vector3D:
Geometrical classes: defining geometrical entities and transformations in 3D space.
The HEPRandom module, originally part of the GEANT4 kernel, and now distributed as a module of CLHEP, has
been designed and developed starting from the Random class of MC++, the original CLHEP’s HepRandom module
and the Rogue Wave approach in the Math.h++ package. For detailed documentation on the HEPRandom classes see
the CLHEP documentation.
Information written in this manual is extracted from the original manifesto distributed with the HEPRandom package.
The HEPRandom module consists of classes implementing different random engines and different random
distributions. A distribution associated to an engine constitutes a random generator. A distribution class
can collect different algorithms and different calling sequences for each method to define distribution parameters or
range-intervals. An engine implements the basic algorithm for pseudo-random numbers generation.
There are 3 different ways of shooting random values:
1. Using the static generator defined in the HepRandom class: random values are shot using static methods
shoot() defined for each distribution class. The static generator will use, as default engine, a MixMaxRng
object, and the user can set its properties or change it with a new instantiated engine object by using the static
methods defined in the HepRandom class.
2. Skipping the static generator and specifying an engine object: random values are shot using static methods
shoot(*HepRandomEngine) defined for each distribution class. The user must instantiate an engine object
and give it as argument to the shoot method. The generator mechanism will then be by-passed by using the basic
flat() method of the specified engine. The user must take care of the engine objects he/she instantiates.
3. Skipping the static generator and instantiating a distribution object: random values are shot using fire()
methods (NOT static) defined for each distribution class. The user must instantiate a distribution object giving
as argument to the constructor an engine by pointer or by reference. By doing so, the engine will be associated
to the distribution object and the generator mechanism will be by-passed by using the basic flat() method of
that engine.
In this guide, we’ll only focus on the static generator (point 1.), since the static interface of HEPRandom is the only
one used within the GEANT4 toolkit.
HEPRandom engines
The class HepRandomEngine is the abstract class defining the interface for each random engine. It implements the
getSeed() and getSeeds() methods which return the initial seed value and the initial array of seeds (if
any) respectively. Many concrete random engines can be defined and added to the structure, simply making them
inheriting from HepRandomEngine. Several different engines are currently implemented in HepRandom, we describe
here five of them:
• HepJamesRandom
It implements the algorithm described in F.James, Comp. Phys. Comm. 60 (1990) 329 for pseudo-random
number generation.
• DRand48Engine
Random engine using the drand48() and srand48() system functions from C standard library to imple-
ment the flat() basic distribution and for setting seeds respectively. DRand48Engine uses the seed48()
function from C standard library to retrieve the current internal status of the generator, which is represented by
3 short values. DRand48Engine is the only engine defined in HEPRandom which intrinsically works in 32 bits
precision. Copies of an object of this kind are not allowed.
• MixMaxRng
Random number engine implementing the MixMax Matrix Generator of Pseudorandom Numbers generator
proposed by N.Z.Akopov, G.K.Saviddy and N.G.Ter-Arutyunian, J.Compt.Phy. 97, (1991) 573 and G.Savvidy
and N.Savvidy, J.Comput.Phys. 97 (1991) 566. This is the default random engine for the static generator; it will
be invoked by each distribution class unless the user sets a different one.
• RanluxEngine
The algorithm for RanluxEngine has been taken from the original implementation in FORTRAN77 by Fred
James, part of the MATHLIB HEP library. The initialisation is carried out using a Multiplicative Congruential
generator using formula constants of L’Ecuyer as described in F.James, Comp. Phys. Comm. 60 (1990) 329-
344. The engine provides five different luxury levels for quality of random generation. When instantiating a
RanluxEngine, the user can specify the luxury level to the constructor (if not, the default value 3 is taken). For
example:
RanluxEngine theRanluxEngine(seed,4);
// instantiates an engine with `seed' and the best luxury-level
... or
RanluxEngine theRanluxEngine;
// instantiates an engine with default seed value and luxury-level
...
The class provides a getLuxury() method to get the engine luxury level.
The SetSeed() and SetSeeds() methods to set the initial seeds for the engine, can be invoked specifying
the luxury level. For example:
// static interface
HepRandom::setTheSeed(seed,4); // sets the seed to `seed' and luxury to 4
HepRandom::setTheSeed(seed); // sets the seed to `seed' keeping
// the current luxury level
• RanecuEngine
The algorithm for RanecuEngine is taken from the one originally written in FORTRAN77 as part of the MATH-
LIB HEP library. The initialisation is carried out using a Multiplicative Congruential generator using formula
constants of L’Ecuyer as described in F.James, Comp. Phys. Comm. 60 (1990) 329-344. Handling of seeds for
this engine is slightly different than the other engines in HEPRandom. Seeds are taken from a seed table given
an index, the getSeed() method returns the current index of seed table. The setSeeds() method will set
seeds in the local SeedTable at a given position index (if the index number specified exceeds the table’s size,
[index%size] is taken). For example:
// static interface
const G4long* table_entry;
table_entry = HepRandom::getTheSeeds();
// it returns a pointer `table_entry' to the local SeedTable
// at the current `index' position. The couple of seeds
// accessed represents the current `status' of the engine itself !
...
G4int index=n;
G4long seeds[2];
HepRandom::setTheSeeds(seeds,index);
// sets the new `index' for seeds and modify the values inside
// the local SeedTable at the `index' position. If the index
// is not specified, the current index in the table is considered.
...
The setSeed() method resets the current ‘status’ of the engine to the original seeds stored in the static table
of seeds in HepRandom, at the specified index.
Except for the RanecuEngine, for which the internal status is represented by just a couple of longs, all the other engines
have a much more complex representation of their internal status, which currently can be obtained only through the
methods saveStatus(), restoreStatus() and showStatus(), which can also be statically called from
HepRandom. The status of the generator is needed for example to be able to reproduce a run or an event in a run at a
given stage of the simulation.
RanecuEngine is probably the most suitable engine for this kind of operation, since its internal status can be
fetched/reset by simply using getSeeds()/setSeeds() (getTheSeeds()/setTheSeeds() for the static
interface in HepRandom).
HepRandom a singleton class and using a MixMaxRng engine as default algorithm for pseudo-random number gener-
ation. HepRandom defines a static private data member, theGenerator, and a set of static methods to manipulate
it. By means of theGenerator, the user can change the underlying engine algorithm, get and set the seeds, and use
any kind of defined random distribution. The static methods setTheSeed() and getTheSeed() will set and get
respectively the initial seed to the main engine used by the static generator. For example:
HepRandom::setTheSeed(seed); // to change the current seed to 'seed'
int startSeed = HepRandom::getTheSeed(); // to get the current initial seed
HepRandom::saveEngineStatus(); // to save the current engine status on file
HepRandom::restoreEngineStatus(); // to restore the current engine to a previous
// saved configuration
HepRandom::showEngineStatus(); // to display the current engine status to stdout
...
int index=n;
long seeds[2];
HepRandom::getTheTableSeeds(seeds,index);
// fills `seeds' with the values stored in the global
// seedTable at position `index'
Only one random engine can be active at a time, the user can decide at any time to change it, define a new one (if not
done already) and set it. For example:
RanecuEngine theNewEngine;
HepRandom::setTheEngine(&theNewEngine);
...
or simply setting it to an old instantiated engine (the old engine status is kept and the new random sequence will start
exactly from the last one previously interrupted). For example:
HepRandom::setTheEngine(&myOldEngine);
HEPRandom distributions
A distribution-class can collect different algorithms and different calling sequences for each method to define distribu-
tion parameters or range-intervals; it also collects methods to fill arrays, of specified size, of random values, according
to the distribution. This class collects either static and not static methods. A set of distribution classes are defined in
HEPRandom. Here is the description of some of them:
• RandFlat Class to shoot flat random values (integers or double) within a specified interval. The class provides
also methods to shoot just random bits.
• RandExponential Class to shoot exponential distributed random values, given a mean (default mean = 1)
• RandGauss Class to shoot Gaussian distributed random values, given a mean (default = 0) or specifying also a
deviation (default = 1). Gaussian random numbers are generated two at the time, so every other time a number
is shot, the number returned is the one generated the time before.
• RandBreitWigner Class to shoot numbers according to the Breit-Wigner distribution algorithms (plain or
mean^2).
• RandPoisson Class to shoot numbers according to the Poisson distribution, given a mean (default = 1) (Algo-
rithm taken from W.H.Press et al., Numerical Recipes in C, Second Edition).
A set of classes implementing numerical algorithms has been developed in GEANT4. Most of the algorithms and
methods have been implemented mainly based on recommendations given in the books:
• B.H. Flowers, An introduction to Numerical Methods In C++, Clarendon Press, Oxford 1995.
• M. Abramowitz, I. Stegun, Handbook of mathematical functions, DOVER Publications INC, New York 1965 ;
chapters 9, 10, and 22.
This set of classes includes:
• G4ChebyshevApproximation Class creating the Chebyshev approximation for a function pointed by
fFunction data member. The Chebyshev polynomial approximation provides an efficient evaluation of the min-
imax polynomial, which (among all polynomials of the same degree) has the smallest maximum deviation from
the true function.
• G4DataInterpolation Class providing methods for data interpolations and extrapolations: Polynomial,
Cubic Spline, . . .
• G4GaussChebyshevQ
• G4GaussHermiteQ
• G4GaussJacobiQ
• G4GaussLaguerreQ Classes implementing the Gauss-Chebyshev, Gauss-Hermite, Gauss-Jacobi, Gauss-
Laguerre and Gauss-Legendre quadrature methods. Roots of orthogonal polynomials and corresponding weights
are calculated based on iteration method (by bisection Newton algorithm).
• G4Integrator Template class collecting integrator methods for generic functions (Legendre, Simpson,
Adaptive Gauss, Laguerre, Hermite, Jacobi).
• G4SimpleIntegration Class implementing simple numerical methods (Trapezoidal, MidPoint, Gauss,
Simpson, Adaptive Gauss, for integration of functions with signature: double f(double).
The global category defines also a set of utility classes generally used within the kernel of GEANT4. These
classes include:
• G4Allocator
A class for fast allocation of objects to the heap through paging mechanism. It’s meant to be used by associating
it to the object to be allocated and defining for it new and delete operators via MallocSingle() and
FreeSingle() methods of G4Allocator.
Note: G4Allocator assumes that objects being allocated have all the same size for the type they represent.
For this reason, classes which are handled by G4Allocator should avoid to be used as base-classes for oth-
ers. Similarly, base-classes of sub-classes handled through G4Allocator should not define their (eventually
empty) virtual destructors inlined; such measure is necessary in order also to prevent bad aliasing optimisations
by compilers which may potentially lead to crashes in the attempt to free allocated chunks of memory when
using the base-class pointer or not.
The list of allocators implicitly defined and used in GEANT4 is reported here:
– events (G4Event): anEventAllocator
– tracks (G4Track): aTrackAllocator
– stacked tracks (G4StackedTrack): aStackedTrackAllocator
– primary particles (G4PrimaryParticle): aPrimaryParticleAllocator
– primary vertices (G4PrimaryVertex): aPrimaryVertexAllocator
• G4ReferenceCountedHandle
Template class acting as a smart pointer and wrapping the type to be counted. It performs the reference counting
during the life-time of the counted object.
• G4FastVector
Template class defining a vector of pointers, not performing boundary checking.
• G4PhysicsVector
Defines a physics vector which has values of energy-loss, cross-section, and other physics values of a particle in
matter in a given range of the energy, momentum, etc. This class serves as the base class for a vector having var-
ious energy scale, for example like ‘log’ (G4PhysicsLogVector) ‘linear’ (G4PhysicsLinearVector),
‘free’ (G4PhysicsFreeVector), etc.
• G4LPhysicsFreeVector
Implements a free vector for low energy physics cross-section data. A subdivision method is used to find the
energy|momentum bin.
• G4PhysicsOrderedFreeVector
A physics ordered free vector inherits from G4PhysicsVector. It provides, in addition, a method for the
user to insert energy/value pairs in sequence. Methods to retrieve the max and min energies and values from the
vector are also provided.
• G4Timer
Utility class providing methods to measure elapsed user/system process time. Uses <sys/times.h> and
<unistd.h> - POSIX.1.
• G4UserLimits
Class collecting methods for get and set any kind of step limitation allowed in GEANT4.
• G4UnitsTable
Placeholder for the system of units in GEANT4.
GEANT4 offers the user the possibility to choose and use the preferred units for any quantity. In fact, GEANT4 takes
care of the units. Internally a consistent set on units based on the HepSystemOfUnits is used:
millimeter (mm)
nanosecond (ns)
Mega electron Volt (MeV)
positron charge (eplus)
degree Kelvin (kelvin)
the amount of substance (mole)
luminous intensity (candela)
radian (radian)
steradian (steradian)
The user must give the units for the data to introduce:
G4double Size = 15*km, KineticEnergy = 90.3*GeV, density = 11*mg/cm3;
GEANT4 assumes that these specifications for the units are respected, in order to assure independence from the units
chosen in the client application.
If units are not specified in the client application, data are implicitly treated in internal GEANT4 system units; this
practice is however strongly discouraged.
If the data set comes from an array or from an external file, it is strongly recommended to set the units as soon as the
data are read, before any treatment. For instance:
for (int j=0, j<jmax, j++) CrossSection[j] *= millibarn;
...
my calculations
...
Interactive commands
Some built-in commands from the User Interface (UI) also require units to be specified.
For instance:
/gun/energy 15.2 keV
/gun/position 3 2 -7 meter
If units are not specified, or are not valid, the command is refused.
You can output your data with the wished units. To do so, it is sufficient to divide the data by the corresponding unit:
G4cout << KineticEnergy/keV << " keV";
G4cout << density/(g/cm3) << " g/cm3";
Of course, G4cout << KineticEnergy will print the energy in the internal units system.
There is another way to output the data. Let GEANT4 choose the most appropriate units for the actual numerical value
of the data. It is sufficient to specify to which category the data belong to (Length, Time, Energy, etc.). For example:
G4cout << G4BestUnit(StepSize, "Length");
StepSize will be printed in km, m, mm, fermi, etc. depending of its actual value.
Using this method, it is not easy to define composed units. It is better to do the following:
• Instantiate an object of the class G4UnitDefinition. These objects are owned by the global
G4UnitsTable at construction, and must not be deleted by the user.
new G4UnitDefinition ( name, symbol, category, value )
The category “Speed” does not exist by default in G4UnitsTable, but it will be created automatically. The
class G4UnitDefinition is defined in source/global/management/G4UnitsTable.hh.
You can print the list of units with the static function: G4UnitDefinition::PrintUnitsTable(); or with
the interactive command: /units/list
3.4 Run
In GEANT4, Run is the largest unit of simulation. A run consists of a sequence of events. Within a run, the detector
geometry, the set up of sensitive detectors, and the physics processes used in the simulation should be kept unchanged.
A run is represented by a G4Run class object. A run starts with BeamOn() method of G4RunManager.
Representation of a run
G4Run represents a run. It has a run identification number, which should be set by the user, and the number of events
simulated during the run. Please note that the run identification number is not used by the GEANT4 kernel, and thus
can be arbitrarily assigned at the user’s convenience.
G4Run has pointers to the tables G4VHitsCollection and G4VDigiCollection. These tables are associ-
ated in case sensitive detectors and digitizer modules are simulated, respectively. The usage of these tables will be
mentioned in Hits and Digitization.
G4Run has two virtual methods, and thus you can extend G4Run class. In particular if you use GEANT4 in multi-
threaded mode and need to accumulate values, these two virtual method must be overwritten to specify how such
values should be collected firstly for a worker thread, and then for the entire run. These virtual methods are the
following.
virtual void RecordEvent(const G4Event*) Method to be overwritten by the user for recording
events in this (thread-local) run. At the end of the implementation, G4Run base-class method for must be
invoked for recording data members in the base class.
void Merge(const G4Run*) Method to be overwritten by the user for merging local Run object to the global
Run object. At the end of the implementation, G4Run base-class method for must be invoked for merging data
members in the base class.
G4RunManager manages the procedures of a run. In the constructor of G4RunManager, all of the manager classes
in GEANT4 kernel, except for some static managers, are constructed. These managers are deleted in the destructor of
G4RunManager. G4RunManager must be a singleton created in the user’s main() program; the pointer to this
singleton object can be obtained by other code using the GetRunManager() static method.
As already mentioned in How to Define the main() Program, all of the user initialization classes defined by the user
should be assigned to G4RunManager before starting initialization of the GEANT4 kernel. The assignments of these
user classes are done by SetUserInitialization() methods. All user classes defined by the GEANT4 kernel
will be summarized in User Actions.
G4RunManager has several public methods, which are listed below.
Initialize() All initializations required by the GEANT4 kernel are triggered by this method. Initializations are:
• construction of the detector geometry and set up of sensitive detectors and/or digitizer modules,
• construction of particles and physics processes,
• calculation of cross-section tables.
This method is thus mandatory before proceeding to the first run. This method will be invoked automatically
for the second and later runs in case some of the initialized quantities need to be updated.
BeamOn(G4int numberOfEvent) This method triggers the actual simulation of a run, that is, an event loop. It
takes an integer argument which represents the number of events to be simulated.
GetRunManager() This static method returns the pointer to the G4RunManager singleton object.
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GetCurrentEvent() This method returns the pointer to the G4Event object which is currently being simulated.
This method is available only when an event is being processed. At this moment, the application state of
GEANT4, which is explained in the following sub-section, is “EventProc”. When GEANT4 is in a state other
than “EventProc”, this method returns null. Please note that the return value of this method is const G4Event *
and thus you cannot modify the contents of the object.
SetNumberOfEventsToBeStored(G4int nPrevious) When simulating the “pile up” of more than one
event, it is essential to access more than one event at the same moment. By invoking this method,
G4RunManager keeps nPrevious G4Event objects. This method must be invoked before proceeding to Bea-
mOn().
GetPreviousEvent(G4int i_thPrevious) The pointer to the i_thPrevious G4Event object can be ob-
tained through this method. A pointer to a const object is returned. It is inevitable that i_thPrevious events
must have already been simulated in the same run for getting the i_thPrevious event. Otherwise, this method
returns null.
AbortRun() This method should be invoked whenever the processing of a run must be stopped. It is valid for
GeomClosed and EventProc states. Run processing will be safely aborted even in the midst of processing an
event. However, the last event of the aborted run will be incomplete and should not be used for further analysis.
G4MTRunManager is the replacement of G4RunManager for multi-threading mode. At the very end of
Initialize() method, G4MTRunManager creates and starts worker threads. The event each thread is tasked
is in first-come-first-served basis, so that event numbers each thread has are not sequential.
G4WorkerRunManager is the local RunManager automatically instantiated by G4MTRunManager to take care
of initialization and event handling of a thread. Both G4MTRunManager and G4WorkerRunManager are derived
classes of G4RunManager base class.
The static method G4RunManager::GetRunManager() returns the following pointer.
• It returns the pointer to the G4WorkerRunManager of the local thread when it is invoked from thread-local
object.
• It returns the pointer to the G4MTRunManager when it is invoked from shared object.
• It returns the pointer to the base G4RunManager if it is used in the sequential mode.
G4RunManager has a method GetRunManagerType() that returns an enum named RMType to indicate what
kind of RunManager it is. RMType is defined as { sequentialRM, masterRM, workerRM }. From the
thread-local object, a static method G4MTRunManager::GetMasterRunManager() is available to access to
G4MTRunManager. From a worker thread, the user may access to, for example, detector construction (it is a shared
class) through this GetMasterRunManager() method.
G4UserRunAction
G4UserRunAction is one of the user action classes from which you can derive your own concrete class. This base
class has three virtual methods as follows:
GenerateRun() This method is invoked at the beginning of the BeamOn() method but after confirmation of the
conditions of the GEANT4 kernel. This method should be used to instantiate a user-specific run class object.
BeginOfRunAction() This method is invoked at the beginning of the BeamOn() method but after confirmation
of the conditions of the GEANT4 kernel. Likely uses of this method include:
• setting a run identification number,
• booking histograms,
• setting run specific conditions of the sensitive detectors and/or digitizer modules (e.g., dead channels).
EndOfRunAction() This method is invoked at the very end of the BeamOn() method. Typical use cases of this
method are
• store/print histograms,
GEANT4 is designed as a state machine. Some methods in GEANT4 are available for only a certain state(s).
G4RunManager controls the state changes of the GEANT4 application. States of GEANT4 are represented by the
enumeration G4ApplicationState. It has six states through the life cycle of a GEANT4 application.
G4State_PreInit state A GEANT4 application starts with this state. The application needs to be initialized when
it is in this state. The application occasionally comes back to this state if geometry, physics processes, and/or
cut-off have been changed after processing a run.
G4State_Init state The application is in this state while the Initialize() method of G4RunManager is being in-
voked. Methods defined in any user initialization classes are invoked during this state.
G4State_Idle state The application is ready for starting a run.
G4State_GeomClosed state When BeamOn() is invoked, the application proceeds to this state to process a run.
Geometry, physics processes, and cut-off cannot be changed during run processing.
G4State_EventProc state A GEANT4 application is in this state when a particular event is being processed.
GetCurrentEvent() and GetPreviousEvent() methods of G4RunManager are available only at this state.
G4State_Quit state When the destructor of G4RunManager is invoked, the application comes to this “dead end”
state. Managers of the GEANT4 kernel are being deleted and thus the application cannot come back to any other
state.
G4State_Abort state When a G4Exception occurs, the application comes to this “dead end” state and causes a
core dump. The user still has a hook to do some “safe” operations, e.g. storing histograms, by implement-
ing a user concrete class of G4VStateDependent. The user also has a choice to suppress the occurrence of
G4Exception by a UI command /control/suppressAbortion. When abortion is suppressed, you will still get error
messages issued by G4Exception, and there is NO guarantee of a correct result after the G4Exception error
message.
G4StateManager belongs to the intercoms category.
In case the user wants to do something at the moment of state change of GEANT4, the user can create a concrete class
of the G4VStateDependent base class. For example, the user can store histograms when G4Exception occurs and
GEANT4 comes to the Abort state, but before the actual core dump.
The following is an example user code which stores histograms when GEANT4 becomes to the Abort state. This class
object should be made in, for example main(), by the user code. This object will be automatically registered to
G4StateManager at its construction.
#include "G4VStateDependent.hh"
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UserHookForAbortState::UserHookForAbortState() {;}
UserHookForAbortState::~UserHookForAbortState() {;}
return true;
}
G4RunManager is a concrete class with a complete set of functionalities for managing the GEANT4 kernel. It
is the only manager class in the GEANT4 kernel which must be constructed in the main() method of the user’s
application. Thus, instead of constructing the G4RunManager provided by GEANT4, you are free to construct
your own RunManager. It is recommended, however, that your RunManager inherit G4RunManager. For this
purpose, G4RunManager has various virtual methods which provide all the functionalities required to handle the
GEANT4 kernel. Hence, your customized run manager need only override the methods particular to your needs; the
remaining methods in G4RunManager base class can still be used. A summary of the available methods is presented
here:
public: virtual void Initialize(); main entry point of GEANT4 kernel initialization
protected: virtual void InitializeGeometry(); geometry construction
protected: virtual void InitializePhysics(); physics processes construction
public: virtual void BeamOn(G4int n_event); main entry point of the event loop
protected: virtual G4bool ConfirmBeamOnCondition(); check the kernel conditions for the
event loop
protected: virtual void RunInitialization(); prepare a run
protected: virtual void DoEventLoop(G4int n_events); manage an event loop
protected: virtual G4Event* GenerateEvent(G4int i_event); generation of G4Event object
protected: virtual void AnalyzeEvent(G4Event* anEvent); storage/analysis of an event
protected: virtual void RunTermination(); terminate a run
public: virtual void DefineWorldVolume(G4VPhysicalVolume * worldVol); set the
world volume to G4Navigator
public: virtual void AbortRun(); abort the run
In G4RunManager the event loop is handled by the virtual method DoEventLoop(). This method is implemented
by a for loop consisting of the following steps:
1. construct a G4Event object and assign to it primary vertex(es) and primary particles. This is done by the virtual
GeneratePrimaryEvent() method.
2. send the G4Event object to G4EventManager for the detector simulation. Hits and trajectories will be
associated with the G4Event object as a consequence.
3. perform bookkeeping for the current G4Event object. This is done by the virtual AnalyzeEvent() method.
DoEventLoop() performs the entire simulation of an event. However, it is often useful to split the above three
steps into isolated application programs. If, for example, you wish to examine the effects of changing discriminator
thresholds, ADC gate widths and/or trigger conditions on simulated events, much time can be saved by performing
steps 1 and 2 in one program and step 3 in another. The first program need only generate the hit/trajectory information
once and store it, perhaps in a database. The second program could then retrieve the stored G4Event objects and
perform the digitization (analysis) using the above threshold, gate and trigger settings. These settings could then be
changed and the digitization program re-run without re-generating the G4Events.
The detector geometry defined in your G4VUserDetectorConstruction concrete class can be changed during
a run break (between two runs). Two different cases are considered.
The first is the case in which you want to delete the entire structure of your old geometry and build up a completely
new set of volumes. For this case, you need to delete them by yourself, and let RunManager invokes Construct()
and ConstructSDandField() methods of your detector construction once again when RunManager starts the
next run.
G4RunManager* runManager = G4RunManager::GetRunManager();
runManager->ReinitializeGeometry();
before proceeding to the next run. An example of changing geometry is given in a GEANT4 tutorial in GEANT4
Training kit #2.
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It is a likely case to change cut-off values in a run. You can change defaultCutValue in
G4VUserPhysicsList during the Idle state. In this case, all cross section tables need to be recalculated be-
fore the event loop. You should use the CutOffHasBeenModified() method when you change cut-off values so
that the SetCuts method of your PhysicsList concrete class will be invoked.
G4UserWorkerInitialization is an additional user initialization class to be used only for the multi-
threaded mode. The object of this class can be set to G4MTRunManager, but not to G4RunManager.
G4UserWorkerInitialization class has five virtual methods as the user hooks which are invoked at several
occasions of the life cycle of each thread.
virtual void WorkerInitialize() const This method is called after the tread is created but before the
G4WorkerRunManager is instantiated.
virtual void WorkerStart() const This method is called once at the beginning of simulation job when
kernel classes and user action classes have already instantiated but geometry and physics have not been yet
initialized. This situation is identical to “PreInit” state in the sequential mode.
virtual void WorkerStartRun() const This method is called before an event loop. Geometry and
physics have already been set up for the thread. All threads are synchronized and ready to start the local event
loop. This situation is identical to “Idle” state in the sequential mode.
virtual void WorkerRunEnd() const This method is called for each thread when the local event loop is
done, but before the synchronization over all worker threads.
virtual void WorkerStop() const This method is called once at the end of simulation job.
3.5 Event
G4Event represents an event. An object of this class contains all inputs and outputs of the simulated event. This
class object is constructed in G4RunManager and sent to G4EventManager. The event currently being processed
can be obtained via the getCurrentEvent() method of G4RunManager.
A G4Event object has four major types of information. Get methods for this information are available in G4Event.
Primary vertexes and primary particles Details are given in Event Generator Interface.
Trajectories Trajectories are stored in G4TrajectoryContainer class objects and the pointer to this container is stored
in G4Event. The contents of a trajectory are given in Trajectory and Trajectory Point.
Hits collections Collections of hits generated by sensitive detectors are kept in G4HCofThisEvent class object
and the pointer to this container class object is stored in G4Event. See Hits for the details.
Digits collections Collections of digits generated by digitizer modules are kept in G4DCofThisEvent class object
and the pointer to this container class object is stored in G4Event. See Digitization for the details.
G4EventManager is the manager class to take care of one event. It is responsible for:
• converting G4PrimaryVertex and G4PrimaryParticle objects associated with the current G4Event
object to G4Track objects. All of G4Track objects representing the primary particles are sent to
G4StackManager.
• Pop one G4Track object from G4StackManager and send it to G4TrackingManager. The current
G4Track object is deleted by G4EventManager after the track is simulated by G4TrackingManager, if
the track is marked as “killed”.
• In case the primary track is “suspended” or “postponed to next event” by G4TrackingManager, it is sent
back to the G4StackManager. Secondary G4Track objects returned by G4TrackingManager are also
sent to G4StackManager.
• When G4StackManager returns NULL for the “pop” request, G4EventManager terminates the current
processing event.
• invokes the user-defined methods beginOfEventAction() and endOfEventAction() from the
G4UserEventAction class. See User Information Classes for details.
G4StackManager has three stacks, named urgent, waiting and postpone-to-next-event, which are objects of the
G4TrackStack class. By default, all G4Track objects are stored in the urgent stack and handled in a “last in first
out” manner. In this case, the other two stacks are not used. However, tracks may be routed to the other two stacks by
the user-defined G4UserStackingAction concrete class.
If the methods of G4UserStackingAction have been overridden by the user, the postpone-to-next-event and
waiting stacks may contain tracks. At the beginning of an event, G4StackManager checks to see if any tracks left
over from the previous event are stored in the postpone-to-next-event stack. If so, it attempts to move them to the
urgent stack. But first the PrepareNewEvent() method of G4UserStackingAction is called. Here tracks
may be re-classified by the user and sent to the urgent or waiting stacks, or deferred again to the postpone-to-next-event
stack. As the event is processed G4StackManager pops tracks from the urgent stack until it is empty. At this point
the NewStage() method of G4UserStackingAction is called. In this method tracks from the waiting stack
may be sent to the urgent stack, retained in the waiting stack or postponed to the next event.
Details of the user-defined methods of G4UserStackingAction and how they affect track stack management are
given in User Information Classes.
The G4Event class object should have a set of primary particles when it is sent to G4EventManager via
processOneEvent() method. It is the mandate of your G4VUserPrimaryGeneratorAction concrete class
to send primary particles to the G4Event object.
The G4PrimaryParticle class represents a primary particle with which GEANT4 starts simulating an event.
This class object has information on particle type and its three momenta. The positional and time information of
primary particle(s) are stored in the G4PrimaryVertex class object and, thus, this class object can have one or
more G4PrimaryParticle class objects which share the same vertex. Primary vertexes and primary particles are
associated with the G4Event object by a form of linked list.
A concrete class of G4VPrimaryGenerator, the G4PrimaryParticle object is constructed with either a
pointer to G4ParticleDefinition or an integer number which represents P.D.G. particle code. For the case of
some artificial particles, e.g., geantino, optical photon, etc., or exotic nuclear fragments, which the P.D.G. particle code
does not cover, the G4PrimaryParticle should be constructed by G4ParticleDefinition pointer. On the
other hand, elementary particles with very short life time, e.g., weak bosons, or quarks/gluons, can be instantiated
as G4PrimaryParticle objects using the P.D.G. particle code. It should be noted that, even though primary
particles with such a very short life time are defined, GEANT4 will simulate only the particles which are defined as
G4ParticleDefinition class objects. Other primary particles will be simply ignored by G4EventManager.
But it may still be useful to construct such “intermediate” particles for recording the origin of the primary event.
The G4PrimaryParticle class object can have a list of its daughter particles. If the parent particle is an “inter-
mediate” particle, which GEANT4 does not have a corresponding G4ParticleDefinition, this parent particle is
ignored and daughters are assumed to start from the vertex with which their parent is associated. For example, a Z
boson is associated with a vertex and it has positive and negative muons as its daughters, these muons will start from
that vertex.
There are some kinds of particles which should fly some reasonable distances and, thus, should be simulated by
GEANT4, but you still want to follow the decay channel generated by an event generator. A typical case of these
particles is B meson. Even for the case of a primary particle which has a corresponding G4ParticleDefinition,
it can have daughter primary particles. GEANT4 will trace the parent particle until it comes to decay, obeying multiple
scattering, ionization loss, rotation with the magnetic field, etc. according to its particle type. When the parent comes
to decay, instead of randomly choosing its decay channel, it follows the “pre-assigned” decay channel. To conserve
the energy and the momentum of the parent, daughters will be Lorentz transformed according to their parent’s frame.
G4HEPEvtInterface
Unfortunately, almost all event generators presently in use, commonly are written in FORTRAN. For GEANT4, it was
decided to not link with any FORTRAN program or library, even though the C++ language syntax itself allows such
a link. Linking to a FORTRAN package might be convenient in some cases, but we will lose many advantages of
object-oriented features of C++, such as robustness. Instead, GEANT4 provides an ASCII file interface for such event
generators.
G4HEPEvtInterface is one of G4VPrimaryGenerator concrete class and thus it can be used in your
G4VUserPrimaryGeneratorAction concrete class. G4HEPEvtInterface reads an ASCII file produced
by an event generator and reproduces G4PrimaryParticle objects associated with a G4PrimaryVertex ob-
ject. It reproduces a full production chain of the event generator, starting with primary quarks, etc. In other words,
G4HEPEvtInterface converts information stored in the /HEPEVT/ common block to an object-oriented data
structure. Because the /HEPEVT/ common block is commonly used by almost all event generators written in FOR-
TRAN, G4HEPEvtInterface can interface to almost all event generators currently used in the HEP commu-
nity. The constructor of G4HEPEvtInterface takes the file name. Listing 3.3 shows an example how to use
G4HEPEvtInterface. Note that an event generator is not assumed to give a place of the primary particles, the
interaction point must be set before invoking GeneratePrimaryVertex() method.
#include "G4VUserPrimaryGeneratorAction.hh"
#include "globals.hh"
class G4VPrimaryGenerator;
class G4Event;
public:
void GeneratePrimaries(G4Event* anEvent);
private:
G4VPrimaryGenerator* HEPEvt;
};
#endif
#include "ExN04PrimaryGeneratorAction.hh"
#include "G4Event.hh"
#include "G4HEPEvtInterface.hh"
ExN04PrimaryGeneratorAction::ExN04PrimaryGeneratorAction()
{
HEPEvt = new G4HEPEvtInterface("pythia_event.data");
}
ExN04PrimaryGeneratorAction::~ExN04PrimaryGeneratorAction()
{
delete HEPEvt;
}
An ASCII file, which will be fed by G4HEPEvtInterface should have the following format.
• The first line of each primary event should be an integer which represents the number of the following lines of
primary particles.
• Each line in an event corresponds to a particle in the /HEPEVT/ common. Each line has ISTHEP, IDHEP,
JDAHEP(1), JDAHEP(2), PHEP(1), PHEP(2), PHEP(3), PHEP(5). Refer to the /HEPEVT/
manual for the meanings of these variables.
Listing 3.4 shows an example FORTRAN code to generate an ASCII file.
Several activities have already been started for developing object-oriented event generators. Such new generators
can be easily linked and used with a GEANT4 based simulation. Furthermore, we need not distinguish a primary
generator from the physics processes used in GEANT4. Future generators can be a kind of physics process plugged-in
by inheriting G4VProcess.
Your G4VUserPrimaryGeneratorAction concrete class can have more than one G4VPrimaryGenerator
concrete class. Each G4VPrimaryGenerator concrete class can be accessed more than once per event. Using
these class objects, one event can have more than one primary event.
One possible use is the following. Within an event, a G4HEPEvtInterface class object instantiated with a mini-
mum bias event file is accessed 20 times and another G4HEPEvtInterface class object instantiated with a signal
event file is accessed once. Thus, this event represents a typical signal event of LHC overlapping 20 minimum bias
events. It should be noted that a simulation of event overlapping can be done by merging hits and/or digits associ-
ated with several events, and these events can be simulated independently. Digitization over multiple events will be
mentioned in Digitization.
GEANT4 provides event biasing techniques which may be used to save computing time in such applications as
the simulation of radiation shielding. These are geometrical splitting and Russian roulette (also called geomet-
rical importance sampling), and weight roulette. Scoring is carried out by G4MultiFunctionalDetector
(see G4MultiFunctionalDetector and G4VPrimitiveScorer and Concrete classes of G4VPrimitiveScorer) using the
standard GEANT4 scoring technique. Biasing specific scorers have been implemented and are described within
G4MultiFunctionalDetector documentation. In this chapter, it is assumed that the reader is familiar with
both the usage of GEANT4 and the concepts of importance sampling. More detailed documentation may be found in
the documents ‘Scoring, geometrical importance sampling and weight roulette’.
A detailed description of different use-cases which employ the sampling and scoring techniques can be found in the
document ‘Use cases of importance sampling and scoring in Geant4’.
The purpose of importance sampling is to save computing time by sampling less often the particle histories entering
“less important” geometry regions, and more often in more “important” regions. Given the same amount of com-
puting time, an importance-sampled and an analogue-sampled simulation must show equal mean values, while the
importance-sampled simulation will have a decreased variance.
The implementation of scoring is independent of the implementation of importance sampling. However both share
common concepts. Scoring and importance sampling apply to particle types chosen by the user, which should be
borne in mind when interpreting the output of any biased simulation.
Examples on how to use scoring and importance sampling may be found in examples/extended/biasing.
Geometries
The kind of scoring referred to in this note and the importance sampling apply to spatial cells provided by the user.
A cell is a physical volume (further specified by it’s replica number, if the volume is a replica). Cells may be defined
in two kinds of geometries:
1. mass geometry: the geometry setup of the experiment to be simulated. Physics processes apply to this geometry.
2. parallel-geometry: a geometry constructed to define the physical volumes according to which scoring and/or
importance sampling is applied.
The user has the choice to score and/or sample by importance the particles of the chosen type, according to mass
geometry or to parallel geometry. It is possible to utilize several parallel geometries in addition to the mass geometry.
This provides the user with a lot of flexibility to define separate geometries for different particle types in order to apply
scoring or/and importance sampling.
Note: Parallel geometries should be constructed using the implementation as described in Parallel Geometries. There
are a few conditions for parallel geometries:
• The world volume for parallel and mass geometries must be identical copies.
• Scoring and importance cells must not share boundaries with the world volume.
Samplers are higher level tools which perform the necessary changes of the GEANT4 sampling in order to apply
importance sampling and weight roulette.
Variance reduction (and scoring through the G4MultiFunctionalDetector) may be combined arbitrarily for
chosen particle types and may be applied to the mass or to parallel geometries.
The G4GeometrySampler can be applied equally to mass or parallel geometries with an abstract interface supplied
by G4VSampler. G4VSampler provides Prepare... methods and a Configure method:
class G4VSampler
{
public:
G4VSampler();
virtual ~G4VSampler();
virtual void PrepareImportanceSampling(G4VIStore *istore,
const G4VImportanceAlgorithm
*ialg = 0) = 0;
virtual void PrepareWeightRoulett(G4double wsurvive = 0.5,
G4double wlimit = 0.25,
G4double isource = 1) = 0;
virtual void PrepareWeightWindow(G4VWeightWindowStore *wwstore,
G4VWeightWindowAlgorithm *wwAlg = 0,
G4PlaceOfAction placeOfAction =
onBoundary) = 0;
virtual void Configure() = 0;
virtual void ClearSampling() = 0;
virtual G4bool IsConfigured() const = 0;
};
The methods for setting up the desired combination need specific information:
• Importance sampling: message PrepareImportanceSampling with a G4VIStore and optionally a
G4VImportanceAlgorithm
• Weight window: message PrepareWeightWindow with the arguments:
– *wwstore: a G4VWeightWindowStore for retrieving the lower weight bounds for the energy-space
cells
– *wwAlg: a G4VWeightWindowAlgorithm if a customized algorithm should be used
– placeOfAction: a G4PlaceOfAction specifying where to perform the biasing
• Weight roulette: message PrepareWeightRoulett with the optional parameters:
– wsurvive: survival weight
– wlimit: minimal allowed value of weight * source importance / cell importance
– isource: importance of the source cell
Each object of a sampler class is responsible for one particle type. The particle type is given to the constructor of the
sampler classes via the particle type name, e.g. “neutron”. Depending on the specific purpose, the Configure() of
a sampler will set up specialized processes (derived from G4VProcess) for transportation in the parallel geometry,
importance sampling and weight roulette for the given particle type. When Configure() is invoked the sampler
places the processes in the correct order independent of the order in which user invoked the Prepare... methods.
Note:
• The Prepare...() functions may each only be invoked once.
• To configure the sampling the function Configure() must be called after the G4RunManager has been
initialized and the PhysicsList has been instantiated.
The interface and framework are demonstrated in the examples/extended/biasing directory, with the main
changes being to the G4GeometrySampler class and the fact that in the parallel case the WorldVolume is a copy of
the Mass World. The parallel geometry now has to inherit from G4VUserParallelWorld which also has the
GetWorld() method in order to retrieve a copy of the mass geometry WorldVolume.
class B02ImportanceDetectorConstruction : public G4VUserParallelWorld
ghostWorld = GetWorld();
The constructor for G4GeometrySampler takes a pointer to the physical world volume and the particle type name
(e.g. “neutron”) as arguments. In a single mass geometry the sampler is created as follows:
G4GeometrySampler mgs(detector->GetWorldVolume(),"neutron");
mgs.SetParallel(false);
Whilst the following lines of code are required in order to set up the sampler for the parallel geometry case:
G4VPhysicalVolume* ghostWorld = pdet->GetWorldVolume();
G4GeometrySampler pgs(ghostWorld,"neutron");
pgs.SetParallel(true);
Also note that the preparation and configuration of the samplers has to be carried out after the instantiation of the
UserPhysicsList. With the modular reference PhysicsList the following set-up is required (first is for biasing, the
second for scoring):
physicsList->RegisterPhysics(new G4ImportanceBiasing(&pgs,parallelName));
physicsList->RegisterPhysics(new G4ParallelWorldPhysics(parallelName));
If the a UserPhysicsList is being implemented, then the following should be used to give the pointer to the Geome-
trySampler to the PhysicsList:
physlist->AddBiasing(&pgs,parallelName);
Then to instantiate the biasing physics process the following should be included in the UserPhysicsList and called
from ConstructProcess():
AddBiasingProcess(){
fGeomSampler->SetParallel(true); // parallelworld
G4IStore* iStore = G4IStore::GetInstance(fBiasWorldName);
fGeomSampler->SetWorld(iStore->GetParallelWorldVolumePointer());
// fGeomSampler->PrepareImportanceSampling(G4IStore::
// GetInstance(fBiasWorldName), 0);
static G4bool first = true;
if(first) {
fGeomSampler->PrepareImportanceSampling(iStore, 0);
fGeomSampler->Configure();
G4cout << " GeomSampler Configured!!! " << G4endl;
first = false;
}
#ifdef G4MULTITHREADED
fGeomSampler->AddProcess();
#else
G4cout << " Running in singlethreaded mode!!! " << G4endl;
#endif
pgs.PrepareImportanceSampling(G4IStore::GetInstance(pdet->GetName()), 0);
pgs.Configure();
Due to the fact that biasing is a process and has to be inserted after all the other processes have been created.
Importance Sampling
Importance sampling acts on particles crossing boundaries between “importance cells”. The action taken depends on
the importance values assigned to the cells. In general a particle history is either split or Russian roulette is played
if the importance increases or decreases, respectively. A weight assigned to the history is changed according to the
action taken.
The tools provided for importance sampling require the user to have a good understanding of the physics in the
problem. This is because the user has to decide which particle types require importance sampled, define the cells,
and assign importance values to the cells. If this is not done properly the results cannot be expected to describe a real
experiment.
The assignment of importance values to a cell is done using an importance store described below.
An “importance store” with the interface G4VIStore is used to store importance values related to cells. In order
to do importance sampling the user has to create an object (e.g. of class G4IStore) of type G4VIStore. The
samplers may be given a G4VIStore. The user fills the store with cells and their importance values. The store is
now a singleton class so should be created using a GetInstance method:
G4IStore *aIstore = G4IStore::GetInstance();
An importance store has to be constructed with a reference to the world volume of the geometry used for importance
sampling. This may be the world volume of the mass or of a parallel geometry. Importance stores derive from the
interface G4VIStore:
class G4VIStore
{
public:
G4VIStore();
virtual ~G4VIStore();
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A concrete implementation of an importance store is provided by the class G4VStore. The public part of the class is:
class G4IStore : public G4VIStore
{
public:
explicit G4IStore(const G4VPhysicalVolume &worldvolume);
virtual ~G4IStore();
virtual G4double GetImportance(const G4GeometryCell &gCell) const;
virtual G4bool IsKnown(const G4GeometryCell &gCell) const;
virtual const G4VPhysicalVolume &GetWorldVolume() const;
void AddImportanceGeometryCell(G4double importance,
const G4GeometryCell &gCell);
void AddImportanceGeometryCell(G4double importance,
const G4VPhysicalVolume &,
G4int aRepNum = 0);
void ChangeImportance(G4double importance,
const G4GeometryCell &gCell);
void ChangeImportance(G4double importance,
const G4VPhysicalVolume &,
G4int aRepNum = 0);
G4double GetImportance(const G4VPhysicalVolume &,
G4int aRepNum = 0) const ;
private: .....
};
The member function AddImportanceGeometryCell() enters a cell and an importance value into the impor-
tance store. The importance values may be returned either according to a physical volume and a replica number or
according to a G4GeometryCell. The user must be aware of the interpretation of assigning importance values to
a cell. If scoring is also implemented then this is attached to logical volumes, in which case the physical volume and
replica number method should be used for assigning importance values. See examples/extended/biasing
B01 and B02 for examples of this.
Importance sampling supports using a customized importance sampling algorithm. To this end, the sampler interface
Changing the Sampling may be given a pointer to the interface G4VImportanceAlgorithm:
class G4VImportanceAlgorithm
{
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G4int fN;
G4double fW;
};
class G4VWeightWindowStore {
public:
G4VWeightWindowStore();
virtual ~G4VWeightWindowStore();
virtual G4double GetLowerWeitgh(const G4GeometryCell &gCell,
G4double partEnergy) const = 0;
virtual G4bool IsKnown(const G4GeometryCell &gCell) const = 0;
virtual const G4VPhysicalVolume &GetWorldVolume() const = 0;
};
private::
...
};
The user may choose equal energy bounds for all cells. In this case a set of upper energy bounds must be given to
the store using the method SetGeneralUpperEnergyBounds. If a general set of energy bounds have been set
AddLowerWeights can be used to add the cells.
Alternatively, the user may chose different energy regions for different cells. In this case the user must
provide a mapping of upper energy bounds to lower weight bounds for every cell using the method
AddUpperEboundLowerWeightPairs.
Weight window algorithms implementing the interface class G4VWeightWindowAlgorithm can be used to define
a customized algorithm:
class G4VWeightWindowAlgorithm {
public:
G4VWeightWindowAlgorithm();
virtual ~G4VWeightWindowAlgorithm();
virtual G4Nsplit_Weight Calculate(G4double init_w,
G4double lowerWeightBound) const = 0;
};
The constructor takes three parameters which are used to: calculate the upper weight bound (upperLimitFaktor),
calculate the survival weight (survivalFaktor), and introduce a maximal number (maxNumberOfSplits) of copies to be
created in one go.
In addition, the inverse of the maxNumberOfSplits is used to specify the minimum survival probability in case of
Russian roulette.
Weight roulette (also called weight cutoff) is usually applied if importance sampling and implicit capture are used
together. Implicit capture is not described here but it is useful to note that this procedure reduces a particle weight in
every collision instead of killing the particle with some probability.
Together with importance sampling the weight of a particle may become so low that it does not change any result
significantly. Hence tracking a very low weight particle is a waste of computing time. Weight roulette is applied in
order to solve this problem.
The weight roulette concept
Weight roulette takes into account the importance “Ic” of the current cell and the importance “Is” of the cell in which
the source is located, by using the ratio “R=Is/Ic”.
Weight roulette uses a relative minimal weight limit and a relative survival weight. When a particle falls below the
weight limit Russian roulette is applied. If the particle survives, tracking will be continued and the particle weight will
be set to the survival weight.
The weight roulette uses the following parameters with their default values:
• wsurvival: 0.5
• wlimit: 0.25
• isource: 1
The following algorithm is applied:
GEANT4 supports physics based biasing through a number of general use, built in biasing techniques. A utility class,
G4WrapperProcess, is also available to support user defined biasing.
Primary particle biasing can be used to increase the number of primary particles generated in a particular phase space
region of interest. The weight of the primary particle is modified as appropriate. A general implementation is provided
through the G4GeneralParticleSource class. It is possible to bias position, angular and energy distributions.
G4GeneralParticleSource is a concrete implementation of G4VPrimaryGenerator. To use, instantiate
G4GeneralParticleSource in the G4VUserPrimaryGeneratorAction class, as demonstrated below.
MyPrimaryGeneratorAction::MyPrimaryGeneratorAction() {
generator = new G4GeneralParticleSource;
}
void
MyPrimaryGeneratorAction::GeneratePrimaries(G4Event*anEvent){
generator->GeneratePrimaryVertex(anEvent);
}
The biasing can be configured through interactive commands, as described in General Particle Source. Examples are
also distributed with the GEANT4 distribution in examples/extended/eventgenerator/exgps.
One hadronic leading particle biasing technique is implemented in the G4HadLeadBias utility. This method keeps
only the most important part of the event, as well as representative tracks of each given particle type. So the track
with the highest energy as well as one of each of Baryon, pi0, mesons and leptons. As usual, appropriate weights are
assigned to the particles. Setting the SwitchLeadBiasOn environmental variable will activate this utility.
Cross section biasing artificially enhances/reduces the cross section of a process. This may be useful for studying
thin layer interactions or thick layer shielding. The built in hadronic cross section biasing applies to photon inelastic,
electron nuclear and positron nuclear processes.
The biasing is controlled through the BiasCrossSectionByFactor method in G4HadronicProcess, as demonstrated
below.
void MyPhysicsList::ConstructProcess()
{
...
G4ElectroNuclearReaction * theElectroReaction =
new G4ElectroNuclearReaction;
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G4ElectronNuclearProcess theElectronNuclearProcess;
theElectronNuclearProcess.RegisterMe(theElectroReaction);
theElectronNuclearProcess.BiasCrossSectionByFactor(100);
pManager->AddDiscreteProcess(&theElectronNuclearProcess);
...
}
The G4RadioactiveDecay (GRDM) class simulates the decay of radioactive nuclei and implements the following
biasing options:
• Increase the sampling rate of radionuclides within observation times through a user defined probability distribu-
tion function
• Nuclear splitting, where the parent nuclide is split into a user defined number of nuclides
• Branching ratio biasing where branching ratios are sampled with equal probability
G4RadioactiveDecay is a process which must be registered with a process manager, as demonstrated below.
void MyPhysicsList::ConstructProcess()
{
...
G4RadioactiveDecay* theRadioactiveDecay =
new G4RadioactiveDecay();
Biasing can be controlled either in compiled code or through interactive commands. Radioactive decay biasing exam-
ples are also distributed with the GEANT4 distribution in examples/extended/radioactivedecay/exrdm.
To select biasing as part of the process registration, use
theRadioactiveDecay->SetAnalogueMonteCarlo(false);
In both cases, true specifies that the unbiased (analogue) simulation will be done, and false selects biasing.
Limited Radionuclides
Radioactive decay may be restricted to only specific nuclides, in order (for example) to avoid tracking extremely long-
lived daughters in decay chains which are not of experimental interest. To limit the range of nuclides decayed as part
of the process registration (above), use
G4NucleusLimits limits(aMin, aMax, zMin, zMax);
theRadioactiveDecay->SetNucleusLimits(limits);
Geometric Biasing
Radioactive decays may be generated throughout the user’s detector model, in one or more specified volumes, or
nowhere. The detector geometry must be defined before applying these geometric biases.
Volumes may be selected or deselected programmatically using
theRadioactiveDecay->SelectAllVolumes();
theRadioactiveDecay->DeselectAllVolumes();
In macro commands, the volumes are specified by name, and found by searching the G4LogicalVolumeStore.
The decay time function (normally an exponential in the natural lifetime) of the primary particle may be replaced with
a time profile F(t), as discussed in Section 40.6 of the Physics Reference Manual. The profile function is represented
as a two-column ASCII text file with up to 100 time points (first column) with fractions (second column).
theRadioactiveDecay->SetSourceTimeProfile(fileName);
theRadioactiveDecay->SetDecayBias(fileName);
/grdm/sourceTimeProfile [fileName]
/grdm/decayBiasProfile [fileName]
Radionuclides with rare decay channels may be biased by forcing all channels to be selected uniformly (BRBias =
true below), rather than according to their natural branching fractions (false).
theRadioactiveDecay->SetBRBias(true);
/grdm/BRbias [true|false]
Nuclear Splitting
The statistical efficiency of generated events may be increased by generating multiple “copies” of nuclei in an event,
each of which is decayed independently, with an assigned weight of 1/Nsplit. Scoring the results of tracking the decay
daughters, using their corresponding weights, can improve the statistical reach of a simulation while preserving the
shape of the resulting distributions.
theRadioactiveDecay->SetSplitNuclei(Nsplit);
/grdm/splitNucleus [Nsplit]
G4WrapperProcess
G4WrapperProcess can be used to implement user defined event biasing. G4WrapperProcess, which is a process itself,
wraps an existing process. By default, all function calls are forwarded to the wrapped process. It is a non-invasive way
to modify the behaviour of an existing process.
To use this utility, first create a derived class inheriting from G4WrapperProcess. Override the methods whose be-
haviour you would like to modify, for example, PostStepDoIt, and register the derived class in place of the process to
be wrapped. Finally, register the wrapped process with G4WrapperProcess. The code snippets below demonstrate its
use.
class MyWrapperProcess : public G4WrapperProcess {
...
G4VParticleChange* PostStepDoIt(const G4Track& track,
const G4Step& step) {
// Do something interesting
}
};
void MyPhysicsList::ConstructProcess()
{
...
G4eBremsstrahlung* bremProcess =
new G4eBremsstrahlung();
Another powerful biasing technique available in GEANT4 is the Reverse Monte Carlo (RMC) method, also known
as the Adjoint Monte Carlo method. In this method particles are generated on the external boundary of the sensitive
part of the geometry and then are tracked backward in the geometry till they reach the external source surface, or
exceed an energy threshold. By this way the computing time is focused only on particle tracks that are contributing
to the tallies. The RMC method is much rapid than the Forward MC method when the sensitive part of the geometry
is small compared to the rest of the geometry and to the external source, that has to be extensive and not beam like.
At the moment the RMC method is implemented in GEANT4 only for some electromagnetic processes (see Reverse
processes). An example illustrating the use of the Reverse MC method in GEANT4 is distributed within the GEANT4
toolkit in examples/extended/biasing/ReverseMC01.
Different G4Adjoint classes have been implemented into the GEANT4 toolkit in order to run an adjoint/reverse simu-
lation in a GEANT4 application. This implementation is illustrated in Fig. 3.3. An adjoint run is divided in a series of
alternative adjoint and forward tracking of adjoint and normal particles. One GEANT4 event treats one of this tracking
phase.
Adjoint particles (adjoint_e-, adjoint_gamma,. . . ) are generated one by one on the so called adjoint source with
random position, energy (1/E distribution) and direction. The adjoint source is the external surface of a user defined
volume or of a user defined sphere. The adjoint source should contain one or several sensitive volumes and should
be small compared to the entire geometry. The user can set the minimum and maximum energy of the adjoint source.
After its generation the adjoint primary particle is tracked backward in the geometry till a user defined external surface
(spherical or boundary of a volume) or is killed before if it reaches a user defined upper energy limit that represents the
maximum energy of the external source. During the reverse tracking, reverse processes take place where the adjoint
particle being tracked can be either scattered or transformed in another type of adjoint particle. During the reverse
tracking the G4AdjointSimulationManager replaces the user defined primary, run, stepping, . . . actions, by its own
actions. A reverse tracking phase corresponds to one GEANT4 event.
When an adjoint particle reaches the external surface its weight, type, position, and direction are registered and a
normal primary particle, with a type equivalent to the last generated primary adjoint, is generated with the same
energy, position but opposite direction and is tracked in the forward direction in the sensitive region as in a forward
MC simulation. During this forward tracking phase the event, stacking, stepping, tracking actions defined by the user
for his forward simulation are used. By this clear separation between adjoint and forward tracking phases, the code
of the user developed for a forward simulation should be only slightly modified to adapt it for an adjoint simulation
(see How to update a G4 application to use the reverse Monte Carlo mode). Indeed the computation of the signals
is done by the same actions or classes that the one used in the forward simulation mode. A forward tracking phase
corresponds to one G4 event.
Reverse processes
During the reverse tracking, reverse processes act on the adjoint particles. The reverse processes that are at the moment
available in GEANT4 are the:
• Reverse discrete ionization for e-, proton and ions
• Continuous gain of energy by ionization and bremsstrahlung for e- and by ionization for protons and ions
• Reverse discrete e- bremsstrahlung
• Reverse photo-electric effect
• Reverse Compton scattering
The list of type of adjoint and forward particles that are generated on the adjoint source and considered in the simulation
is a function of the adjoint processes declared in the physics list. For example if only the e- and gamma electromagnetic
processes are considered, only adjoint e- and adjoint gamma will be considered as primaries. In this case an adjoint
event will be divided in four G4 event consisting in the reverse tracking of an adjoint e-, the forward tracking of its
equivalent forward e-, the reverse tracking of an adjoint gamma, and the forward tracking of its equivalent forward
gamma. In this case a run of 100 adjoint events will consist into 400 GEANT4 events. If the proton ionization is also
considered adjoint and forward protons are also generated as primaries and 600 GEANT4 events are processed for 100
adjoint events.
Some modifications are needed to an existing GEANT4 application in order to adapt it for the use of the reverse
simulation mode (see also the G4 example examples/extended/biasing/ReverseMC01). It consists into the:
• Creation of the adjoint simulation manager in the main code
• Optional declaration of user actions that will be used during the adjoint tracking phase
• Use of a special physics lists that combine the adjoint and forward processes
• Modification of the user analysis part of the code
The class G4AdjointSimManager represents the manager of an adjoint simulation. This static class should be created
somewhere in the main code. The way to do that is illustrated below
int main(int argc,char** argv) {
...
G4AdjointSimManager* theAdjointSimManager = G4AdjointSimManager::GetInstance();
...
}
By doing this the G4 application can be run in the reverse MC mode as well as in the forward MC mode. It is important
to note that G4AdjointSimManager is not a new G4RunManager and that the creation of G4RunManager in the main
and the declaration of the geometry, physics list, and user actions to G4RunManager is still needed. The definition
of the adjoint and external sources and the start of an adjoint simulation can be controlled by G4UI commands in the
directory /adjoint.
During an adjoint simulation the user stepping, tracking, stacking and event actions declared to G4RunManager are
used only during the G4 events dedicated to the forward tracking of normal particles in the sensitive region, while
during the events where adjoint particles are tracked backward the following happen concerning these actions:
• The user stepping action is replaced by G4AdjointSteppingAction that is responsible to stop an adjoint
track when it reaches the external source, exceed the maximum energy of the external source, or cross
the adjoint source surface. If needed the user can declare its own stepping action that will be called by
G4AdjointSteppingAction after the check of stopping track conditions. This stepping action can be different
that the stepping action used for the forward simulation. It is declared to G4AdjointSimManager by the follow-
ing lines of code:
G4AdjointSimManager* theAdjointSimManager = G4AdjointSimManager::GetInstance();
theAdjointSimManager->SetAdjointSteppingAction(aUserDefinedSteppingAction);
• No stacking, tracking and event actions are considered by default. If needed the user can declare to
G4AdjointSimManager stacking, tracking and event actions that will be used only during the adjoint tracking
phase. The following lines of code show how to declare these adjoint actions to G4AdjointSimManager:
G4AdjointSimManager* theAdjointSimManager = G4AdjointSimManager::GetInstance();
theAdjointSimManager->SetAdjointEventAction(aUserDefinedEventAction);
theAdjointSimManager->SetAdjointStackingAction(aUserDefinedStackingAction);
theAdjointSimManager->SetAdjointTrackingAction(aUserDefinedTrackingAction);
By default no user run action is considered in an adjoint simulation but if needed such action can be declared to
G4AdjointSimManager as such:
G4AdjointSimManager* theAdjointSimManager = G4AdjointSimManager::GetInstance();
theAdjointSimManager->SetAdjointRunAction(aUserDefinedRunAction);
To run an adjoint simulation a specific physics list should be used where existing G4 adjoint electromagnetic pro-
cesses and their forward equivalent have to be declared. An example of such physics list is provided by the class
G4AdjointPhysicsLits in the G4 example extended/biasing/ReverseMC01.
The user code should be modified to normalize the signals computed during the forward tracking phase to the weight
of the last adjoint particle that reaches the external surface. This weight represents the statistical weight that the last
full adjoint tracks (from the adjoint source to the external source) would have in a forward simulation. If multiplied
by a signal and registered in function of energy and/or direction the simulation results will give an answer matrix of
this signal. To normalize it to a given spectrum it has to be furthermore multiplied by a directional differential flux
corresponding to this spectrum The weight, direction, position , kinetic energy and type of the last adjoint particle
that reaches the external source, and that would represents the primary of a forward simulation, can be gotten from
G4AdjointSimManager by using for example the following line of codes
G4AdjointSimManager* theAdjointSimManager = G4AdjointSimManager::GetInstance();
G4String particle_name = theAdjointSimManager->GetFwdParticleNameAtEndOfLastAdjointTrack();
G4int PDGEncoding= theAdjointSimManager->GetFwdParticlePDGEncodingAtEndOfLastAdjointTrack();
G4double weight = theAdjointSimManager->GetWeightAtEndOfLastAdjointTrack();
G4double Ekin = theAdjointSimManager->GetEkinAtEndOfLastAdjointTrack();
G4double Ekin_per_nuc=theAdjointSimManager->GetEkinNucAtEndOfLastAdjointTrack(); // for ions
G4ThreeVector dir = theAdjointSimManager->GetDirectionAtEndOfLastAdjointTrack();
G4ThreeVector pos = theAdjointSimManager->GetPositionAtEndOfLastAdjointTrack();
In order to have a code working for both forward and adjoint simulation mode, the extra code needed in user actions
or analysis manager for the adjoint simulation mode can be separated to the code needed only for the normal forward
simulation by using the following public method of G4AdjointSimManager:
G4bool GetAdjointSimMode();
The following code example shows how to normalize a detector signal and compute an answer matrix in the case of
an adjoint simulation.
if (theAdjSimManager->GetFwdParticleNameAtEndOfLastAdjointTrack() == "e-") {
G4double ekin_prim = theAdjSimManager->GetEkinAtEndOfLastAdjointTrack();
G4ThreeVector dir_prim = theAdjointSimManager->GetDirectionAtEndOfLastAdjointTrack();
G4double weight_prim = theAdjSimManager->GetWeightAtEndOfLastAdjointTrack();
S_for_answer_matrix = S*weight_prim;
normalized_S = S_for_answer_matrix*F(ekin_prim,dir);
// F(ekin_prim,dir_prim) gives the differential directional flux of primary e-
}
//follows the code where normalized_S and S_for_answer_matrix are registered or whatever
....
}
In rare cases an adjoint track may get a wrong high weight when reaching the external source. While this happens not
often it may corrupt the simulation results significantly. This happens in some tracks where both reverse photo-electric
and bremsstrahlung processes take place at low energy. We still need some investigations to remove this problem at
the level of physical adjoint/reverse processes. However this problem can be solved at the level of event actions or
analysis in the user code by adding a test on the normalized signal during an adjoint simulation. An example of such
test has been implemented in the GEANT4 example extended/biasing/ReverseMC01. In this implementation an event
is rejected when the relative error of the computed normalized energy deposited increases during one event by more
than 50% while the computed precision is already below 10%.
Reverse bremsstrahlung
A difference between the differential cross sections used in the adjoint and forward bremsstrahlung models is the
source of a higher flux of >100 keV gamma in the reverse simulation compared to the forward simulation mode.
In principle the adjoint processes/models should make use of the direct differential cross section to sample the ad-
joint secondaries and compute the adjoint cross section. However due to the way the effective differential cross
section is considered in the forward model G4eBremsstrahlungModel this was not possible to achieve for the reverse
bremsstrahlung. Indeed the differential cross section used in G4AdjointeBremstrahlungModel is obtained by the nu-
merical derivation over the cut energy of the direct cross section provided by G4eBremsstrahlungModel. This would
be a correct procedure if the distribution of secondary in G4eBremsstrahlungModel would match this differential
cross section. Unfortunately it is not the case as independent parameterization are used in G4eBremsstrahlungModel
for both the cross sections and the sampling of secondaries. (It means that in the forward case if one would integrate
the effective differential cross section considered in the simulation we would not find back the used cross section). In
the future we plan to correct this problem by using an extra weight correction factor after the occurrence of a reverse
bremsstrahlung. This weight factor should be the ratio between the differential CS used in the adjoint simulation and
the one effectively used in the forward processes. As it is impossible to have a simple and direct access to the forward
differential CS in G4eBremsstrahlungModel we are investigating the feasibility to use the differential CS considered
in G4Penelope models.
For the reverse multiple scattering the same model is used than in the forward case. This approximation makes that
the discrepancy between the adjoint and forward simulation cases can get to a level of ~ 10-15% relative differences
in the test cases that we have considered. In the future we plan to improve the adjoint multiple scattering models by
forcing the computation of multiple scattering effect at the end of an adjoint step.
Overview
The generic biasing scheme relies on two abstract classes, that are meant to model the biasing problems. You have to
inherit from them to create your own concrete classes, or use some of the concrete instances provided (see Existing
biasing operations, operator and interaction laws), if they respond to your case. A dedicated process provides the
interface between these biasing classes and the tracking. In case of parallel geometry usage, an other process handles
the navigation in these geometries.
Getting Started
Examples
Six “Generic Biasing (GB)” examples are proposed (they have been introduced in 10.0, 10.1 and 10.3, two examples
each time):
• examples/extended/biasing/GB01:
– which shows how biasing of process cross-section can be done.
– This example uses the physics-based biasing operation G4BOptnChangeCrossSection de-
fined in geant4/source/processes/biasing/generic. This operation performs
the actual process cross-section change. In the example a first G4VBiasingOperator,
For making an existing G4VBiasingOperator used by your application, you have to do two things:
1. Attach the operator to the G4LogicalVolume where the biasing should take place: You have to make this
attachment in your ConstructSDandField() method (to make your application both sequential and MT-
compliant):
2. Setup the physics list you use to properly include the needed G4BiasingProcessInterface instances.
You have several options for this.
• The easiest way is if you use a pre-packaged physics list (e.g. FTFP_BERT, QGSP. . . ). As such a physics
list is of G4VModularPhysicsList type, you can alter it with a G4VPhysicsConstructor. The
constructor G4GenericBiasingPhysics is meant for this. It can be used, typically in your main
program, as:
Doing so, all physics processes will be wrapped, and, for example, the gamma conversion process,
"conv", will appear as "biasWrapper(conv)" when dumping the processes (/particle/
process/dump). An additional "biasWrapper(0)" process, for non-physics-based biasing is also
inserted.
Other methods to specifically chose some physics processes to be biased or to insert only
G4BiasingProcessInterface instances for non-physics-based biasing also exist.
• The second way is useful if you write your own physics list, and if this one is not a modular physics
list, but inherits directly from the lowest level abstract class G4VUserPhysicsList. In this case,
the above solution with G4GenericBiasingPhysics does not apply. Instead you can use the
G4BiasingHelper utility class (this one is indeed used by G4GenericBiasingPhysics).
• A last way to setup the physics list is by direct insertion of the G4BiasingProcessInterface in-
stances, but this requires solid expertise in physics list creation.
In case you also use parallel geometries, you have to make the generic biasing sensitive to these. Assum-
ing you have created three parallel geometries with names "parallelWorld1", "parallelWorld2" and
"parallelWorld3" that you want to be active for neutrons, the additional calls you have to make compared
to example EvtBias.GenericBiasing.Overview.UsePhysConstructor above are simply:
It is also possible, even though less convenient, to use the G4BiasingHelper utility class making
calls to the static method limiter = G4BiasingHelper::AddLimiterProcess(pmanager,
"limiterProcessName") in addition to the ones of example EvtBias.GenericBiasing.Overview.UseBiasingHelper
above. This call returns a pointer limiter on the constructed G4ParallelGeometriesLimiterProcess
process, setting its name as "limiterProcessName", this pointer has then to be used to specify the parallel
geometries to the process : limiter->AddParallelWorld("parallelWorld1"). . .
This is set of biasing operations and one operator available in 10.1, as well as a set of biasing interaction laws. These
are defined in source/processes/biasing/generic. Please note that several examples (Examples) also
implement dedicated operators and operations.
These classes have been tested for now with neutral particles.
• G4VBiasingOperation classes:
– G4BOptnCloning: a non-physics-based biasing operation that clones the current track. Each of the two
copies is given freely a weight.
– G4BOptnChangeCrossSection: a physics-based biasing operation to change one process cross-
section
– G4BOptnForceFreeFlight: a physics-based biasing operation to force a flight with no interaction
through the current volume. This operation is better said a “silent flight”: the flight is conducted under a
zero weight, and the track weight is restored at the end of the free flight, taking into account the cumulative
weight change for the non-interaction flight. This special feature is because this class in used in the MCNP-
like force collision scheme G4BOptrForceCollision.
– G4BOptnForceCommonTruncatedExp: a physics-based biasing operation to force a collision inside
the current volume. It is “common” as several processes may be forced together, driving the related
interaction law by the sum of these processes cross-section. The relative natural occurrence of processes
is conserved. This operation makes use of a “truncated exponential” law, which is the exponential law
limited to a segment [0,L], where L is the distance to exit the current volume.
• G4VBiasingOperator class:
– G4BOptrForceCollision: a biasing operator that implements a force collision scheme quite close to
the one provided by MCNP. It handles the scheme though the following sequence:
1. The operator starts by using a G4BOptnCloning cloning operation, making a copy of the primary
entering the volume. The primary is given a zero weight.
2. The primary is then transported through to the volume, without interactions. This is done with the
operator requesting forced free flight G4BOptnForceFreeFlight operations to all physics pro-
cesses. The weight is zero to prevent the primary to contribute to scores. This flight purpose is to
accumulate the probability to fly through the volume without interaction. When the primary reaches
the volume boundary, the first free flight operation restores the primary weight to its initial weight
and all operations multiply this weight by their weight for non-interaction flight. The operator then
abandons here the primary track, letting it back to normal tracking.
3. The copy of the primary track starts and the track is forced to interact in the volume, using the
G4BOptnForceCommonTruncatedExp operation, itself using the total cross-section to compute
the forced interaction law (exponential law limited to path length in the volume). One of the physics
processes is randomly selected (on the basis of cross-section values) for the interaction.
4. Other processes are receiving a forced free flight operation, from the operator.
5. The copy of the primary is transported up to its interaction point. With these operations configured, the
G4BiasingProcessInterface instances have all needed information to automatically compute
the weight of the primary track and of its interaction products.
As this operation starts on the volume boundary, a single force interaction occurs: if the track survives
the interaction (e.g Compton process), as it moved apart the boundary, the operator does not consider it
further.
• G4VBiasingInteractionLaw classes. These classes describe the interaction law in term of a non-
interaction probability over a segment of length l, and an “effective” cross-section for an interaction at distance
l (see Physics Reference Manual, section generic biasing [to come]). An interaction law can also be sampled.
– G4InteractionLawPhysical: the usual exponential law, driven by a cross-section constant over a
step. The effective cross-section is the cross-section.
– G4ILawForceFreeFlight: an “interaction” law for, precisely, a non-interacting track, with non-
interaction probability always 1, and zero effective cross-section. It is a limit case of the modeling.
– G4ILawTruncatedExp: an exponential interaction law limited to a segment [0,L]. The non-interaction
probability and effective cross-section depend on l, the distance travelled, and become zero and infinite,
respectively, at l=L.
The G4VBiasingOperation class has been evolved to simplify the interface. The changes regard physics-based
biasing (occurrence biasing and final state biasing) and are:
• Suppression of the method virtual G4ForceCondition ProposeForceCondition(const
G4ForceCondition wrappedProcessCondition)
– The functionality has been kept, absorbing the ProposeForceCondition(...) method by the
ProvideOccurenceBiasingInteractionLaw(...) one, which has now the signature:
virtual const G4VBiasingInteractionLaw*
ProvideOccurenceBiasingInteractionLaw ( const
(continues on next page)
Changes in 10.2 derive from the introduction of the track feature G4VAuxiliaryTrackInformation. They
regard essentially the force collision operator G4BOptrForceCollision and related features. These changes are
transparent to the user if using G4BOptrForceCollision and following examples/extended/biasing/
GB02. The information below are provided for developers of biasing classes.
The G4VAuxiliaryTrackInformation functionality allows to extend the G4Track attributes with an in-
stance of a concrete class deriving from G4VAuxiliaryTrackInformation. Such an object is registered
to the G4Track using an ID that has to be previously obtained from the G4PhysicsModelCatalog. The
G4VBiasingOperator class defines two new virtual methods, Configure() and ConfigureForWorker(),
to help with the creation of these ID's at the proper time (see G4BOptrForceCollision as an example).
Before 10.2, the G4BOptrForceCollision class was using state variables to make the bookkeeping of the
tracks handled by the scheme. Now this bookkeeping is handled using a G4VAuxiliaryTrackInformation,
G4BOptrForceCollisionTrackData.
To help with the bookkeeping, the base class G4VBiasingOperator was defining a set of methods
(GetBirthOperation(..), RememberSecondaries(..), ForgetTrack(..)), these have been re-
moved in 10.2 and are easy to overpass with a dedicated G4VAuxiliaryTrackInformation.
FOUR
4.1 Geometry
4.1.1 Introduction
The detector definition requires the representation of its geometrical elements, their materials and electronics prop-
erties, together with visualization attributes and user defined properties. The geometrical representation of detector
elements focuses on the definition of solid models and their spatial position, as well as their logical relations to one
another, such as in the case of containment.
GEANT4 uses the concept of “Logical Volume” to manage the representation of detector element properties. The
concept of “Physical Volume” is used to manage the representation of the spatial positioning of detector elements
and their logical relations. The concept of “Solid” is used to manage the representation of the detector element solid
modeling. Volumes and solids must be dynamically allocated using ‘new’ in the user program; they must not be
declared as local objects. Volumes and solids are automatically registered on creation to dedicated stores; these stores
will delete all objects at the end of the job.
4.1.2 Solids
The GEANT4 geometry modeller implements Constructive Solid Geometry (CSG) representations for geometrical
primitives. CSG representations are easy to use and normally give superior performance.
All solids must be allocated using ‘new’ in the user’s program; they get registered to a G4SolidStore at construc-
tion, which will also take care to deallocate them at the end of the job, if not done already in the user’s code.
All constructed solids can stream out their contents via appropriate methods and streaming operators.
For all solids it is possible to estimate the geometrical volume and the surface area by invoking the methods:
G4double GetCubicVolume()
G4double GetSurfaceArea()
which return an estimate of the solid volume and total area in internal units respectively. For elementary solids the
functions compute the exact geometrical quantities, while for composite or complex solids an estimate is made using
Monte Carlo techniques.
For all solids it is also possible to generate pseudo-random points lying on their surfaces, by invoking the method
G4ThreeVector GetPointOnSurface() const
which returns the generated point in local coordinates relative to the solid. To be noted that this function is not meant
to provide a uniform distribution of points on the surfaces of the solids.
97
Book For Application Developers, Release 10.5
Since release 10.3, solids can be scaled in their dimensions along the Cartesian axes X, Y or Z, by providing a scale
transformation associated to the original solid.
G4ScaledSolid( const G4String& pName,
G4VSolid* pSolid ,
const G4Scale3D& pScale )
CSG solids are defined directly as three-dimensional primitives. They are described by a minimal set of parameters
necessary to define the shape and size of the solid. CSG solids are Boxes, Tubes and their sections, Cones and their
sections, Spheres, Wedges, and Toruses.
Box:
To create a box one can use the constructor:
In the picture:
pX = 30, pY = 40, pZ = 60
by giving the box a name and its half-lengths along the X, Y and Z axis:
This will create a box that extends from -pX to +pX in X, from -pY to +pY in Y, and from -pZ to +pZ in Z.
For example to create a box that is 2 by 6 by 10 centimeters in full length, and called BoxA one should use the
following code:
G4Box* aBox = new G4Box("BoxA", 1.0*cm, 3.0*cm, 5.0*cm);
In the picture:
pRMin = 10, pRMax = 15, pDz = 20
In the picture:
pRMin = 12, pRMax = 20, pDz = 30,
pSPhi = 0, pDPhi = 1.5*pi, pLowNorm =
(0,-0.7,-0.71), pHighNorm = (0.7,0,0.
71)
4.1. Geometry 99
Book For Application Developers, Release 10.5
In the picture:
pRmin1 = 5, pRmax1 = 10, pRmin2 =
20, pRmax2 = 25, pDz = 40, pSPhi = 0,
pDPhi = 4/3*Pi
Parallelepiped:
A parallelepiped is constructed using:
In the picture:
dx = 30, dy = 40, dz = 60
Trapezoid:
To construct a trapezoid use:
In the picture:
dx1 = 30, dx2 = 10, dy1 = 40, dy2 =
15, dz = 60
Generic Trapezoid:
To build a generic trapezoid, the G4Trap class is provided. Here are the two constructors for a Right Angular Wedge
and for the general trapezoid for it:
pZ Length along z
pY Length along y
pX Length along x at the wider side
pLTX Length along x at the narrower side (plTX<=pX)
Note: The angle pAlph1 and pAlph2 have to be the same due to the planarity condition.
In the picture:
pRmin = 100, pRmax = 120, pSPhi =
0*Degree, pDPhi = 180*Degree, pSTheta
= 0 Degree, pDTheta = 180*Degree
In the picture:
pRmax = 100
The Orb can be obtained from a Sphere with: pRmin = 0, pSPhi = 0, pDPhi = 2 * 𝜋, pSTheta = 0, pDTheta = 𝜋
Torus:
To build a torus use:
In the picture:
pRmin = 40, pRmax = 60, pRtor = 200,
pSPhi = 0, pDPhi = 90*degree
In addition, the GEANT4 Design Documentation shows in the Solids Class Diagram the complete list of CSG classes.
Specific CSG Solids
Polycons:
Polycons (PCON) are implemented in GEANT4 through the G4Polycone class:
In the picture:
phiStart = 1/4*Pi, phiTotal = 3/2*Pi,
numZPlanes = 9, rInner = { 0, 0, 0,
0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0}, rOuter = { 0, 10,
10, 5 , 5, 10 , 10 , 2, 2}, z = { 5,
7, 9, 11, 25, 27, 29, 31, 35 }
where:
A Polycone where Z planes position can also decrease is implemented through the G4GenericPolycone class:
where:
Polyhedra (PGON):
Polyhedra (PGON) are implemented through G4Polyhedra:
In the picture:
phiStart = -1/4*Pi, phiTotal= 5/4*Pi,
numSide = 3, nunZPlanes = 7, rInner =
{ 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0, 0 }, rOuter = {
0, 15, 15, 4, 4, 10, 10 }, z = { 0,
5, 8, 13 , 30, 32, 35 }
where:
In the picture
Dx = 5, Dy = 10, Dz = 20
General Ellipsoid:
The general ellipsoid with possible cut in Z can be defined as follows:
In the picture:
pxSemiAxis = 10, pySemiAxis = 20,
pzSemiAxis = 50, pzBottomCut = -10,
pzTopCut = 40
A general (or triaxial) ellipsoid is a quadratic surface which is given in Cartesian coordinates by:
1.0 = (x/pxSemiAxis)**2 + (y/pySemiAxis)**2 + (z/pzSemiAxis)**2
where:
pxSemiAxis Semiaxis in X
pySemiAxis Semiaxis in Y
pzSemiAxis Semiaxis in Z
pzBottomCut lower cut plane level, z
pzTopCut upper cut plane level, z
In the picture:
pxSemiAxis = 30/75, pySemiAxis = 60/
75, zMax = 50, pzTopCut = 25
where:
pxSemiAxis Semiaxis in X
pySemiAxis Semiaxis in Y
zMax Height of elliptical cone
pzTopCut upper cut plane level
An elliptical cone of height zMax, with two bases at -pzTopCut and +pzTopCut, semiaxis pxSemiAxis, and
semiaxis pySemiAxis is given by the parametric equations:
x = pxSemiAxis * ( zMax - u ) / u * Cos(v)
y = pySemiAxis * ( zMax - u ) / u * Sin(v)
z = u
Where v is between 0 and 2𝜋, and u between -pzTopCut and +pzTopCut respectively.
Paraboloid, a solid with parabolic profile:
A solid with parabolic profile and possible cuts along the Z axis can be defined as follows:
In the picture:
R1 = 20, R2 = 35, Dz = 20
In the picture:
innerStereo = 0.7, outerStereo = 0.
7, halfLenZ = 50, innerRadius = 20,
outerRadius = 30
G4Hype is shaped with curved sides parallel to the z-axis, has a specified half-length along the z axis about which it
is centred, and a given minimum and maximum radius.
A minimum radius of 0 defines a filled Hype (with hyperbolic inner surface), i.e. inner radius = 0 AND inner stereo
angle = 0.
The inner and outer hyperbolic surfaces can have different stereo angles. A stereo angle of 0 gives a cylindrical
surface:
Tetrahedra:
A tetrahedra solid can be defined as follows:
In the picture:
anchor = {0, 0, sqrt(3)}, p2 = { 0,
2*sqrt(2/3), -1/sqrt(3) }, p3 = {
-sqrt(2), -sqrt(2/3),-1/sqrt(3) }, p4
= { sqrt(2), -sqrt(2/3) , -1/sqrt(3)
}
Extruded Polygon:
The extrusion of an arbitrary polygon (extruded solid) with fixed outline in the defined Z sections can be defined as
follows (in a general way, or as special construct with two Z sections):
In the picture:
poligon = {-30,-30},{-30,30},{30,30},{30,-30},
{15,-30},{15,15},{-15,15},{-15,
-30}
zsections = [-60,{0,30},0.8], [-15, {0,-30},1.],
[10,{0,0},0.6], [60,{0,30},1.2]
The z-sides of the solid are the scaled versions of the same polygon.
Box Twisted:
A box twisted along one axis can be defined as follows:
In the picture:
twistedangle = 30*Degree, pDx = 30,
pDy =40, pDz = 60
G4TwistedBox is a box twisted along the z-axis. The twist angle cannot be greater than 90 degrees:
The first constructor of G4TwistedTrap produces a regular trapezoid twisted along the z-axis, where the caps of
the trapezoid are of the same shape and size.
The second constructor produces a generic trapezoid with polar, azimuthal and tilt angles.
The twist angle cannot be greater than 90 degrees:
In the picture:
dx1 = 30, dx2 = 10, dy1 = 40, dy2 =
15, dz = 60, twistedangle = 30*Degree
where:
where:
The order of specification of the coordinates for the vertices in G4GenericTrap is important. The first four points
are the vertices sitting on the -hz plane; the last four points are the vertices sitting on the +hz plane.
The order of defining the vertices of the solid is the following:
• point 0 is connected with points 1,3,4
• point 1 is connected with points 0,2,5
• point 2 is connected with points 1,3,6
• point 3 is connected with points 0,2,7
• point 4 is connected with points 0,5,7
• point 5 is connected with points 1,4,6
• point 6 is connected with points 2,5,7
• point 7 is connected with points 3,4,6
Points can be identical in order to create shapes with less than 8 vertices; the only limitation is to have at least one
triangle at +hz or -hz; the lateral surfaces are not necessarily planar. Not planar lateral surfaces are represented by a
surface that linearly changes from the edge on -hz to the corresponding edge on +hz; it represents a sweeping surface
with twist angle linearly dependent on Z, but it is not a real twisted surface mathematically described by equations as
for the other twisted solids described in this chapter.
Tube Section Twisted along Its Axis:
A tube section twisted along its axis can be defined as follows:
In the picture:
endinnerrad = 10, endouterrad = 15,
halfzlen = 20, dphi = 90*Degree,
twistedangle = 60*Degree
G4TwistedTubs is a sort of twisted cylinder which, placed along the z-axis and divided into phi-segments is
shaped like an hyperboloid, where each of its segmented pieces can be tilted with a stereo angle.
It can have inner and outer surfaces with the same stereo angle:
Additional constructors are provided, allowing the shape to be specified either as:
• the number of segments in phi and the total angle for all segments, or
• a combination of the above constructors providing instead the inner and outer radii at z=0 with different z-
lengths along negative and positive z-axis.
Simple solids can be combined using Boolean operations. For example, a cylinder and a half-sphere can be combined
with the union Boolean operation.
Creating such a new Boolean solid, requires:
• Two solids
• A Boolean operation: union, intersection or subtraction.
• Optionally a transformation for the second solid.
The solids used should be either CSG solids (for examples a box, a spherical shell, or a tube) or another Boolean solid:
the product of a previous Boolean operation. An important purpose of Boolean solids is to allow the description of
solids with peculiar shapes in a simple and intuitive way, still allowing an efficient geometrical navigation inside them.
Note: The constituent solids of a Boolean operation should possibly avoid be composed by sharing all or part of their
surfaces. This precaution is necessary in order to avoid the generation of ‘fake’ surfaces due to precision loss, or errors
in the final visualization of the Boolean shape. In particular, if any one of the subtractor surfaces is coincident with a
surface of the subtractee, the result is undefined. Moreover, the final Boolean solid should represent a single ‘closed’
solid, i.e. a Boolean operation between two solids which are disjoint or far apart each other, is not a valid Boolean
composition.
Note: The tracking cost for navigating in a Boolean solid in the current implementation, is proportional to the number
of constituent solids. So care must be taken to avoid extensive, unnecessary use of Boolean solids in performance-
critical areas of a geometry description, where each solid is created from Boolean combinations of many other solids.
Examples of the creation of the simplest Boolean solids are given below:
G4Box* box =
new G4Box("Box",20*mm,30*mm,40*mm);
G4Tubs* cyl =
new G4Tubs("Cylinder",0,50*mm,50*mm,0,twopi); // r: 0 mm -> 50 mm
// z: -50 mm -> 50 mm
// phi: 0 -> 2 pi
G4UnionSolid* union =
new G4UnionSolid("Box+Cylinder", box, cyl);
G4IntersectionSolid* intersection =
new G4IntersectionSolid("Box*Cylinder", box, cyl);
G4SubtractionSolid* subtraction =
new G4SubtractionSolid("Box-Cylinder", box, cyl);
where the union, intersection and subtraction of a box and cylinder are constructed.
The more useful case where one of the solids is displaced from the origin of coordinates also exists. In this case the
second solid is positioned relative to the coordinate system (and thus relative to the first). This can be done in two
ways:
• Either by giving a rotation matrix and translation vector that are used to transform the coordinate system of the
second solid to the coordinate system of the first solid. This is called the passive method.
• Or by creating a transformation that moves the second solid from its desired position to its standard position,
e.g., a box’s standard position is with its centre at the origin and sides parallel to the three axes. This is called
the active method.
In the first case, the translation is applied first to move the origin of coordinates. Then the rotation is used to rotate the
coordinate system of the second solid to the coordinate system of the first.
G4RotationMatrix* yRot = new G4RotationMatrix; // Rotates X and Z axes only
yRot->rotateY(M_PI/4.*rad); // Rotates 45 degrees
G4ThreeVector zTrans(0, 0, 50);
G4UnionSolid* unionMoved =
new G4UnionSolid("Box+CylinderMoved", box, cyl, yRot, zTrans);
//
// The new coordinate system of the cylinder is translated so that
// its centre is at +50 on the original Z axis, and it is rotated
// with its X axis halfway between the original X and Z axes.
Note that the first constructor that takes a pointer to the rotation-matrix (G4RotationMatrix*), does NOT copy
it. Therefore once used a rotation-matrix to construct a Boolean solid, it must NOT be modified.
In contrast, with the alternative method shown, a G4Transform3D is provided to the constructor by value, and its
transformation is stored by the Boolean solid. The user may modify the G4Transform3D and eventually use it
again.
When positioning a volume associated to a Boolean solid, the relative center of coordinates considered for the posi-
tioning is the one related to the first of the two constituent solids.
Multi-Union Structures
Since release 10.4, the possibility to define multi-union structures is part of the standard set of constructs in GEANT4.
A G4MultiUnion structure allows for the description of a Boolean union of many displaced solids at once, therefore
representing volumes with the same associated material. An example on how to define a simple MultiUnion structure
is given here:
#include "G4MultiUnion.hh"
Fast detection of intersections in tracking is assured by the adoption of a specialised optimisation applied to the 3D
structure itself and generated at initialisation.
Tessellated Solids
In GEANT4 it is also implemented a class G4TessellatedSolid which can be used to generate a generic solid
defined by a number of facets (G4VFacet). Such constructs are especially important for conversion of complex
geometrical shapes imported from CAD systems bounded with generic surfaces into an approximate description with
facets of defined dimension (see Fig. 4.1).
Fig. 4.1: Example of geometries imported from CAD system and converted to tessellated solids.
They can also be used to generate a solid bounded with a generic surface made of planar facets. It is important that the
supplied facets shall form a fully enclose space to represent the solid, and that adjacent facets always share a complete
edge (no vertex on one facet can lie between vertices on an adjacent facet).
Two types of facet can be used for the construction of a G4TessellatedSolid: a triangular facet
(G4TriangularFacet) and a quadrangular facet (G4QuadrangularFacet).
An example on how to generate a simple tessellated shape is given below.
Listing 4.1: Example of geometries imported from CAD system and con-
verted to tessellated solids.
// First declare a tessellated solid
//
G4TessellatedSolid solidTarget = new G4TessellatedSolid("Solid_name");
The G4TriangularFacet class is used for the construction of G4TessellatedSolid. It is defined by three
vertices, which shall be supplied in anti-clockwise order looking from the outside of the solid where it belongs. Its
constructor looks like:
G4TriangularFacet ( const G4ThreeVector Pt0,
const G4ThreeVector vt1,
const G4ThreeVector vt2,
G4FacetVertexType fType )
G4FacetVertexType ABSOLUTE in which case Pt0, vt1 and vt2 are the three vertices in anti-clockwise
order looking from the outside.
G4FacetVertexType RELATIVE in which case the first vertex is Pt0, the second vertex is Pt0+vt1
and the third vertex is Pt0+vt2, all in anti-clockwise order when looking from the
outside.
The G4QuadrangularFacet class can be used for the construction of G4TessellatedSolid as well. It is
defined by four vertices, which shall be in the same plane and be supplied in anti-clockwise order looking from the
outside of the solid where it belongs. Its constructor looks like:
G4QuadrangularFacet ( const G4ThreeVector Pt0,
const G4ThreeVector vt1,
const G4ThreeVector vt2,
const G4ThreeVector vt3,
G4FacetVertexType fType )
G4FacetVertexType ABSOLUTE in which case Pt0, vt1, vt2 and vt3 are the four vertices required in
anti-clockwise order when looking from the outside.
G4FacetVertexType RELATIVE in which case the first vertex is Pt0, the second vertex is Pt0+vt, the
third vertex is Pt0+vt2 and the fourth vertex is Pt0+vt3, in anti-clockwise order
when looking from the outside.
Tessellated solids can also be used to import geometrical models from CAD systems (see fig-geom-solid-1). In order to
do this, it is required to convert first the CAD shapes into tessellated surfaces. A way to do this is to save the shapes in
the geometrical model as STEP files and convert them to tessellated (faceted surfaces) solids, using a tool which allows
such conversion. At the time of writing, at least one tool is available for such purpose: FASTRAD. This strategy allows
to import any shape with some degree of approximation; the converted CAD models can then be imported through
GDML (Geometry Description Markup Language) into GEANT4 and be represented as G4TessellatedSolid
shapes.
Other tools which can be used to generate meshes to be then imported in GEANT4 as tessellated solids are:
• InStep - A free STL to GDML conversion tool.
• SALOME - Open-source software allowing to import STEP/BREP/IGES/STEP/ACIS formats, mesh them and
export to STL.
• ESABASE2 - Space environment analysis CAD, basic modules free for academic non-commercial use. Can
import STEP files and export to GDML shapes or complete geometries.
• CADMesh - Tool based on the VCG Library to read STL files and import in GEANT4.
• Cogenda - Commercial TCAD software for generation of 3D meshes through the module Gds2Mesh and final
export to GDML.
Unified Solids
An alternative implementation for some of the cited geometrical primitives is provided since release 10.0 of GEANT4.
The solids included in release 10.5 are: Box, Cons, Polycone, Polyhedra, Paraboloid, Orb, Sphere, Trd, Trap, Para,
GenericTrap, Tubs, CutTubs, Torus, Hyperboloid, Tet, Extruded Solid and Tessellated Solid.
The code for the new geometrical primitives originated as part of the AIDA Unified Solids Library and is now in-
tegrated in the VecGeom library (the vectorized geometry library for particle-detector simulation); it is provided for
experimental use and can be activated in place of the original primitives defined in GEANT4, by selecting the appro-
priate compilation flag when configuring the GEANT4 libraries installation. The installation allows to build against an
external system installation of the VecGeom library, therefore the appropriate installation path must also be provided
during the installation configuration:
-DGEANT4_USE_USOLIDS="all" // to replace all available shapes
-DGEANT4_USE_USOLIDS="box;tubs" // to replace only individual shapes
The Logical Volume manages the information associated with detector elements represented by a given Solid and
Material, independently from its physical position in the detector.
G4LogicalVolumes must be allocated using ‘new’ in the user’s program; they get registered to a
G4LogicalVolumeStore at construction, which will also take care to deallocate them at the end of the job, if
not done already in the user’s code.
A Logical Volume knows which physical volumes are contained within it. It is uniquely defined to be their mother
volume. A Logical Volume thus represents a hierarchy of unpositioned volumes whose positions relative to one another
are well defined. By creating Physical Volumes, which are placed instances of a Logical Volume, this hierarchy or tree
can be repeated.
A Logical Volume also manages the information relative to the Visualization attributes (Visualization Attributes) and
user-defined parameters related to tracking, electro-magnetic field or cuts (through the G4UserLimits interface).
By default, tracking optimization of the geometry (voxelization) is applied to the volume hierarchy identified by a
logical volume. It is possible to change the default behavior by choosing not to apply geometry optimization for a
given logical volume. This feature does not apply to the case where the associated physical volume is a parameterised
volume; in this case, optimization is always applied.
G4LogicalVolume( G4VSolid* pSolid,
G4Material* pMaterial,
const G4String& Name,
G4FieldManager* pFieldMgr=0,
G4VSensitiveDetector* pSDetector=0,
G4UserLimits* pULimits=0,
G4bool Optimise=true )
Through the logical volume it is also possible to tune the granularity of the optimisation algorithm to be applied to the
sub-tree of volumes represented. This is possible using the methods:
G4double GetSmartless() const
void SetSmartless(G4double s)
The default smartless value is 2 and controls the average number of slices per contained volume which are used in the
optimisation. The smaller the value, the less fine grained optimisation grid is generated; this will translate in a possible
reduction of memory consumed for the optimisation of that portion of geometry at the price of a slight CPU time
increase at tracking time. Manual tuning of the optimisation is in general not required, since the optimal granularity
level is computed automatically and adapted to the specific geometry setup; however, in some cases (like geometry
portions with ‘dense’ concentration of volumes distributed in a non-uniform way), it may be necessary to adopt manual
tuning for helping the optimisation process in dealing with the most critical areas. By setting the verbosity to 2 through
the following UI run-time command:
/run/verbose 2
a statistics of the memory consumed for the allocated optimisation nodes will be displayed volume by volume, allowing
to easily identify the critical areas which may eventually require manual intervention.
The logical volume provides a way to estimate the mass of a tree of volumes defining a detector or sub-detector. This
can be achieved by calling the method:
G4double GetMass(G4bool forced=false)
The mass of the logical volume tree is computed from the estimated geometrical volume of each solid and material
associated with the logical volume and its daughters. Note that this computation may require a considerable amount
of time, depending on the complexity of the geometry tree. The returned value is cached by default and can be used
for successive calls, unless recomputation is forced by providing true for the Boolean argument forced in input.
Computation should be forced if the geometry setup has changed after the previous call.
Finally, the Logical Volume manages the information relative to the Envelopes hierarchy required for fast Monte Carlo
parameterisations (Parameterization).
Sub-detector Regions
In complex geometry setups, such as those found in large detectors in particle physics experiments, it is useful to think
of specific Logical Volumes as representing parts (sub-detectors) of the entire detector setup which perform specific
functions. In such setups, the processing speed of a real simulation can be increased by assigning specific production
cuts to each of these detector parts. This allows a more detailed simulation to occur only in those regions where it is
required.
The concept of detector Region is introduced to address this need. Once the final geometry setup of the detector has
been defined, a region can be specified by constructing it with:
G4Region( const G4String& rName )
where:
G4Regions must be allocated using ‘new’ in the user’s program; they get registered to a G4RegionStore at
construction, which will also take care to deallocate them at the end of the job, if not done already in the user’s code.
A G4Region must then be assigned to a logical volume, in order to make it a Root Logical Volume:
G4Region* emCalorimeter = new G4Region("EM-Calorimeter");
emCalorimeterLV->SetRegion(emCalorimeter);
emCalorimeter->AddRootLogicalVolume(emCalorimeterLV);
A root logical volume is the first volume at the top of the hierarchy to which a given region is assigned. Once the
region is assigned to the root logical volume, the information is automatically propagated to the volume tree, so that
each daughter volume shares the same region. Propagation on a tree branch will be interrupted if an already existing
root logical volume is encountered.
A specific Production Cut can be assigned to the region, by defining and assigning to it a G4ProductionCut object
emCalorimeter->SetProductionCuts(emCalCuts);
Set production threshold (SetCut methods) describes how to define a production cut. The same region can be assigned
to more than one root logical volume, and root logical volumes can be removed from an existing region. A logical
volume can have only one region assigned to it. Regions will be automatically registered in a store which will take
care of destroying them at the end of the job. A default region with a default production cut is automatically created
and assigned to the world volume.
Regions can also become ‘envelopes’ for fast-simulation; can be assigned user-limits or generic user-information
(G4VUserRegionInformation); can be associated to specific stepping-actions (G4UserSteppingAction)
or have assigned a local magnetic-field (local fields specifically associated to logical volumes take precedence any-
how).
Physical volumes represent the spatial positioning of the volumes describing the detector elements. Several techniques
can be used. They range from the simple placement of a single copy to the repeated positioning using either a simple
linear formula or a user specified function.
Any physical volume must be allocated using ‘new’ in the user’s program; they get registered to a
G4PhysicalVolumeStore at construction, which will also take care to deallocate them at the end of the job,
if not done already in the user’s code.
The simple placement involves the definition of a transformation matrix for the volume to be positioned. Repeated
positioning is defined using the number of times a volume should be replicated at a given distance along a given
direction. Finally it is possible to define a parameterised formula to specify the position of multiple copies of a
volume. Details about these methods are given below.
Note: For geometries which vary between runs and for which components of the old geometry setup are explicitly
-deleted-, it is required to consider the proper order of deletion (which is the exact inverse of the actual construction,
i.e., first delete physical volumes and then logical volumes). Deleting a logical volume does NOT delete its daughter
volumes.
It is not necessary to delete the geometry setup at the end of a job, the system will take care to free the volume and
solid stores at the end of the job. The user has to take care of the deletion of any additional transformation or rotation
matrices allocated dynamically in his/her own application.
In this case, the Physical Volume is created by associating a Logical Volume with a Transformation that defines the
position of the current volume in the mother volume. The solid itself is moved by rotating and translating it to bring
it into the system of coordinates of the mother volume. The decomposition of the Transformation must contain only
rotation and translation (reflection and scaling are not allowed).
To create a Placement one must construct it using:
G4PVPlacement( G4Transform3D solidTransform,
G4LogicalVolume* pCurrentLogical,
const G4String& pName,
G4LogicalVolume* pMotherLogical,
G4bool pMany,
G4int pCopyNo,
G4bool pSurfChk=false )
where:
Currently Boolean operations are not implemented at the level of physical volume. So pMany must be false. However,
an alternative implementation of Boolean operations exists. In this approach a solid can be created from the union,
intersection or subtraction of two solids. See Solids made by Boolean operations above for an explanation of this.
The mother volume must be specified for all volumes except the world volume.
An alternative way to specify a Placement is to use a Rotation Matrix and a Translation Vector. If compared with the
previous construct, the Rotation Matrix is the inverse of the rotation from the decomposition of the transformation,
but the Translation Vector is the same. The Rotation Matrix represents the rotation of the reference frame of the
considered volume relatively to its mother volume’s reference frame. The Translation Vector represents the translation
of the current volume in the reference frame of its mother volume. This passive method can be utilized using the
following constructor:
G4PVPlacement( G4RotationMatrix* pRot,
const G4ThreeVector& tlate,
G4LogicalVolume* pCurrentLogical,
const G4String& pName,
G4LogicalVolume* pMotherLogical,
G4bool pMany,
G4int pCopyNo,
G4bool pSurfChk=false )
where:
Care must be taken because the rotation matrix is not copied by a G4PVPlacement. So the user must not modify it
after creating a Placement that uses it. However the same rotation matrix can be re-used for many volumes.
An alternative method to specify the mother volume is to specify its placed physical volume. It can be used in either
of the above methods of specifying the placement’s position and rotation. The effect will be exactly the same as for
using the mother logical volume.
Note that a Placement Volume can still represent multiple detector elements. This can happen if several copies exist
of the mother logical volume. Then different detector elements will belong to different branches of the tree of the
hierarchy of geometrical volumes.
An example demonstrating various ways of placement and constructing the rotation matrix is provided in examples/
extended/geometry/transforms.
Repeated volumes
In this case, a single Physical Volume represents multiple copies of a volume within its mother volume, allowing to
save memory. This is normally done when the volumes to be positioned follow a well defined rotational or translational
symmetry along a Cartesian or cylindrical coordinate. The Repeated Volumes technique is available for most volumes
described by CSG solids.
Replicas
Replicas are repeated volumes in the case when the multiple copies of the volume are all identical. The coordinate
axis and the number of replicas need to be specified for the program to compute at run time the transformation matrix
corresponding to each copy.
G4PVReplica( const G4String& pName,
G4LogicalVolume* pCurrentLogical,
G4LogicalVolume* pMotherLogical, // OR G4VPhysicalVolume*
const EAxis pAxis,
const G4int nReplicas,
const G4double width,
const G4double offset=0 )
where:
G4PVReplica represents nReplicas volumes differing only in their positioning, and completely filling the con-
taining mother volume. Consequently if a G4PVReplica is ‘positioned’ inside a given mother it MUST be the
mother’s only daughter volume. Replica’s correspond to divisions or slices that completely fill the mother volume and
have no offsets. For Cartesian axes, slices are considered perpendicular to the axis of replication.
The replica’s positions are calculated by means of a linear formula. Replication may occur along:
• Cartesian axes (kXAxis,kYAxis,kZAxis)
The replications, of specified width have coordinates of form (-width*(nReplicas-1)*0.
5+n*width,0,0) where n=0.. nReplicas-1 for the case of kXAxis, and are unrotated.
• Radial axis (cylindrical polar) (kRho)
The replications are cons/tubs sections, centred on the origin and are unrotated.
They have radii of width*n+offset to width*(n+1)+offset where n=0..nReplicas-1
• Phi axis (cylindrical polar) (kPhi)
The replications are phi sections or wedges, and of cons/tubs form.
They have phi of offset+n*width to offset+(n+1)*width where n=0..nReplicas-1
The coordinate system of the replicas is at the centre of each replica for the Cartesian axis. For the radial case, the
coordinate system is unchanged from the mother. For the phi axis, the new coordinate system is rotated such that the
X axis bisects the angle made by each wedge, and Z remains parallel to the mother’s Z axis.
The solid associated via the replicas’ logical volume should have the dimensions of the first volume created and must
be of the correct symmetry/type, in order to assist in good visualisation.
ex. For X axis replicas in a box, the solid should be another box with the dimensions of the replications. (same Y & Z
dimensions as mother box, X dimension = mother’s X dimension/nReplicas).
Replicas may be placed inside other replicas, provided the above rule is observed. Normal placement volumes may be
placed inside replicas, provided that they do not intersect the mother’s or any previous replica’s boundaries. Parame-
terised volumes may not be placed inside.
Because of these rules, it is not possible to place any other volume inside a replication in radius.
The world volume cannot act as a replica, therefore it cannot be sliced.
During tracking, the translation + rotation associated with each G4PVReplica object is modified according to the
currently ‘active’ replication. The solid is not modified and consequently has the wrong parameters for the cases of
phi and r replication and for when the cross-section of the mother is not constant along the replication.
Example
G4PVReplica repR("RSlices",
pRepRLogical,
pContainingMotherTub,
kRho, 5, 10*mm, 0);
G4PVReplica repZ("ZSlices",
pRepZLogical,
pContainingMotherTub,
kZAxis, 5, 10*mm);
G4PVReplica repPhi("PhiSlices",
pRepPhiLogical,
pContainingMotherTub,
kPhi, 4, M_PI*0.5*rad, 0);
RepX is an array of 5 replicas of width 10*mm, positioned inside and completely filling the volume pointed by
pContainingMotherBox. The mother’s X length must be 5*10*mm=50*mm (for example, if the mother’s solid
were a Box of half lengths [25,25,25] then the replica’s solid must be a box of half lengths [25,25,5]).
If the containing mother’s solid is a tube of radius 50*mm and half Z length of 25*mm, RepR divides the mother tube
into 5 cylinders (hence the solid associated with pRepRLogical must be a tube of radius 10*mm, and half Z length
25*mm); repZ divides the tube into 5 shorter cylinders (the solid associated with pRepZLogical must be a tube of
radius 10*mm, and half Z length 5*mm); finally, repPhi divides the tube into 4 tube segments with full angle of 90
degrees (the solid associated with pRepPhiLogical must be a tube segment of radius 10*mm, half Z length 5*mm
and delta phi of M_PI*0.5*rad).
No further volumes may be placed inside these replicas. To do so would result in intersecting boundaries due to the r
replications.
Parameterised Volumes
Parameterised Volumes are repeated volumes in the case in which the multiple copies of a volume can be different in
size, solid type, or material. The solid’s type, its dimensions, the material and the transformation matrix can all be
parameterised in function of the copy number, both when a strong symmetry exist and when it does not. The user
implements the desired parameterisation function and the program computes and updates automatically at run time the
information associated to the Physical Volume.
An example of creating a parameterised volume (by dimension and position) exists in basic exam-
ple B2b. The implementation is provided in the two classes B2bDetectorConstruction and
B2bChamberParameterisation.
To create a parameterised volume, one must first create its logical volume like trackerChamberLV below. Then
one must create his own parameterisation class (B2bChamberParameterisation) and instantiate an object of this class
(chamberParam). We will see how to create the parameterisation below.
G4Tubs* chamberS
= new G4Tubs("tracker",0, 100*cm, 100*cm, 0.*deg, 360.*deg);
fLogicChamber
= new G4LogicalVolume(chamberS,fChamberMaterial,"Chamber",0,0,0);
G4VPVParameterisation* chamberParam =
new B2bChamberParameterisation(
NbOfChambers, // NoChambers
firstPosition, // Z of center of first
chamberSpacing, // Z spacing of centers
chamberWidth, // chamber width
firstLength, // initial length
lastLength); // final length
Note that for a parameterised volume the user must always specify a mother volume. So the world volume can never
be a parameterised volume, nor it can be sliced. The mother volume can be specified either as a physical or a logical
volume.
pAxis specifies the tracking optimisation algorithm to apply: if a valid axis (the axis along which the parameterisation
is performed) is specified, a simple one-dimensional voxelisation algorithm is applied; if “kUndefined” is specified
instead, the default three-dimensional voxelisation algorithm applied for normal placements will be activated. In the
latter case, more voxels will be generated, therefore a greater amount of memory will be consumed by the optimisation
algorithm.
pSurfChk if true activates a check for overlaps with existing volumes or paramaterised instances.
The parameterisation mechanism associated to a parameterised volume is defined in the parameterisation class and its
methods. Every parameterisation must create two methods:
• ComputeTransformation defines where one of the copies is placed,
• ComputeDimensions defines the size of one copy, and
• a constructor that initializes any member variables that are required.
Note that the translation and rotation given in this scheme are those for the frame of coordinates (the passive method).
They are not for the active method, in which the solid is rotated into the mother frame of coordinates.
Similarly the ComputeDimensions method is used to set the size of that copy.
void B2bChamberParameterisation::ComputeDimensions
(G4Tubs& trackerChamber, const G4int copyNo, const G4VPhysicalVolume*) const
{
// Note: copyNo will start with zero!
G4double rmax = fRmaxFirst + copyNo * fRmaxIncr;
trackerChamber.SetInnerRadius(0);
trackerChamber.SetOuterRadius(rmax);
trackerChamber.SetZHalfLength(fHalfWidth);
trackerChamber.SetStartPhiAngle(0.*deg);
trackerChamber.SetDeltaPhiAngle(360.*deg);
}
The user must ensure that the type of the first argument of this method (in this example G4Tubs &) corresponds to
the type of object the user give to the logical volume of parameterised physical volume.
More advanced usage allows the user:
• to change the type of solid by creating a ComputeSolid method, or
• to change the material of the volume by creating a ComputeMaterial method. This method can also utilise
information from a parent or other ancestor volume (see the Nested Parameterisation below.)
for the parameterisation.
Example examples/extended/runAndEvent/RE02 shows a simple parameterisation by material. A more
complex example is provided in examples/extended/medical/DICOM, where a phantom grid of cells is built
using a parameterisation by material defined through a map.
Note: Currently for many cases it is not possible to add daughter volumes to a parameterised volume. Only param-
eterised volumes all of whose solids have the same size are allowed to contain daughter volumes. When the size or
type of solid varies, adding daughters is not supported. So the full power of parameterised volumes can be used only
for “leaf” volumes, which contain no other volumes.
Note: A hierarchy of volumes included in a parameterised volume cannot vary. Therefore, it is not possible to
implement a parameterisation which can modify the hierarchy of volumes included inside a specific parameterised
copy.
Note: For parameterisations of tubes or cons, where the starting Phi and its DeltaPhi angles
vary, it is possible to optimise the regeneration of the trigonometric parameters of the shape, by invoking
SetStartPhiAngle(newPhi, false); SetDeltaPhiAngle (newDPhi), i.e. by specifying with
false flag to skip the computation of the parameters which will be later on properly initialised with the call for
DeltaPhi.
Note: Parameterisations of composed solids like Boolean, Reflected or Displaced solids are not recommended, given
the complexity in handling transformations that this might imply, and limitations in making persistent representations
(i.e. GDML) of the geometry itself.
Note: For multi-threaded applications, one must be careful in the implementation of the parameterisation functions
for the geometrical objects being created in the parameterisation. In particular, when parameterising by the type of a
solid, it is assumed that the solids being parameterised are being declared thread-local in the user’s parameterisation
class and allocated just once.
A different type of parameterisation enables a user to have the daughter’s material also depend on the copy number
of the parent when a parameterised volume (daughter) is located inside another (parent) repeated volume. The parent
volume can be a replica, a parameterised volume, or a division if the key feature of modifying its contents is utilised.
(Note: a ‘nested’ parameterisation inside a placement volume is not supported, because all copies of a placement
volume must be identical at all levels.)
In such a ” nested” parameterisation , the user must provide a ComputeMaterial method that utilises the new
argument that represents the touchable history of the parent volume:
// Sample Parameterisation
class SampleNestedParameterisation : public G4VNestedParameterisation
{
public:
// .. other methods ...
// Mandatory method, required and reason for this class
virtual G4Material* ComputeMaterial(G4VPhysicalVolume *currentVol,
const G4int no_lev,
const G4VTouchable *parentTouch);
private:
G4Material *material1, *material2;
};
The implementation of the method can utilise any information from a parent or other ancestor volume of its parame-
terised physical volume, but typically it will use only the copy number:
G4Material*
SampleNestedParameterisation::ComputeMaterial(G4VPhysicalVolume *currentVol,
const G4int no_lev,
const G4VTouchable *parentTouchable)
{
G4Material *material=0;
Nested parameterisations are suitable for the case of regular, ‘voxel’ geometries in which a large number of ‘equal’
volumes are required, and their only difference is in their material. By creating two (or more) levels of parameterised
physical volumes it is possible to divide space, while requiring only limited additional memory for very fine-level
optimisation. This provides fast navigation. Alternative implementations, taking into account the regular structure of
such geometries in navigation are under study.
Divisions of Volumes
where:
The parameterisation is calculated automatically using the values provided in input. Therefore the di-
mensions of the solid associated with pCurrentLogical will not be used, but recomputed through the
G4VParameterisation::ComputeDimension() method.
Since G4VPVParameterisation may have different ComputeDimension() methods for each solid type, the
user must provide a solid that is of the same type as of the one associated to the mother volume.
As for any replica, the coordinate system of the divisions is related to the centre of each division for the Cartesian
axis. For the radial axis, the coordinate system is the same of the mother volume. For the phi axis, the new coordinate
system is rotated such that the X axis bisects the angle made by each wedge, and Z remains parallel to the mother’s Z
axis.
As divisions are parameterised volumes with constant dimensions, they may be placed inside other divisions, except
in the case of divisions along the radial axis.
It is also possible to place other volumes inside a volume where a division is placed.
The list of volumes that currently support divisioning and the possible division axis are summarised below:
(*) - G4Polyhedra:
• kPhi - the number of divisions has to be the same as solid sides, (i.e. numSides), the width will not be taken
into account.
In the case of division along kRho of G4Cons, G4Polycone, G4Polyhedra, if width is provided, it is taken as
the width at the -Z radius; the width at other radii will be scaled to this one.
Examples are given below in listings Listing 4.3 and Listing 4.5.
• divBox1 is a division of a box along its X axis in 5 equal copies. Each copy will have a dimension in meters
of [0.2, 1., 1.].
• divBox2 is a division of the same box along its X axis with a width of 0.1 meters and an offset of 0.5
meters. As the mother dimension along X of 1 meter (0.5*m of halflength), the division will be sized in total
1 - 0.45 = 0.55 meters. Therefore, there’s space for 5 copies, the first extending from -0.05 to 0.05
meters in the mother’s frame and the last from 0.35 to 0.45 meters.
• divBox3 is a division of the same box along its X axis in 3 equal copies of width 0.1 meters and an offset of
0.5 meters. The first copy will extend from 0. to 0.1 meters in the mother’s frame and the last from 0.2 to
0.3 meters.
• divPconePhiW is a division of a polycone along its phi axis in equal copies of width 30 degrees with an
offset of 60 degrees. As the mother extends from 0 to 180 degrees, there’s space for 4 copies. All the copies
have a starting angle of 20 degrees (as for the mother) and a phi extension of 30 degrees. They are rotated
around the Z axis by 60 and 30 degrees, so that the first copy will extend from 80 to 110 and the last from 170
to 200 degrees.
• divPconeZN is a division of the same polycone along its Z axis. As the mother polycone has two sections, it
will be divided in two one-section polycones, the first one extending from -1 to -0.25 meters, the second from
-0.25 to 1 meters. Although specified, the offset will not be used.
Note: Divisions for polycone and polyhedra are NOT possible in a multi-threaded application.
Introduction to Touchables
A touchable for a volume serves the purpose of providing a unique identification for a detector element. This can
be useful for description of the geometry alternative to the one used by the GEANT4 tracking system, such as a
Sensitive Detectors based read-out geometry, or a parameterised geometry for fast Monte Carlo. In order to create a
touchable volume, several techniques can be implemented: for example, in GEANT4 touchables are implemented as
solids associated to a transformation-matrix in the global reference system, or as a hierarchy of physical volumes up
to the root of the geometrical tree.
A touchable is a geometrical entity (volume or solid) which has a unique placement in a detector description. It is
represented by an abstract base class which can be implemented in a variety of ways. Each way must provide the
capabilities of obtaining the transformation and solid that is described by the touchable.
All G4VTouchable implementations must respond to the two following “requests”, where in all cases, by depth it
is meant the number of levels up in the tree to be considered (the default and current one is 0):
1. GetTranslation(depth)
2. GetRotation(depth)
that return the components of the volume’s transformation.
Additional capabilities are available from implementations with more information. These have a default implementa-
tion that causes an exception.
Several capabilities are available from touchables with physical volumes:
1. GetSolid(depth) gives the solid associated to the touchable.
2. GetVolume(depth) gives the physical volume.
3. GetReplicaNumber(depth) or GetCopyNumber(depth) which return the copy number of the phys-
ical volume (replicated or not).
Touchables that store volume hierarchy (history) have the whole stack of parent volumes available. Thus it is possible
to add a little more state in order to extend its functionality. We add a “pointer” to a level and a member function to
move the level in this stack. Then calling the above member functions for another level the information for that level
can be retrieved.
The top of the history tree is, by convention, the world volume.
1. GetHistoryDepth() gives the depth of the history tree.
2. MoveUpHistory(num) moves the current pointer inside the touchable to point num levels up the history
tree. Thus, e.g., calling it with num=1 will cause the internal pointer to move to the mother of the current
volume.
Warning: this function changes the state of the touchable and can cause errors in tracking if applied to
Pre/Post step touchables.
These methods are valid only for the touchable-history type, as specified also below.
An update method, with different arguments is available, so that the information in a touchable can be updated:
1. UpdateYourself(vol, history) takes a physical volume pointer and can additionally take a
NavigationHistory pointer.
As shown in Sections Logical Volumes and Physical Volumes, a logical volume represents unpositioned detector ele-
ments, and a physical volume can represent multiple detector elements. On the other hand, touchables provide a unique
identification for a detector element. In particular, the GEANT4 transportation process and the tracking system exploit
touchables as implemented in G4TouchableHistory. The touchable history is the minimal set of information re-
quired to specify the full genealogy of a given physical volume (up to the root of the geometrical tree). These touchable
volumes are made available to the user at every step of the GEANT4 tracking in G4VUserSteppingAction.
To create/access a G4TouchableHistory the user must message G4Navigator which provides the method
CreateTouchableHistoryHandle():
G4TouchableHistoryHandle CreateTouchableHistoryHandle() const;
The first method is used to find out how many levels deep in the geometry tree the current volume is. The second
method asks the touchable to eliminate its deepest level.
As mentioned above, MoveUpHistory(num) significantly modifies the state of a touchable.
G4AssemblyVolume is a helper class which allows several logical volumes to be combined together in an arbitrary
way in 3D space. The result is a placement of a normal logical volume, but where final physical volumes are many.
However, an assembly volume does not act as a real mother volume, being an envelope for its daughter volumes. Its
role is over at the time the placement of the logical assembly volume is done. The physical volume objects become
independent copies of each of the assembled logical volumes.
This class is particularly useful when there is a need to create a regular pattern in space of a complex component which
consists of different shapes and can’t be obtained by using replicated volumes or parametrised volumes (see also Fig.
4.2. Careful usage of G4AssemblyVolume must be considered though, in order to avoid cases of “proliferation” of
physical volumes all placed in the same mother.
Participating logical volumes are represented as a triplet of <logical volume, translation, rotation>
(G4AssemblyTriplet class).
The adopted approach is to place each participating logical volume with respect to the assembly’s coordinate system,
according to the specified translation and rotation.
An assembly volume object is composed of a set of logical volumes; imprints of it can be made inside a mother logical
volume.
Since the assembly volume class generates physical volumes during each imprint, the user has no way to specify
identifiers for these. An internal counting mechanism is used to compose uniquely the names of the physical volumes
created by the invoked MakeImprint(...) method(s).
The name for each of the physical volume is generated with the following format:
av_WWW_impr_XXX_YYY_ZZZ
where:
• WWW - assembly volume instance number
• XXX - assembly volume imprint number
• YYY - the name of the placed logical volume
• ZZZ - the logical volume index inside the assembly volume
It is however possible to access the constituent physical volumes of an assembly and eventually customise ID and
copy-number.
At destruction all the generated physical volumes and associated rotation matrices of the imprints will be destroyed. A
list of physical volumes created by MakeImprint() method is kept, in order to be able to cleanup the objects when
not needed anymore. This requires the user to keep the assembly objects in memory during the whole job or during
the life-time of the G4Navigator, logical volume store and physical volume store may keep pointers to physical
volumes generated by the assembly volume.
The MakeImprint() method will operate correctly also on transformations including reflections and can be applied
also to recursive assemblies (i.e., it is possible to generate imprints of assemblies including other assemblies). Giving
true as the last argument of the MakeImprint() method, it is possible to activate the volumes overlap check for
the assembly’s constituents (the default is false).
At destruction of a G4AssemblyVolume, all its generated physical volumes and rotation matrices will be freed.
Example
This example shows how to use the G4AssemblyVolume class. It implements a layered detector where each layer
consists of 4 plates.
In the code below, at first the world volume is defined, then solid and logical volume for the plate are created, followed
by the definition of the assembly volume for the layer.
The assembly volume for the layer is then filled by the plates in the same way as normal physical volumes are placed
inside a mother volume.
Finally the layers are placed inside the world volume as the imprints of the assembly volume (see Listing 4.7).
void TstVADetectorConstruction::ConstructAssembly()
{
// Define world volume
G4Box* WorldBox = new G4Box( "WBox", worldX/2., worldY/2., worldZ/2. );
G4LogicalVolume* worldLV = new G4LogicalVolume( WorldBox, selectedMaterial,
"WLog", 0, 0, 0 );
G4VPhysicalVolume* worldVol = new G4PVPlacement( 0, G4ThreeVector(), "WPhys",worldLV,
0, false, 0 );
// Define a plate
G4Box* PlateBox = new G4Box( "PlateBox", plateX/2., plateY/2., plateZ/2. );
G4LogicalVolume* plateLV = new G4LogicalVolume( PlateBox, Pb, "PlateLV", 0, 0, 0 );
Hierarchies of volumes based on CSG or specific solids can be reflected by means of the G4ReflectionFactory
class and G4ReflectedSolid, which implements a solid that has been shifted from its original reference frame
to a new ‘reflected’ one. The reflection transformation is applied as a decomposition into rotation and translation
transformations.
The factory is a singleton object which provides the following methods:
G4PhysicalVolumesPair Place(const G4Transform3D& transform3D,
const G4String& name,
G4LogicalVolume* LV,
G4LogicalVolume* motherLV,
G4bool isMany,
G4int copyNo,
G4bool surfCheck=false)
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The method Place() used for placements, evaluates the passed transformation. In case the transformation contains
a reflection, the factory will act as follows:
1. Performs the transformation decomposition.
2. Creates a new reflected solid and logical volume, or retrieves them from a map if the reflected object was already
created.
3. Transforms the daughters (if any) and place them in the given mother.
If successful, the result is a pair of physical volumes, where the second physical volume is a placement in a re-
flected mother. Optionally, it is also possible to force the overlaps check at the time of placement, by activating the
surfCheck flag.
The method Replicate() creates replicas in the given mother. If successful, the result is a pair of physical volumes,
where the second physical volume is a replica in a reflected mother.
The method Divide() creates divisions in the given mother. If successful, the result is a pair of physical volumes,
where the second physical volume is a division in a reflected mother. There exists also two more variants of this
method which may specify or not width or number of divisions.
Note: In order to reflect hierarchies containing divided volumes, it is necessary to explicitly instantiate a concrete
division factory -before- applying the actual reflection: (i.e. - G4PVDivisionFactory::GetInstance();).
G4VPhysicalVolume* physiCalor =
new G4PVPlacement(rotD3, // rotation
G4ThreeVector(Xpos,0.,0.), // at (Xpos,0,0)
logicCalor, // its logical volume (defined elsewhere)
"Calorimeter", // its name
logicHall, // its mother volume (defined elsewhere)
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G4ReflectionFactory::Instance()
->Place(transform, // the transformation with reflection
"Calorimeter", // the actual name
logicCalor, // the logical volume
logicHall, // the mother volume
false, // no boolean operation
1, // copy number
false); // no overlap check triggered
// Replicate layers
//
G4ReflectionFactory::Instance()
->Replicate("Layer", // layer name
logicLayer, // layer logical volume (defined elsewhere)
logicCalor, // its mother
kXAxis, // axis of replication
5, // number of replica
20*cm); // width of replica
Navigation through the geometry at tracking time is implemented by the class G4Navigator. The navigator is used
to locate points in the geometry and compute distances to geometry boundaries. At tracking time, the navigator is
intended to be the only point of interaction with tracking.
Internally, the G4Navigator has several private helper/utility classes:
• G4NavigationHistory - stores the compounded transformations, replication/parameterisation information, and
volume pointers at each level of the hierarchy to the current location. The volume types at each level are also
stored - whether normal (placement), replicated or parameterised.
• G4NormalNavigation - provides location & distance computation functions for geometries containing ‘place-
ment’ volumes, with no voxels.
• G4VoxelNavigation - provides location and distance computation functions for geometries containing ‘place-
ment’ physical volumes with voxels. Internally a stack of voxel information is maintained. Private functions
allow for isotropic distance computation to voxel boundaries and for computation of the ‘next voxel’ in a speci-
fied direction.
• G4ParameterisedNavigation - provides location and distance computation functions for geometries containing
parameterised volumes with voxels. Voxel information is maintained similarly to G4VoxelNavigation, but
computation can also be simpler by adopting voxels to be one level deep only (unrefined, or 1D optimisation)
• G4ReplicaNavigation - provides location and distance computation functions for replicated volumes.
In addition, the navigator maintains a set of flags for exiting/entry optimisation. A navigator is not a singleton class;
this is mainly to allow a design extension in future (e.g. geometrical event biasing).
The main functions required for tracking in the geometry are described below. Additional functions are provided to
return the net transformation of volumes and for the creation of touchables. None of the functions implicitly requires
More than one navigator object can be created inside an application; these navigators can act independently for dif-
ferent purposes. The main navigator which is activated automatically at the startup of a simulation program is the
navigator used for the tracking and attached the world volume of the main tracking (or mass) geometry.
The navigator for tracking can be retrieved at any state of the application by messaging the
G4TransportationManager:
G4Navigator* tracking_navigator =
G4TransportationManager::GetInstance()->GetNavigatorForTracking();
This also allows to retrieve at any time a pointer to the world volume assigned for tracking:
The navigator for tracking also retains all the information of the current history of volumes traversed at a precise
moment of the tracking during a run. Therefore, if the navigator for tracking is used during tracking for locating a
generic point in the tree of volumes, the actual particle gets also -relocated- in the specified position and tracking will
be of course affected !
In order to avoid the problem above and provide information about location of a point without affecting the tracking,
it is suggested to either use an alternative G4Navigator object (which can then be assigned to the world-volume),
or access the information through the step.
If the user instantiates an alternative G4Navigator, ownership is retained by the user’s code, and the navigator
object should be deleted by that code.
During the tracking run, geometrical information can be retrieved through the touchable handle associated to the
current step. For example, to identify the exact copy-number of a specific physical volume in the mass geometry, one
should do the following:
// Given the pointer to the step object ...
//
G4Step* aStep = ..;
To determine the exact position in global coordinates in the mass geometry and convert to local coordinates (local to
the current volume):
G4ThreeVector worldPosition = preStepPoint->GetPosition();
G4ThreeVector localPosition = theTouchable->GetHistory()->
GetTopTransform().TransformPoint(worldPosition);
In order to know (when in the idle state of the application) in which physical volume a given point is located in the
detector geometry, it is necessary to create an alternative navigator object first and assign it to the world volume:
G4Navigator* aNavigator = new G4Navigator();
aNavigator->SetWorldVolume(worldVolumePointer);
Then, locate the point myPoint (defined in global coordinates), retrieve a touchable handle and do whatever you
need with it:
aNavigator->LocateGlobalPointAndSetup(myPoint);
G4TouchableHistoryHandle aTouchable =
aNavigator->CreateTouchableHistoryHandle();
If outside of the tracking run and given a generic local position (local to a given volume in the geometry tree), it is
-not- possible to determine a priori its global position and convert it to the global coordinates system. The reason for
this is rather simple, nobody can guarantee that the given (local) point is located in the right -copy- of the physical
volume ! In order to retrieve this information, some extra knowledge related to the absolute position of the physical
volume is required first, i.e. one should first determine a global point belonging to that volume, eventually making a
dedicated scan of the geometry tree through a dedicated G4Navigator object and then apply the method above after
having created the touchable for it.
Since release 8.2 of GEANT4, it is possible to define geometry trees which are parallel to the tracking geometry and
having them assigned to navigator objects that transparently communicate in sync with the normal tracking geometry.
Parallel geometries can be defined for several uses (fast shower parameterisation, geometrical biasing, particle scoring,
readout geometries, etc . . . ) and can overlap with the mass geometry defined for the tracking. The parallel
transportation will be activated only after the registration of the parallel geometry in the detector description setup; see
Section Parallel Geometries for how to define a parallel geometry and register it to the run-manager.
The G4TransportationManager provides all the utilities to verify, retrieve and activate the navigators associated
to the various parallel geometries defined.
Since release 9.1 of GEANT4, a specialised navigation algorithm has been introduced to allow for optimal memory use
and extremely efficient navigation in geometries represented by a regular pattern of volumes and particularly three-
dimensional grids of boxes. A typical application of this kind is the case of DICOM phantoms for medical physics
studies.
The class G4RegularNavigation is used and automatically activated when such geometries are defined. It is
required to the user to implement a parameterisation of the kind G4PhantomParameterisation and place the
parameterised volume containing it in a container volume, so that all cells in the three-dimensional grid (voxels)
completely fill the container volume. This way the location of a point inside a voxel can be done in a fast way,
transforming the position to the coordinate system of the container volume and doing a simple calculation of the kind:
copyNo_x = (localPoint.x()+fVoxelHalfX*fNoVoxelX)/(fVoxelHalfX*2.)
where fVoxelHalfX is the half dimension of the voxel along X and fNoVoxelX is the number of vox-
els in the X dimension. Voxel 0 will be the one closest to the corner (fVoxelHalfX*fNoVoxelX,
fVoxelHalfY*fNoVoxelY, fVoxelHalfZ*fNoVoxelZ).
Having the voxels filling completely the container volume allows to avoid the lengthy computation of
ComputeStep() and ComputeSafety methods required in the traditional navigation algorithm. In this case,
when a track is inside the parent volume, it has always to be inside one of the voxels and it will be only necessary to
calculate the distance to the walls of the current voxel.
Another speed optimisation can be provided by skipping the frontiers of two voxels which the same material assigned,
so that bigger steps can be done. This optimisation may be not very useful when the number of materials is very big
(in which case the probability of having contiguous voxels with same material is reduced), or when the physical step
is small compared to the voxel dimensions (very often the case of electrons). The optimisation can be switched off in
such cases, by invoking the following method with argument skip = 0:
If you want to describe a phantom of a unique material, you may spare some memory by not filling the set of indices
of materials of each voxel. If the method SetMaterialIndices() is not invoked, the index for all voxels will be
0, that is the first (and unique) material in your list.
G4RegularParameterisation::SetSkipEqualMaterials( G4bool skip );
Example
To use the specialised navigation, it is required to first create an object of type G4PhantomParameterisation:
G4PhantomParameterisation* param = new G4PhantomParameterisation();
The physical volume should be assigned as the container volume of the parameterisation:
param->BuildContainerSolid(cont_phys);
// Assure that the voxels are completely filling the container volume
//
param->CheckVoxelsFillContainer( cont_solid->GetXHalfLength(),
cont_solid->GetyHalfLength(),
cont_solid->GetzHalfLength() );
An example showing the application of the optimised navigation algorithm for phantoms geometries is avail-
able in examples/extended/medical/DICOM. It implements a real application for reading DICOM im-
ages and convert them to GEANT4 geometries with defined materials and densities, allowing for different imple-
mentation solutions to be chosen (non-optimised, classical 3D optimisation, nested parameterisations and use of
G4PhantomParameterisation).
Run-time commands
When running in verbose mode (i.e. the default, G4VERBOSE set while installing the GEANT4 kernel libraries), the
navigator provides a few commands to control its behavior. It is possible to select different verbosity levels (up to 5),
with the command:
geometry/navigator/verbose [verbose_level]
The latter will force more strict and less tolerant checks in step/safety computation to verify the correctness of the
solids’ response in the geometry.
By combining check_mode with verbosity level-1, additional verbosity checks on the response from the solids can be
activated.
The tolerance value defining the accuracy of tracking on the surfaces is by default set to a reasonably small value of
10E-9 mm. Such accuracy may be however redundant for use on simulation of detectors of big size or macroscopic
dimensions. Since release 9.0, it is possible to specify the surface tolerance to be relative to the extent of the world
volume defined for containing the geometry setup.
The class G4GeometryManager can be used to activate the computation of the surface tolerance to be relative to
the geometry setup which has been defined. It can be done this way:
G4GeometryManager::GetInstance()->SetWorldMaximumExtent(WorldExtent);
where, WorldExtent is the actual maximum extent of the world volume used for placing the whole geometry setup.
Such call to G4GeometryManager must be done before defining any geometrical component of the setup (solid
shape or volume), and can be done only once!
The class G4GeometryTolerance is to be used for retrieving the actual values defined for tolerances, surface
(Cartesian), angular or radial respectively:
G4GeometryTolerance::GetInstance()->GetSurfaceTolerance();
G4GeometryTolerance::GetInstance()->GetAngularTolerance();
G4GeometryTolerance::GetInstance()->GetRadialTolerance();
GGE is the acronym for GEANT4 Graphical Geometry Editor. GGE aims to assist physicists who have a little knowl-
edge on C++ and the GEANT4 toolkit to construct his or her own detector geometry. In essence, GGE is made up of a
set of tables which can contain all relevant parameters to construct a simple detector geometry. Tables for scratch or
compound materials, tables for logical and physical volumes are provided. From the values in the tables, C++ source
codes are automatically generated.
GGE provides methods to:
1. construct a detector geometry including G4Element, G4Material, G4Solids, G4LogicalVolume,
G4PVPlacement, etc.
2. view the detector geometry using existing visualization system, DAWN
3. keep the detector object in a persistent way, either in GDML format (currently only logical volumes are sup-
ported) or Java serialized format.
4. produce corresponding C++ codes after the norm of GEANT4 toolkit
5. make a GEANT4 executable, in collaboration with another component of MOMO, i.e., GPE, or GEANT4 Physics
Editor.
GGE can be found in the standard GEANT4 source package under the directory environments/MOMO/MOMO.
jar. JRE (Java Run-time Environment) is prerequisite to run MOMO.jar, Java archive file of MOMO. MOMO
contains GGE, GPE, GAG and other helper tools. Further information is available from the Web pages below.
MOMO = GGE + GPE + GAG: http://www-geant4.kek.jp/~yoshidah
GGE provides the database of elements in the form of the periodic table, from which users can select element(s) to
construct new materials. They can be loaded, used, edited and saved as Java persistent objects or in a GDML file. In
enviroments/MOMO, a pre-constructed database of materials taken from the PDG book, PDG.xml is present.
Users can also create new materials either from scratch or by combining other materials.
• By selecting an element in the periodic table, default values as shown below are copied to a row in the table.
Use marks the used materials. Only the elements and materials used in the logical volumes are kept in the
detector object and are used to generate C++ constructors.
• By selecting multiple elements in the periodic table, a material from a combination of elements is assigned to a
row of the compound material table. The minimum actions user have to do is to give a name to the material and
define its density.
Use Name Elements Density Unit State Temperature Unit Pressure Unit
By clicking the column Elements, a new window is open to select one of two methods:
– Add an element, giving its fraction by weight
– Add an element, giving its number of atoms.
Solids
The most popular CSG solids (G4Box, G4Tubs, G4Cons, G4Trd) and specific solids (Pcons, Pgons) are supported.
All relevant parameters of such a solid can be specified in the parameter table, which pops up upon selection.
Color, or the visualization attribute of a logical volume can be created, using color chooser panel. Users can view each
solid using DAWN.
Logical Volume
The lists of solid types, names of the materials defined in the material tables, and names of user-defined visualization
attributes are shown automatically in respective table cell for user’s choices.
The construction and assignment of appropriate entities for G4FieldManager and G4VSensitiveDetector
are left to the user.
Physical Volume
GEANT4 enables users to create a physical volume in different ways; the mother volume can be either a logical or a
physical one, spatial rotation can be either with respect to the volume or to the frame to which the volume is attached.
GGE is prepared for such four combinatorial cases to construct a physical volume.
Five simple cases of creating physical volumes are supported by GGE. Primo, a single copy of a physical volume can
be created by a translation and rotation. Secondo, repeated copies can be created by repeated linear translations. A
logical volume is translated in a Cartesian direction, starting from the initial position, with a given step size. Mother
volume can be either another logical volume or a physical volume.
Name LogicalVol- Type and name of Mother- Many X0, Y0, Direc- Step- Unit Copy-
ume Volume Z0 tion Size Number
Third, repeated copies are created by rotation around an axis, placing an object repeatedly on a “cylindrical” pattern.
Fourth, replicas are created by slicing a volume along a Cartesian direction. Fifth, replicas are created by cutting a
volume cylindrically.
User has to type in a class name to his geometry, for example, MyDetectorConstruction. Then, with a mouse
button click, source codes in the form of an include file and a source file are created and shown in the editor panel.
In this example, they are MyDetectorConstruction.cc and MyDetectorConstruction.hh files. They
reflect all current user modifications in the tables in real-time.
Visualization
The whole geometry can be visualized after the compilation of the source code MyDetectorConstruction.cc
with appropriate parts of GEANT4. (In particular only the geometry and visualization, together with the small other
parts they depend on, are needed.) MOMO provides Physics Editor to create standard electromagnetic physics and a
minimum main program. See the on-line document in MOMO.
Approach
G3toG4 is the GEANT4 facility to convert GEANT 3.21 geometries into GEANT4. This is done in two stages:
1. The user supplies a GEANT 3.21 RZ-file (.rz) containing the initialization data structures. An executable
rztog4 reads this file and produces an ASCII call list file containing instructions on how to build the ge-
ometry. The source code of rztog4 is FORTRAN.
2. A call list interpreter (G4BuildGeom.cc) reads these instructions and builds the geometry in the user’s client
code for GEANT4.
Two examples of how to use the call list interpreter are supplied in the directory examples/extended/g3tog4:
1. cltog4 is a simple example which simply invokes the call list interpreter method G4BuildGeom from the
G3toG4DetectorConstruction class, builds the geometry and exits.
2. clGeometry, is more complete and is patterned as for the basic GEANT4 examples. It also invokes the call
list interpreter, but in addition, allows the geometry to be visualized and particles to be tracked.
To compile and build the G3toG4 libraries, you need to have enabled GEANT4_USE_G3TOG4 at the build configura-
tion of GEANT4. The G3toG4 libraries are not built by default.
Current Status
The package has been tested with the geometries from experiments like: BaBar, CMS, Atlas, Alice, Zeus, L3, and
Opal.
Here is a comprehensive list of features supported and not supported or implemented in the current version of the
package:
• Supported shapes: all GEANT 3.21 shapes except for GTRA, CTUB.
• PGON, PCON are built using the specific solids G4Polycone and G4Polyhedra.
• GEANT 3.21 MANY feature is only partially supported. MANY positions are resolved in the G3toG4MANY()
function, which has to be processed before G3toG4BuildTree() (it is not called by default). In order
to resolve MANY, the user code has to provide additional info using G4gsbool(G4String volName,
G4String manyVolName) function for all the overlapping volumes. Daughters of overlapping volumes
are then resolved automatically and should not be specified via Gsbool.
Limitation: a volume with a MANY position can have only this one position; if more than one position is needed
a new volume has to be defined (gsvolu()) for each position.
• GSDV* routines for dividing volumes are implemented, using G4PVReplicas, for shapes:
– BOX, TUBE, TUBS, PARA - all axes;
– CONE, CONS - axes 2, 3;
– TRD1, TRD2, TRAP - axis 3;
– PGON, PCON - axis 2;
– PARA -axis 1; axis 2,3 for a special case
• GSPOSP is implemented via individual logical volumes for each instantiation.
• GSROTM is implemented. Reflections of hierarchies based on plain CSG solids are implemented through the
G3Division class.
• Hits are not implemented.
• Conversion of GEANT 3.21 magnetic field is currently not supported. However, the usage of magnetic field has
to be turned on.
Volumes are often positioned within other volumes with the intent that one is fully contained within the other. If,
however, a volume extends beyond the boundaries of its mother volume, it is defined as overlapping. It may also be
intended that volumes are positioned within the same mother volume such that they do not intersect one another. When
such volumes do intersect, they are also defined as overlapping.
The problem of detecting overlaps between volumes is bounded by the complexity of the solid model description.
Hence it requires the same mathematical sophistication which is needed to describe the most complex solid topology,
in general. However, a tunable accuracy can be obtained by approximating the solids via first and/or second order
surfaces and checking their intersections.
In general, the most powerful clash detection algorithms are provided by CAD systems, treating the intersection
between the solids in their topological form.
The GEANT4 geometry modeler provides the ability to detect overlaps of placed volumes (normal placements or
parameterised) at the time of construction. This check is optional and can be activated when instantiating a place-
ment (see G4PVPlacement constructor in Placements: single positioned copy) or a parameterised volume (see
G4PVParameterised constructor in Repeated volumes).
The positioning of that specific volume will be checked against all volumes in the same hierarchy level and its mother
volume. Depending on the complexity of the geometry being checked, the check may require considerable CPU time;
it is therefore suggested to use it only for debugging the geometry setup and to apply it only to the part of the geometry
setup which requires debugging.
The classes G4PVPlacement and G4PVParameterised also provide a method:
G4bool CheckOverlaps(G4int res=1000, G4double tol=0., G4bool verbose=true)
which will force the check for the specified volume, and can be therefore used to verify for overlaps also once the
geometry is fully built. The check verifies if each placed or parameterised instance is overlapping with other instances
or with its mother volume. A default resolution for the number of points to be generated and verified is provided. The
method returns true if an overlap occurs. It is also possible to specify a “tolerance” by which overlaps not exceeding
such quantity will not be reported; by default, all overlaps are reported.
Built-in run-time commands to activate verification tests for the user-defined geometry are also provided
geometry/test/run
--> to start verification of geometry for overlapping regions
recursively through the volumes tree.
geometry/test/recursion_start [int]
--> to set the starting depth level in the volumes tree from where
checking overlaps. Default is level '0' (i.e. the world volume).
The new settings will then be applied to any recursive test run.
geometry/test/recursion_depth [int]
--> to set the total depth in the volume tree for checking overlaps.
Default is '-1' (i.e. checking the whole tree).
Recursion will stop after having reached the specified depth (the
default being the full depth of the geometry tree).
The new settings will then be applied to any recursive test run.
geometry/test/tolerance [double] [unit]
--> to define tolerance by which overlaps should not be reported.
Default is '0'.
geometry/test/verbosity [bool]
--> to set verbosity mode. Default is 'true'.
geometry/test/resolution [int]
--> to establish the number of points on surface to be generated
and checked for each volume. Default is '10000'.
geometry/test/maximum_errors [int]
--> to fix the threshold for the number of errors to be reported
for a single volume. By default, for each volume, reports stop
after the first error reported.
To detect overlapping volumes, the built-in UI commands use the random generation of points on surface technique
described above. It allows to detect with high level of precision any kind of overlaps, as depicted below. For example,
consider Fig. 4.4:
Here we have a line intersecting some physical volume (large, black rectangle). Belonging to the volume are four
daughters: A, B, C, and D. Indicated by the dots are the intersections of the line with the mother volume and the four
daughters.
This example has two geometry errors. First, volume A sticks outside its mother volume (this practice, sometimes used
in GEANT3.21, is not allowed in GEANT4). This can be noticed because the intersection point (leftmost magenta dot)
lies outside the mother volume, as defined by the space between the two black dots.
The second error is that daughter volumes A and B overlap. This is noticeable because one of the intersections with A
(rightmost magenta dot) is inside the volume B, as defined as the space between the red dots. Alternatively, one of the
intersections with B (leftmost red dot) is inside the volume A, as defined as the space between the magenta dots.
Another difficult issue is roundoff error. For example, daughters C and D lie precisely next to each other. It is possible,
due to roundoff, that one of the intersections points will lie just slightly inside the space of the other. In addition, a
volume that lies tightly up against the outside of its mother may have an intersection point that just slightly lies outside
the mother.
Finally, notice that no mention is made of the possible daughter volumes of A, B, C, and D. To keep the code simple,
only the immediate daughters of a volume are checked at one pass. To test these “granddaughter” volumes, the
daughters A, B, C, and D each have to be tested themselves in turn. To make this automatic, a recursive algorithm is
applied; it first tests the target volume, then it loops over all daughter volumes and calls itself.
Note: for a complex geometry, checking the entire volume hierarchy can be extremely time consuming.
The GEANT4 visualization offers a powerful debugging tool for detecting potential intersections of physical volumes.
The GEANT4 DAVID visualization tool can automatically detect the overlaps between the volumes defined in GEANT4
and converted to a graphical representation for visualization purposes. The accuracy of the graphical representation
can be tuned onto the exact geometrical description. In the debugging, physical-volume surfaces are automatically
decomposed into 3D polygons, and intersections of the generated polygons are investigated. If a polygon intersects
with another one, physical volumes which these polygons belong to are visualized in color (red is the default). The
Fig. 4.5 figure below is a sample visualization of a detector geometry with intersecting physical volumes highlighted:
At present physical volumes made of the following solids can be debugged: G4Box, G4Cons, G4Para, G4Sphere,
G4Trd, G4Trap, G4Tubs. (Existence of other solids is harmless.)
Visual debugging of physical-volume surfaces is performed with the DAWNFILE driver defined in the visualization
category and with the two application packages, i.e. Fukui Renderer “DAWN” and a visual intersection debugger
“DAVID”. DAWN and DAVID can be downloaded from the Web.
How to compile GEANT4 with the DAWNFILE driver incorporated is described in The Visualization Drivers.
If the DAWNFILE driver, DAWN and DAVID are all working well in your host machine, the visual intersection
debugging of physical-volume surfaces can be performed as follows:
Run your GEANT4 executable, invoke the DAWNFILE driver, and execute visualization commands to visualize your
detector geometry:
Idle> /vis/open DAWNFILE
.....(setting camera etc)...
Idle> /vis/drawVolume
Idle> /vis/viewer/update
Then a file “g4.prim”, which describes the detector geometry, is generated in the current directory and DAVID is
invoked to read it. (The description of the format of the file g4.prim can be found from the DAWN web site documen-
tation.)
If DAVID detects intersection of physical-volume surfaces, it automatically invokes DAWN to visualize the detector
geometry with the intersected physical volumes highlighted (See the above sample visualization).
If no intersection is detected, visualization is skipped and the following message is displayed on the console:
------------------------------------------------------
!!! Number of intersected volumes : 0 !!!
!!! Congratulations ! \(^o^)/ !!!
------------------------------------------------------
If you always want to skip visualization, set an environmental variable as follows beforehand:
% setenv DAVID_NO_VIEW 1
To control the precision associated to computation of intersections (default precision is set to 9), it is possible to use
the environmental variable for the DAWNFILE graphics driver, as follows:
% setenv G4DAWNFILE_PRECISION 10
If necessary, re-visualize the detector geometry with intersected parts highlighted. The data are saved in a file
“g4david.prim” in the current directory. This file can be re-visualized with DAWN as follows:
% dawn g4david.prim
It is also helpful to convert the generated file g4david.prim into a VRML-formatted file and perform interactive visu-
alization of it with your WWW browser. The file conversion tool prim2wrml can be downloaded from the DAWN
web site download pages.
For more details, see the documentation of DAVID mentioned above.
GEANT4 can handle geometries which vary in time (e.g. a geometry varying between two runs in the same job).
It is considered a change to the geometry setup, whenever for the same physical volume:
• the shape or dimension of its related solid is modified;
• the positioning (translation or rotation) of the volume is changed;
• the volume (or a set of volumes, tree) is removed/replaced or added.
Whenever such a change happens, the geometry setup needs to be first “opened” for the change to be applied and
afterwards “closed” for the optimisation to be reorganised.
In the general case, in order to notify the GEANT4 system of the change in the geometry setup, the G4RunManager
has to be messaged once the new geometry setup has been finalised:
G4RunManager::GeometryHasBeenModified();
The above notification needs to be performed also if a material associated to a positioned volume is changed, in
order to allow for the internal materials/cuts table to be updated. However, for relatively complex geometries the
re-optimisation step may be extremely inefficient, since it has the effect that the whole geometry setup will be re-
optimised and re-initialised. In cases where only a limited portion of the geometry has changed, it may be suitable to
apply the re-optimisation only to the affected portion of the geometry (subtree).
Since release 7.1 of the GEANT4 toolkit, it is possible to apply re-optimisation local to the subtree of the geometry
which has changed. The user will have to explicitly “open/close” the geometry providing a pointer to the top physical
volume concerned:
Listing 4.9: Opening and closing a portion of the geometry without noti-
fying the G4RunManager.
#include "G4GeometryManager.hh"
If the existing geometry setup is modified locally in more than one place, it may be convenient to apply such a
technique only once, by specifying a physical volume on top of the hierarchy (subtree) containing all changed portions
of the setup.
An alternative solution for dealing with dynamic geometries is to specify NOT to apply optimisation for the subtree
affected by the change and apply the general solution of invoking the G4RunManager. In this case, a performance
penalty at run-time may be observed (depending on the complexity of the not-optimised subtree), considering that,
without optimisation, intersections to all volumes in the subtree will be explicitly computed each time.
Note: in multi-threaded runs, dynamic geometries are only allowed for runs consisting only of one event.
Geometry Description Markup Language (GDML) is a markup language based on XML and suited for the descrip-
tion of detector geometry models. It allows for easy exchange of geometry data in a human-readable XML-based
description and structured formatting.
The GDML parser is a component of GEANT4 which can be built and installed as an optional choice. It allows for
importing and exporting GDML files, following the schema specified in the GDML documentation. The installation
of the plugin is optional and requires the installation of the XercesC DOM parser.
Examples of how to import and export a detector description model based on GDML, and also how to extend the
GDML schema, are provided and can be found in examples/extended/persistency/gdml.
Since release 9.2 of GEANT4, it is also possible to import geometry setups based on a plain text description, according
to a well defined syntax for identifying the different geometrical entities (solids, volumes, materials and volume
attributes) with associated parameters. An example showing how to define a geometry in plain text format and import
it in a GEANT4 application is shown in examples/extended/persistency/P03. The example also covers
the case of associating a sensitive detector to one of the volumes defined in the text geometry, the case of mixing C++
and text geometry definitions and the case of defining new tags in the text format so that regions and cuts by region
can be defined in the text file. It also provides an example of how to write a geometry text file from the in-memory
GEANT4 geometry. For the details on the format see the dedicated manual.
The GEANT4 geometry tree can be stored in the Root binary file format using the Root-I/O technique provided by
in Root. Such a binary file can then be used to quickly load the geometry into the memory or to move geometries
between different GEANT4 applications.
See Object Persistency for details and references.
4.2 Material
In nature, materials (chemical compounds, mixtures) are made of elements, and elements are made of isotopes.
GEANT4 has three main classes designed to reflect this organization. Each of these classes has a table, which is a
static data member, used to keep track of the instances of the respective classes created.
G4Isotope This class describes the properties of atoms: atomic number, number of nucleons, mass per mole, etc.
G4Element This class describes the properties of elements: effective atomic number, effective number of nucleons,
effective mass per mole, number of isotopes, shell energy, and quantities like cross section per atom, etc.
G4Material This class describes the macroscopic properties of matter: density, state, temperature, pressure, and
macroscopic quantities like radiation length, mean free path, dE/dx, etc.
Only the G4Material class is visible to the rest of the toolkit and used by the tracking, the geometry and the
physics. It contains all the information relevant to its constituent elements and isotopes, while at the same time hiding
their implementation details.
G4Isotope
A G4Isotope object has a name, atomic number, number of nucleons, mass per mole, and an index in the table.
The constructor automatically stores “this” isotope in the isotopes table, which will assign it an index number. The
G4Isotope objects are owned by the isotopes table, and must not be deleted by user code.
G4Element
A G4Element object has a name, symbol, effective atomic number, effective number of nucleons, effective mass of
a mole, an index in the elements table, the number of isotopes, a vector of pointers to such isotopes, and a vector of
relative abundances referring to such isotopes (where relative abundance means the number of atoms per volume). In
addition, the class has methods to add, one by one, the isotopes which are to form the element.
The constructor automatically stores “this” element in the elements table, which will assign it an index number. The
G4Element objects are owned by the elements table, and must not be deleted by user code.
A G4Element object can be constructed by directly providing the effective atomic number, effective number of
nucleons, and effective mass of a mole, if the user explicitly wants to do so. Alternatively, a G4Element object can
be constructed by declaring the number of isotopes of which it will be composed. The constructor will “new” a vector
of pointers to G4Isotopes and a vector of doubles to store their relative abundances. Finally, the method to add an
isotope must be invoked for each of the desired (pre-existing) isotope objects, providing their addresses and relative
abundances. At the last isotope entry, the system will automatically compute the effective atomic number, effective
number of nucleons and effective mass of a mole, and will store “this” element in the elements table.
A few quantities, with physical meaning or not, which are constant in a given element, are computed and stored here
as “derived data members”.
Using the internal GEANT4 database, a G4Element can be accessed by atomic number or by atomic symbol (“Al”,
“Fe”, “Pb”. . . ). In that case G4Element will be found from the list of existing elements or will be constructed using
data from the GEANT4 database, which is derived from the NIST database of elements and isotope compositions.
Thus, the natural isotope composition can be built by default. The same element can be created as using the NIST
database with the natural composition of isotopes and from scratch in user code with user defined isotope composition.
G4Material
A G4Material object has a name, density, physical state, temperature and pressure (by default the standard con-
ditions), the number of elements and a vector of pointers to such elements, a vector of the fraction of mass for each
element, a vector of the atoms (or molecules) numbers of each element, and an index in the materials table. In addition,
the class has methods to add, one by one, the elements which will comprise the material.
The constructor automatically stores “this” material in the materials table, which will assign it an index number. The
G4Material objects are owned by the materials table, and must not be deleted by user code.
A G4Material object can be constructed by directly providing the resulting effective numbers, if the user explicitly
wants to do so (an underlying element will be created with these numbers). Alternatively, a G4Material object
can be constructed by declaring the number of elements of which it will be composed. The constructor will “new” a
vector of pointers to G4Element and a vector of doubles to store their fraction of mass. Finally, the method to add
an element must be invoked for each of the desired (pre-existing) element objects, providing their addresses and mass
fractions. At the last element entry, the system will automatically compute the vector of the number of atoms of each
element per volume, the total number of electrons per volume, and will store “this” material in the materials table. In
the same way, a material can be constructed as a mixture of other materials and elements.
It should be noted that if the user provides the number of atoms (or molecules) for each element comprising the
chemical compound, the system automatically computes the mass fraction. A few quantities, with physical meaning
or not, which are constant in a given material, are computed and stored here as “derived data members”.
Some materials are included in the internal GEANT4 database, which were derived from the NIST database of material
properties. Additionally a number of materials frequently used in HEP is included in the database. Materials are
interrogated or constructed by their names ( Material Database). There are UI commands for the material category,
which provide an interactive access to the database. If material is created using the NIST database by it will consist
by default of elements with the natural composition of isotopes.
Final Considerations
The classes will automatically decide if the total of the mass fractions is correct, and perform the necessary checks.
The main reason why a fixed index is kept as a data member is that many cross section and energy tables will be built
in the physics processes “by rows of materials (or elements, or even isotopes)”. The tracking gives the physics process
the address of a material object (the material of the current volume). If the material has an index according to which
the cross section table has been built, then direct access is available when a number in such a table must be accessed.
We get directly to the correct row, and the energy of the particle will tell us the column. Without such an index, every
access to the cross section or energy tables would imply a search to get to the correct material’s row. More details will
be given in the section on processes.
Isotopes, elements and materials must be instantiated dynamically in the user application; they are automatically
registered in internal stores and the system takes care to free the memory allocated at the end of the job.
int main() {
G4String name, symbol; // a=mass of a mole;
G4double a, z, density; // z=mean number of protons;
G4int iz, n; // iz=nb of protons in an isotope;
// n=nb of nucleons in an isotope;
G4int ncomponents, natoms;
G4double abundance, fractionmass;
G4double temperature, pressure;
G4UnitDefinition::BuildUnitsTable();
// define Elements
a = 1.01*g/mole;
G4Element* elH = new G4Element(name="Hydrogen",symbol="H" , z= 1., a);
a = 12.01*g/mole;
G4Element* elC = new G4Element(name="Carbon" ,symbol="C" , z= 6., a);
a = 14.01*g/mole;
G4Element* elN = new G4Element(name="Nitrogen",symbol="N" , z= 7., a);
a = 16.00*g/mole;
G4Element* elO = new G4Element(name="Oxygen" ,symbol="O" , z= 8., a);
a = 28.09*g/mole;
G4Element* elSi = new G4Element(name="Silicon", symbol="Si", z=14., a);
a = 55.85*g/mole;
G4Element* elFe = new G4Element(name="Iron" ,symbol="Fe", z=26., a);
a = 183.84*g/mole;
G4Element* elW = new G4Element(name="Tungsten" ,symbol="W", z=74., a);
a = 207.20*g/mole;
G4Element* elPb = new G4Element(name="Lead" ,symbol="Pb", z=82., a);
density = 1.390*g/cm3;
a = 39.95*g/mole;
G4Material* lAr = new G4Material(name="liquidArgon", z=18., a, density);
density = 8.960*g/cm3;
(continues on next page)
density = 1.032*g/cm3;
G4Material* Sci = new G4Material(name="Scintillator", density, ncomponents=2);
Sci->AddElement(elC, natoms=9);
Sci->AddElement(elH, natoms=10);
density = 2.200*g/cm3;
G4Material* SiO2 = new G4Material(name="quartz", density, ncomponents=2);
SiO2->AddElement(elSi, natoms=1);
SiO2->AddElement(elO , natoms=2);
density = 8.280*g/cm3;
G4Material* PbWO4= new G4Material(name="PbWO4", density, ncomponents=3);
PbWO4->AddElement(elO , natoms=4);
PbWO4->AddElement(elW , natoms=1);
PbWO4->AddElement(elPb, natoms=1);
density = 0.3*mg/cm3;
pressure = 2.*atmosphere;
temperature = 500.*kelvin;
G4Material* steam = new G4Material(name="Water steam ", density, ncomponents=1,
kStateGas,temperature,pressure);
steam->AddMaterial(H2O, fractionmass=1.);
// What about vacuum ? Vacuum is an ordinary gas with very low density
density = universe_mean_density; //from PhysicalConstants.h
pressure = 1.e-19*pascal;
temperature = 0.1*kelvin;
new G4Material(name="Galactic", z=1., a=1.01*g/mole, density,
kStateGas,temperature,pressure);
density = 1.e-5*g/cm3;
pressure = 2.e-2*bar;
temperature = STP_Temperature; //from PhysicalConstants.h
G4Material* beam = new G4Material(name="Beam ", density, ncomponents=1,
(continues on next page)
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}
As can be seen in the later examples, a material has a state: solid (the default), liquid, or gas. The constructor checks
the density and automatically sets the state to gas below a given threshold (10 mg/cm3).
In the case of a gas, one may specify the temperature and pressure. The defaults are STP conditions defined in
PhysicalConstants.hh.
An element must have the number of nucleons >= number of protons >= 1.
A material must have non-zero values of density, temperature and pressure.
Materials can also be defined using the internal GEANT4 database. Listing 4.11 illustrates how to do this for the same
materials used in Listing 4.10. There are also UI commands which allow the database to be accessed. The list of
currently available material names ( Material Database) is extended permanently.
Listing 4.11: A program which shows how to define materials from the
internal database.
#include "globals.hh"
#include "G4Material.hh"
#include "G4NistManager.hh"
int main() {
G4NistManager* man = G4NistManager::Instance();
man->SetVerbose(1);
// define elements
G4Element* C = man->FindOrBuildElement("C");
G4Element* Pb = man->FindOrBuildMaterial("Pb");
// HEP materials
G4Material* PbWO4 = man->FindOrBuildMaterial("G4_PbWO4");
G4Material* lAr = man->FindOrBuildMaterial("G4_lAr");
G4Material* vac = man->FindOrBuildMaterial("G4_Galactic");
return EXIT_SUCCESS;
}
Print a constituent
GEANT4 is capable of describing and propagating in a variety of fields. Magnetic fields, electric fields, electromagnetic
fields, and gravity fields, uniform or non-uniform, can specified for a GEANT4 setup. The propagation of tracks inside
them can be performed to a user-defined accuracy.
In order to propagate a track inside a field, the equation of motion of the particle in the field is integrated. In general,
this is done using a Runge-Kutta method for the integration of ordinary differential equations. However, for specific
cases where an analytical solution is known, it is possible to utilize this instead. Several Runge-Kutta methods are
available, suitable for different conditions. In specific cases (such as a uniform field where the analytical solution is
known) different solvers can also be used. In addition, when an approximate analytical solution is known, it is possible
to utilize it in an iterative manner in order to converge to the solution to the precision required. This latter method is
currently implemented and can be used particularly well for magnetic fields that are almost uniform.
Once a method is chosen that calculates the track’s propagation in a specific field, the curved path is broken up into
linear chord segments. These chord segments are determined so that they closely approximate the curved path. The
chords are then used to interrogate the Navigator as to whether the track has crossed a volume boundary. Several pa-
rameters are available to adjust the accuracy of the integration and the subsequent interrogation of the model geometry.
How closely the set of chords approximates a curved trajectory is governed by a parameter called the miss distance
(also called the chord distance). This is an upper bound for the value of the sagitta - the distance between the ‘real’
curved trajectory and the approximate linear trajectory of the chord. By setting this parameter, the user can control the
precision of the volume interrogation. Every attempt has been made to ensure that all volume interrogations will be
made to an accuracy within this miss distance.
In addition to the miss distance there are two more parameters which the user can set in order to adjust the accuracy
(and performance) of tracking in a field. In particular these parameters govern the accuracy of the intersection with a
volume boundary and the accuracy of the integration of other steps. As such they play an important role for tracking.
The delta intersection parameter is the accuracy to which an intersection with a volume boundary is calculated. If
a candidate boundary intersection is estimated to have a precision better than this, it is accepted. This parameter is
especially important because it is used to limit a bias that our algorithm (for boundary crossing in a field) exhibits.
This algorithm calculates the intersection with a volume boundary using a chord between two points on the curved
particle trajectory. As such, the intersection point is always on the ‘inside’ of the curve. By setting a value for this
parameter that is much smaller than some acceptable error, the user can limit the effect of this bias on, for example,
the future estimation of the reconstructed particle momentum.
Fig. 4.6: The curved trajectory will be approximated by chords, so that the maximum estimated distance and chord is
less than the miss distance.
Fig. 4.7: The distance between the calculated chord intersection point C and a computed curve point D is used to
determine whether C is an accurate representation of the intersection of the curved path ADB with a volume boundary.
Here CD is likely too large, and a new intersection on the chord AD will be calculated.
The delta one step parameter is the accuracy for the endpoint of ‘ordinary’ integration steps, those which do not
intersect a volume boundary. This parameter is a limit on the estimated error of the endpoint of each physics step. It
can be seen as akin to a statistical uncertainty and is not expected to contribute any systematic behavior to physical
quantities. In contrast, the bias addressed by delta intersection is clearly correlated with potential systematic errors in
the momentum of reconstructed tracks. Thus very strict limits on the intersection parameter should be used in tracking
detectors or wherever the intersections are used to reconstruct a track’s momentum.
Delta intersection and delta one step are parameters of the Field Manager; the user can set them according to the
demands of his application. Because it is possible to use more than one field manager, different values can be set for
different detector regions.
Note that reasonable values for the two parameters are strongly coupled: it does not make sense to request an accuracy
of 1 nm for delta intersection and accept 100 𝜇m for the delta one step error value. Nevertheless delta intersection is
the more important of the two. It is recommended that these parameters should not differ significantly - certainly not
by more than an order of magnitude.
The simplest way to define a field for a detector involves the following steps:
1. create a field:
G4UniformMagField* magField
= new G4UniformMagField(G4ThreeVector(0.,0.,fieldValue));
Since 10.0 version, it is also possible to perform all three steps above at once using the
G4GlobalMagFieldMessenger class:
G4ThreeVector fieldValue = G4ThreeVector();
fMagFieldMessenger = new G4GlobalMagFieldMessenger(fieldValue);
fMagFieldMessenger->SetVerboseLevel(1);
The messenger creates the global uniform magnetic field, which is activated (set to the
G4TransportationManager object) only when the fieldValue is non zero vector. The messenger
class setter functions can be then used to change the field value (and activate or inactivate the field again) or the level
of output messages. The messenger also takes care of deleting the field.
As its class name suggests, the messenger creates also UI commands which can be used to change the field value and
the verbose level interactively or from a macro:
/globalField/setValue vx vy vz unit
/globalField/verbose level
It is possible to create a field for a part of the detector. In particular it can describe the field (with pointer fEmField,
for example) inside a logical volume and all its daughters. This can be done by simply creating a G4FieldManager
and attaching it to a logical volume (with pointer, logicVolumeWithField, for example) or set of logical volumes.
G4bool allLocal = true;
logicVolumeWithField->SetFieldManager(localFieldManager, allLocal);
Using the second parameter to SetFieldManager you choose whether daughter volumes of this logical volume
will also be given this new field. If it has the value true, the field will be assigned also to its daughters, and all their
sub-volumes. Else, if it is false, it will be copied only to those daughter volumes which do not have a field manager
already.
The design and implementation of the Field category allows and enables the use of an electric or combined electro-
magnetic field. These fields can also vary with time, as can magnetic fields.
Source listing Listing 4.12 shows how to define a uniform electric field for the whole of a detector.
Listing 4.12: How to define a uniform electric field for the whole of a
detector, extracted from example in examples/extended/field/field02 .
// in the header file (or first)
#include "G4EqMagElectricField.hh"
#include "G4UniformElectricField.hh"
#include "G4DormandPrince745.hh"
...
G4ElectricField* fEMfield;
G4EqMagElectricField* fEquation;
G4MagIntegratorStepper* fStepper;
G4FieldManager* fFieldMgr;
G4double fMinStep ;
G4ChordFinder* fChordFinder ;
{
fEMfield = new G4UniformElectricField(
G4ThreeVector(0.0,100000.0*kilovolt/cm,0.0));
G4int nvar = 8;
An example with an electric field is examples/extended/field/field02, where the class F02ElectricFieldSetup demon-
strates how to set these and other parameters, and how to choose different Integration Steppers. An example with a
uniform gravity field (G4UniformGravityField) is examples/extended/field/field06.
The user can also create their own type of field, inheriting from G4VField, and an associated Equation of Motion
class (inheriting from G4EqRhs) to simulate other types of fields.
Choosing a Stepper
Runge-Kutta integration is used to compute the motion of a charged track in a general field. There are many general
steppers from which to choose, of low and high order, and specialized steppers for pure magnetic fields. By default,
GEANT4 uses the established stepper of Dormand and Prince Runge-Kutta stepper, which is general purpose, efficient
and robust. It is a 5th order method which provides an error estimate directly , and requires fewer evaluations of the
derivative (and field) than the previous default, the classical 4th order method (for which an error estimate required
multiple sub-steps).
For somewhat smooth fields (intermediate), the choice between a fifth order stepper (such as the default
G4DormandPrince745):
G4int nvar = 8; // To integrate time & energy
// in addition to position, momentum
G4EqMagElectricField* fEquation= new G4EqMagElectricField(fEMfield);
Alternative fifth order embedded steppers beside the recommended and default G4DormandPrince745 which re-
quires 7 field evaluations (stages) include the older G4CashKarpRKF45 which requires fewer field evaluations (6
‘stages’)
fStepper = new G4CashKarpRKF45( fEquation, nvar );
// Alternative 4/5th order stepper for reasonably smooth fields
The newest experimental classes G4BogackiShampine45 or G4TsitourasRK45 implement some of the most
efficient fifth order methods in the literature, but require an additional derivative (field evaluation) per step.:
fStepper = new G4BogackiShampine45( fEquation, nvar );
// Alternative 4/5th order stepper with 8 stages (evaluations).
If there are particularly challenging accuracy demands (better than 1e-7) it may be worth to investigate higher order
steppers. Alternatively, if the field is known to have specific properties, lower or higher order steppers can be used to
obtain the results of the necessary accuracy using fewer computing cycles.
Sometimes the field changes greatly over short distances, and is estimated in ways that do not ensure that its derivatives
are smooth. These can present a challenge for fourth or fifth order Runge-Kutta methods.
What matters is the variation of the field in geometrical regions in which a large fraction of particles are tracked. In
particular, if the field is calculated from a field map and it varies significantly and in a non-smooth way over short
distances in important regions, it is suggested to investigate a lower order stepper.
Steppers of reduced order are also suitable when lower accuracy is required, such as errors of order 10-3 . Such accuracy
could be suitable for the least important tracks, such as low energy electrons near the end of their trajectory (but still
inside material.)
Steppers of reduced order require fewer derivative evaluations per step. The choice of lower order steppers includes
the third order embedded stepper G4BogackiShampine23, which provides a direct error estimate.:
fStepper = new G4BogackiShampine23( fEquation, nvar );
// 3rd order embbedded stepper
// Suitable for lower accuracy needs (<~ 10^-3) and/or 'rough' fields
Older type steppers, which do not provide a direct error estimate, offer an alternative for the roughest fields. ( Note:
these methods estimate the error in a step by subdividing it into two smaller steps and using the difference between
the new estimate and the estimate for the whole step as the estimated error. )
The recommended ones are the fourth order G4ClassicalRK4, which was the default in releases of GEANT4 up to
10.3, and is very robust:
fStepper = new ClassicalRK4( fEquation, nvar );
// 4th order, the old default - a robust alternative
the third order stepper G4SimpleHeum, and the second order steppers G4ImplicitEuler and
G4SimpleRunge.:
fStepper = new G4SimpleHeum( fEquation, nvar );
// 3rd order robust alternative for low accuracy and/or rought fields
A first order stepper is not recommended, but may be used only for the roughest fields, as a cross check for other
higher performance methods.
For somewhat smooth fields (intermediate), the choice between a fifth order stepper (such as the default
G4DormandPrince745):
fStepper = new G4DormandPrince745( fEquation, nvar );
// The recommended stepper, well suited for reasonably smooth fields
embedded third, the older type second or third order steppers, or the established fourth order G4ClassicalRK4 or
should be made by trial and error.
Trying a few different types of steppers for a particular field or application is suggested if maximum performance is a
goal.
The choice of stepper depends on the type of field: magnetic or general. A general field can be an electric or electro-
magnetic field, it can be a magnetic field or a user-defined field (which requires a user-defined equation of motion.)
For a general field all the above steppers are potential alternatives to the recommended / default
G4DormandPrince745.
But specialized steppers for pure magnetic fields are also available. The G4NystromRK4 stepper is a fourth order
method which estimates the integration error in a step directly from the variation of the field at the initial point, the
midpoint and near the endpoint of the step. Thus it requires no additional evaluations (stages.):
G4Mag_UsualEqRhs*
fEquation = new G4Mag_UsualEqRhs(fMagneticField);
fStepper = new G4NystromRK4( fEquation );
Others take into account the fact that a local trajectory in a slowly varying field will not vary significantly from a helix.
Combining this in with a variation the Runge-Kutta method can provide higher accuracy at lower computational cost
when large steps are possible.
fStepper = new G4HelixImplicitEuler( fEquation );
// Note that for magnetic field that do not vary with time,
// the default number of variables suffices.
// or ..
fStepper = new G4HelixExplicitEuler( fEquation );
fStepper = new G4HelixSimpleRunge( fEquation );
A new stepper for propagation in magnetic field is available in release 9.3. Choosing the G4NystromRK4 stepper
provides accuracy near that of G4ClassicalRK4 (4th order) with a significantly reduced cost in field evaluation. Using
a novel analytical expression for estimating the error of a proposed step and the Nystrom reuse of the mid-point field
value, it requires only 2 additional field evaluations per attempted step, in place of 10 field evaluations of ClassicalRK4
(which uses the general midpoint method for estimating the step error.)
G4Mag_UsualEqRhs*
pMagFldEquation = new G4Mag_UsualEqRhs(fMagneticField);
fStepper = new G4NystromRK4( pMagFldEquation );
It is proposed as an alternative stepper in the case of a pure magnetic field. It is not applicable for the simulation of
electric or full electromagnetic or other types of field. For a pure magnetic field, results should be fully compatible
with the results of ClassicalRK4 in nearly all cases. (The only potential exceptions are large steps for tracks with small
momenta - which cannot be integrated well by any RK method except the Helical extended methods.)
You can choose an alternative stepper either when the field manager is constructed or later. At the construction of the
ChordFinder it is an optional argument:
G4ChordFinder( G4MagneticField* itsMagField,
G4double stepMinimum = 1.0e-2 * mm,
G4MagIntegratorStepper* pItsStepper = 0 );
New in GEANT4 10.4 is the ability to use a property of RK methods known as ‘First Same as Last’ or FSAL. The
embedded steppers with this property evaluate the field (and thus the derivative in the equation of motion) at the
endpoint of each step. As a result, for a successful integration step, one in which the estimated error was acceptable,
there is no need to call the derivative evaluation - and thus an evaluation of the field is saved.
These methods can be used for a magnetic field by adding a flag to the constructor of G4ChordFinder:
G4MagneticField * pMagField;
G4double stepMinimum = 0.03 * millimeter;
G4bool useFSALstepper= true;
They must then be coupled to a new type of driver G4FSALIntegrationDriver in order to be used in integration.
( This is a derived class of the new base class for drivers G4VIntegrationDriver.)
auto intgrDriver = new
G4FSALIntegrationDriver<NewFsalStepperType>(stepMinimum,
fsalStepper,
fsalStepper->GetNumberOfVariables() );
This also demonstrates one of a new family of (FSAL) steppers G4RK547FEq1 ( others are G4RK547FEq2 and
G4RK547FEq3) which were created to provide an improved equilibrium in integration. When a integration step fails
due to an error above threshold, for some problems there can be oscillations in step size that cause multiple bounces
between a successful and a failed step. The coefficients of these steppers were optimised to reduce these oscillations,
and thus increase the success rate of steps. Initial tests demonstrated a potential small (1-2.5%) performance advantage.
In order to obtain a particular accuracy in tracking particles through an electromagnetic field, it is necessary to adjust
the parameters of the field propagation module. In the following section, some of these additional parameters are
discussed.
When integration is used to calculate the trajectory, it is necessary to determine an acceptable level of numerical
imprecision in order to get performant simulation with acceptable errors. The parameters in GEANT4 tell the field
module what level of integration inaccuracy is acceptable.
In all quantities which are integrated (position, momentum, energy) there will be errors. Here, however, we focus
on the error in two key quantities: the position and the momentum. (The error in the energy will come from the
momentum integration).
Three parameters exist which are relevant to the integration accuracy. DeltaOneStep is a distance and is roughly
the position error which is acceptable in an integration step. Since many integration steps may be required for a
single physics step, DeltaOneStep should be a fraction of the average physics step size. The next two parameters
impose a further limit on the relative error of the position/momentum inaccuracy. EpsilonMin and EpsilonMax im-
pose a minimum and maximum on this relative error - and take precedence over DeltaOneStep. (Note: if you set
EpsilonMin=EpsilonMax=your-value, then all steps will be made to this relative precision.
Listing 4.13: How to set accuracy parameters for the ‘global’ field of the
setup.
G4FieldManager *globalFieldManager;
globalFieldManager = transportMgr->GetFieldManager();
// Relative accuracy values:
G4double minEps= 1.0e-5; // Minimum & value for largest steps
G4double maxEps= 1.0e-4; // Maximum & value for smallest steps
globalFieldManager->SetMinimumEpsilonStep( minEps );
globalFieldManager->SetMaximumEpsilonStep( maxEps );
globalFieldManager->SetDeltaOneStep( 0.5e-3 * mm ); // 0.5 micrometer
G4cout << "EpsilonStep: set min= " << minEps << " max= " << maxEps << G4endl;
We note that the relevant parameters above limit the inaccuracy in each step. The final inaccuracy due to the full
trajectory will accumulate!
The exact point at which a track crosses a boundary is also calculated with finite accuracy. To limit this inaccuracy, a
parameter called DeltaIntersection is used. This is a maximum for the inaccuracy of a single boundary crossing. Thus
the accuracy of the position of the track after a number of boundary crossings is directly proportional to the number of
boundaries.
An additional method to reduce the number of field evaluations is to utilise the new class G4CachedMagneticField
class. It is applicable only for pure magnetic fields which do not vary with time.
G4MagneticField * pMagField; // Your field - Defined elsewhere
It is possible to create a FieldManager which has different properties for particles of different momenta (or depending
on other parameters of a track). This is useful, for example, in obtaining high accuracy for ‘important’ tracks (e.g.
muons) and accept less accuracy in tracking others (e.g. electrons). To use this, you must create your own field
manager which uses the method
void ConfigureForTrack( const G4Track * );
to configure itself using the parameters of the current track. An example of this will be available in exam-
ples/extended/field05.
The default settings of this module are for problems with the physical size of a typical high energy physics setup,
that is, distances smaller than about one kilometer. A few parameters are necessary to carry this information to the
magnetic field module, and must typically be rescaled for problems of vastly different sizes in order to get reasonable
performance and robustness. Two of these parameters are the maximum acceptable step and the minimum step size.
The maximum acceptable step should be set to a distance larger than the biggest reasonable step. If the apparatus in
a setup has a diameter of two meters, a likely maximum acceptable steplength would be 10 meters. A particle could
then take large spiral steps, but would not attempt to take, for example, a 1000-meter-long step in the case of a very
low-density material. Similarly, for problems of a planetary scale, such as the earth with its radius of roughly 6400
km, a maximum acceptable steplength of a few times this value would be reasonable.
An upper limit for the size of a step is a parameter of G4PropagatorInField, and can be set by calling its
SetLargestAcceptableStep method.
The minimum step size is used during integration to limit the amount of work in difficult cases. It is possible that
strong fields or integration problems can force the integrator to try very small steps; this parameter stops them from
becoming unnecessarily small.
Trial steps smaller than this parameter will be treated with less accuracy, and may even be ignored, depending on the
situation.
The minimum step size is a parameter of the MagInt_Driver, but can be set in the constructor of G4ChordFinder, as in
the source listing above.
Known Issues
Currently it is computationally expensive to change the miss distance to very small values, as it causes tracks to be
limited to curved sections whose ‘bend’ is smaller than this value. (The bend is the distance of the mid-point from the
chord between endpoints.) For tracks with small curvature (typically low momentum particles in strong fields) this
can cause a large number of steps
• even in areas where there are no volumes to intersect (something that is expected to be addressed in future
development, in which the safety will be utilized to partially alleviate this limitation)
• especially in a region near a volume boundary (in which case it is necessary in order to discover whether a track
might intersect a volume for only a short distance.)
Requiring such precision at the intersection is clearly expensive, and new development would be necessary to minimize
the expense.
By contrast, changing the intersection parameter is less computationally expensive. It causes further calculation for
only a fraction of the steps, in particular those that intersect a volume boundary.
The effects of a particle’s motion on the precession of its spin angular momentum in slowly varying external fields are
simulated. The relativistic equation of motion for spin is known as the BMT equation. The equation demonstrates a
remarkable property; in a purely magnetic field, in vacuum, and neglecting small anomalous magnetic moments, the
particle’s spin precesses in such a manner that the longitudinal polarization remains a constant, whatever the motion
of the particle. But when the particle interacts with electric fields of the medium and multiple scatters, the spin, which
is related to the particle’s magnetic moment, does not participate, and the need thus arises to propagate it independent
of the momentum vector. In the case of a polarized muon beam, for example, it is important to predict the muon’s spin
direction at decay-time in order to simulate the decay electron (Michel) distribution correctly.
In order to track the spin of a particle in a magnetic field, you need to code the following:
1. in your DetectorConstruction
#include "G4Mag_SpinEqRhs.hh"
2. in your PrimaryGenerator
particleGun->SetParticlePolarization(G4ThreeVector p)
for example:
particleGun->
SetParticlePolarization(-(particleGun->GetParticleMomentumDirection()));
// or
particleGun->
SetParticlePolarization(particleGun->GetParticleMomentumDirection()
.cross(G4ThreeVector(0.,1.,0.)));
sets the muon anomaly by default, the class also comes with the public method:
inline void SetAnomaly(G4double a) { anomaly = a; }
with which you can set the magnetic anomaly to any value you require.
The code has been rewritten (in Release 9.5) such that field tracking of the spin can now be done for charged and
neutral particles with a magnetic moment, for example spin tracking of ultra cold neutrons. This requires the user
to set EnableUseMagneticMoment, a method of the G4Transportation process. The force resulting from
the term, MUSDOTNABLAB, is not yet implemented in GEANT4 (for example, simulated trajectory of a neutral
hydrogen atom trapped by its magnetic moment in a gradient B-field.)
4.4 Hits
4.4.1 Hit
A hit is a snapshot of the physical interaction of a track in the sensitive region of a detector. In it you can store
information associated with a G4Step object. This information can be
• the position and time of the step,
• the momentum and energy of the track,
• the energy deposition of the step,
• geometrical information,
or any combination of the above.
G4VHit
G4VHit is an abstract base class which represents a hit. You must inherit this base class and derive your own concrete
hit class(es). The member data of your concrete hit class can be, and should be, your choice.
As with G4THitsCollection, authors of subclasses must declare templated G4Allocators for their class. They
must also implement operator new() and operator delete() which use these allocators.
G4VHit has two virtual methods, Draw() and Print(). To draw or print out your concrete hits, these methods
should be implemented. How to define the drawing method is described in Polylines, Markers and Text.
G4THitsCollection
G4VHit is an abstract class from which you derive your own concrete classes. During the processing of a given
event, represented by a G4Event object, many objects of the hit class will be produced, collected and associ-
ated with the event. Therefore, for each concrete hit class you must also prepare a concrete class derived from
G4VHitsCollection, an abstract class which represents a vector collection of user defined hits.
G4THitsCollection is a template class derived from G4VHitsCollection, and the concrete hit collection
class of a particular G4VHit concrete class can be instantiated from this template class. Each object of a hit collection
must have a unique name for each event.
G4Event has a G4HCofThisEvent class object, that is a container class of collections of hits. Hit collections are
stored by their pointers, whose type is that of the base class.
#ifndef B2TrackerHit_h
#define B2TrackerHit_h 1
#include "G4VHit.hh"
#include "G4THitsCollection.hh"
#include "G4Allocator.hh"
#include "G4ThreeVector.hh"
private:
G4double fEdep;
G4ThreeVector pos;
public:
inline void SetEdep(G4double edep)
{ fEdep = edep; }
inline G4double GetEdep() const
{ return fEdep; }
inline void SetPos(G4ThreeVector xyz)
{ fPos = xyz; }
inline G4ThreeVector GetPos() const
{ return fPos; }
};
#endif
#include "B2TrackerHit.hh"
G4Allocator is a class for fast allocation of objects to the heap through the paging mechanism. For details of
G4Allocator, refer to General management classes. Use of G4Allocator is not mandatory, but it is recom-
mended, especially for users who are not familiar with the C++ memory allocation mechanism or alternative tools of
memory allocation. On the other hand, note that G4Allocator is to be used only for the concrete class that is not
used as a base class of any other classes. For example, do not use the G4Trajectory class as a base class for a
customized trajectory class, since G4Trajectory uses G4Allocator.
G4THitsMap
G4THitsMap is an alternative to G4THitsCollection. G4THitsMap does not demand G4VHit, but in-
stead any variable which can be mapped with an integer key. Typically the key is a copy number of the volume,
and the mapped value could for example be a double, such as the energy deposition in a volume. G4THitsMap
is convenient for applications which do not need to output event-by-event data but instead just accumulate them.
All the G4VPrimitiveScorer classes discussed in G4MultiFunctionalDetector and G4VPrimitiveScorer use
G4THitsMap.
G4THitsMap is derived from the G4VHitsCollection abstract base class and all objects of this class are also
stored in G4HCofThisEvent at the end of an event. How to access a G4THitsMap object is discussed in the
following section (G4MultiFunctionalDetector and G4VPrimitiveScorer).
G4VSensitiveDetector
G4VSensitiveDetector is an abstract base class which represents a detector. The principal mandate of
a sensitive detector is the construction of hit objects using information from steps along a particle track. The
ProcessHits() method of G4VSensitiveDetector performs this task using G4Step objects as input. In
the case of a “Readout” geometry, objects of the G4TouchableHistory class may be used as an optional input.
Your concrete detector class should be instantiated with the unique name of your detector. The name can be associated
with one or more global names with “/” as a delimiter for categorizing your detectors. For example
myEMcal = new MyEMcal("/myDet/myCal/myEMcal");
where myEMcal is the name of your detector. The detector must be constructed in
G4VUserDetectorConstruction::ConstructSDandField() method. It must be assigned to one
or more G4LogicalVolume objects to set the sensitivity of these volumes. Such assignment must be made in the
same G4VUserDetectorConstruction::ConstructSDandField() method. The pointer should also be
registered to G4SDManager, as described in G4SDManager.
G4VSensitiveDetector has three major virtual methods.
ProcessHits() This method is invoked by G4SteppingManager when a step is composed in the
G4LogicalVolume which has the pointer to this sensitive detector. The first argument of this method is
a G4Step object of the current step. The second argument is a G4TouchableHistory object for the
Readout geometry described in the next section. The second argument is NULL if Readout geometry
is not assigned to this sensitive detector. In this method, one or more G4VHit objects should be constructed if
the current step is meaningful for your detector.
Initialize() This method is invoked at the beginning of each event. The argument of this method is an object
of the G4HCofThisEvent class. Hit collections, where hits produced in this particular event are stored,
can be associated with the G4HCofThisEvent object in this method. The hit collections associated with
the G4HCofThisEvent object during this method can be used for during the event processing
digitization.
EndOfEvent() This method is invoked at the end of each event. The argument of this method is the same object as
the previous method. Hit collections occasionally created in your sensitive detector can be associated with the
G4HCofThisEvent object.
4.4.3 G4SDManager
The user interface commands activate and inactivate are available to control your sensitive detectors. For
example:
/hits/activate detector_name
/hits/inactivate detector_name
that must be unique among primitive scorers registered in a G4MultiFunctionalDetector. Please note that a
primitive scorer object must not be shared by more than one G4MultiFunctionalDetector object.
As mentioned in Hit, each G4VPrimitiveScorer generates one G4THitsMap object per event. The name of
the map object is the same as the name of the primitive scorer. Each of the concrete primitive scorers listed in
Concrete classes of G4VPrimitiveScorer generates a G4THitsMap<G4double> that maps a G4double value
to its key integer number. By default, the key is taken as the copy number of the G4LogicalVolume to which
G4MultiFunctionalDetector is assigned. In case the logical volume is uniquely placed in its mother volume
and the mother is replicated, the copy number of its mother volume can be taken by setting the second argument of
the G4VPrimitiveScorer constructor, “depth” to 1, i.e. one level up. Furthermore, in case the key must consider
more than one copy number of a different geometry hierarchy, the user can derive his/her own primitive scorer from
the provided concrete class and implement the GetIndex(G4Step*) virtual method to return the unique key.
Listing 4.15 shows an example of primitive sensitivity class definitions.
G4SDParticleFilter* gammaFilter =
new G4SDParticleFilter(filterName="gammaFilter",particleName="gamma");
G4SDParticleFilter* electronFilter =
new G4SDParticleFilter(filterName="electronFilter",particleName="e-");
G4SDParticleFilter* positronFilter =
new G4SDParticleFilter(filterName="positronFilter",particleName="e+");
G4SDParticleFilter* epFilter = new G4SDParticleFilter(filterName="epFilter");
epFilter->add(particleName="e-");
epFilter->add(particleName="e+");
for(G4int i=0;i<3;i++)
{
for(G4int j=0;j<2;j++)
{
// Loop counter j = 0 : absorber
// = 1 : gap
G4String detName = fCalName[i];
if(j==0)
{ detName += "_abs"; }
else
{ detName += "_gap"; }
G4MultiFunctionalDetector* det = new G4MultiFunctionalDetector(detName);
// The second argument in each primitive means the "level" of geometrical hierarchy,
// the copy number of that level is used as the key of the G4THitsMap.
// For absorber (j = 0), the copy number of its own physical volume is used.
// For gap (j = 1), the copy number of its mother physical volume is used, since there
// is only one physical volume of gap is placed with respect to its mother.
G4VPrimitiveScorer* primitive;
primitive = new G4PSEnergyDeposit("eDep",j);
det->RegisterPrimitive(primitive);
primitive = new G4PSNofSecondary("nGamma",j);
primitive->SetFilter(gammaFilter);
det->RegisterPrimitive(primitive);
primitive = new G4PSNofSecondary("nElectron",j);
primitive->SetFilter(electronFilter);
det->RegisterPrimitive(primitive);
primitive = new G4PSNofSecondary("nPositron",j);
primitive->SetFilter(positronFilter);
det->RegisterPrimitive(primitive);
primitive = new G4PSMinKinEAtGeneration("minEkinGamma",j);
(continues on next page)
G4SDManager::GetSDMpointer()->AddNewDetector(det);
if(j==0)
{ layerLogical[i]->SetSensitiveDetector(det); }
else
{ gapLogical[i]->SetSensitiveDetector(det); }
}
}
}
Each G4THitsMap object can be accessed from G4HCofThisEvent with a unique collection ID num-
ber. This ID number can be obtained from G4SDManager::GetCollectionID() with a name of
G4MultiFunctionalDetector and G4VPrimitiveScorer connected with a slush (“/”). G4THitsMap
has a [] operator taking the key value as an argument and returning the pointer of the value. Please note that the []
operator returns the pointer of the value. If you get zero from the [] operator, it does not mean the value is zero, but
that the provided key does not exist. The value itself is accessible with an asterisk (“*”). It is advised to check the va-
lidity of the returned pointer before accessing the value. G4THitsMap also has a += operator in order to accumulate
event data into run data. Listing 4.16 shows the use of G4THitsMap.
#include "G4RunManager.hh"
#include "G4Event.hh"
#include "G4SDManager.hh"
#include "G4HCofThisEvent.hh"
#include "G4THitsMap.hh"
#include "G4SystemOfUnits.hh"
//....oooOO0OOooo........oooOO0OOooo........oooOO0OOooo........oooOO0OOooo......
B3bRun::B3bRun()
: G4Run(),
fCollID_cryst(-1),
fCollID_patient(-1),
fPrintModulo(10000),
fGoodEvents(0),
fSumDose(0.),
fStatDose()
{ }
//....oooOO0OOooo........oooOO0OOooo........oooOO0OOooo........oooOO0OOooo......
B3bRun::~B3bRun()
{ }
//....oooOO0OOooo........oooOO0OOooo........oooOO0OOooo........oooOO0OOooo......
(continues on next page)
if ( fCollID_patient < 0 ) {
fCollID_patient
= G4SDManager::GetSDMpointer()->GetCollectionID("patient/dose");
//G4cout << " fCollID_patient: " << fCollID_patient << G4endl;
}
if (evtNb%fPrintModulo == 0) {
G4cout << G4endl << "---> end of event: " << evtNb << G4endl;
}
//Hits collections
//
G4HCofThisEvent* HCE = event->GetHCofThisEvent();
if(!HCE) return;
G4THitsMap<G4double>* evtMap =
static_cast<G4THitsMap<G4double>*>(HCE->GetHC(fCollID_cryst));
std::map<G4int,G4double*>::iterator itr;
for (itr = evtMap->GetMap()->begin(); itr != evtMap->GetMap()->end(); itr++) {
G4double edep = *(itr->second);
if (edep > eThreshold) nbOfFired++;
///G4int copyNb = (itr->first);
///G4cout << G4endl << " cryst" << copyNb << ": " << edep/keV << " keV ";
}
if (nbOfFired == 2) fGoodEvents++;
evtMap = static_cast<G4THitsMap<G4double>*>(HCE->GetHC(fCollID_patient));
G4Run::RecordEvent(event);
}
// ...
//....oooOO0OOooo........oooOO0OOooo........oooOO0OOooo........oooOO0OOooo......
With GEANT4 version 8.0, several concrete primitive scorer classes are provided, all of which are derived from the
G4VPrimitiveScorer abstract base class and which are to be registered to G4MultiFunctionalDetector.
Each of them contains one G4THitsMap object and scores a simple double value for each key.
G4PSTrackLength The track length is defined as the sum of step lengths of the particles inside the cell. By
default, the track weight is not taken into account, but could be used as a multiplier of each step length if the
Weighted() method of this class object is invoked.
G4PSPassageTrackLength The passage track length is the same as the track length in G4PSTrackLength,
except that only tracks which pass through the volume are taken into account. It means newly-generated or
stopped tracks inside the cell are excluded from the calculation. By default, the track weight is not taken into
account, but could be used as a multiplier of each step length if the Weighted() method of this class object
is invoked.
G4PSEnergyDeposit This scorer stores a sum of particles’ energy deposits at each step in the cell. The particle
weight is multiplied at each step.
G4PSDoseDeposit In some cases, dose is a more convenient way to evaluate the effect of energy deposit in a cell
than simple deposited energy. The dose deposit is defined by the sum of energy deposits at each step in a cell
divided by the mass of the cell. The mass is calculated from the density and volume of the cell taken from the
methods of G4VSolid and G4LogicalVolume. The particle weight is multiplied at each step.
There are two different definitions of a particle’s flow for a given geometry. One is a current and the other is a flux.
In our scorers, the current is simply defined as the number of particles (with the particle’s weight) at a certain surface
or volume, while the flux takes the particle’s injection angle to the geometry into account. The current and flux are
usually defined at a surface, but volume current and volume flux are also provided.
G4PSFlatSurfaceCurrent Flat surface current is a surface based scorer. The present implementation is limited
to scoring only at the -Z surface of a G4Box solid. The quantity is defined by the number of tracks that
reach the surface. The user must choose a direction of the particle to be scored. The choices are fCurrent_In,
fCurrent_Out, or fCurrent_InOut, one of which must be entered as the second argument of the constructor. Here,
fCurrent_In scores incoming particles to the cell, while fCurrent_Out scores only outgoing particles from the
cell. fCurrent_InOut scores both directions. The current is multiplied by particle weight and is normalized for a
unit area.
G4PSSphereSurfaceCurrent Sphere surface current is a surface based scorer, and similar to the
G4PSFlatSurfaceCurrent. The only difference is that the surface is defined at the inner surface of a G4Sphere
solid.
G4PSPassageCurrent Passage current is a volume-based scorer. The current is defined by the number of tracks
that pass through the volume. A particle weight is applied at the exit point. A passage current is defined for a
volume.
G4PSFlatSurfaceFlux Flat surface flux is a surface based flux scorer. The surface flux is defined by the number
of tracks that reach the surface. The expression of surface flux is given by the sum of W/cos(t)/A, where W,
t and A represent particle weight, injection angle of particle with respect to the surface normal, and area of
the surface. The user must enter one of the particle directions, fFlux_In, fFlux_Out, or fFlux_InOut in the
constructor. Here, fFlux_In scores incoming particles to the cell, while fFlux_Out scores outgoing particles
from the cell. fFlux_InOut scores both directions.
G4PSCellFlux Cell flux is a volume based flux scorer. The cell flux is defined by a track length (L) of the particle
inside a volume divided by the volume (V) of this cell. The track length is calculated by a sum of the step
lengths in the cell. The expression for cell flux is given by the sum of (W*L)/V, where W is a particle weight,
and is multiplied by the track length at each step.
G4PSPassageCellFlux Passage cell flux is a volume based scorer similar to G4PSCellFlux. The only differ-
ence is that tracks which pass through a cell are taken into account. It means generated or stopped tracks inside
the volume are excluded from the calculation.
Other scorers
G4PSMinKinEAtGeneration This scorer records the minimum kinetic energy of secondary particles at their
production point in the volume in an event. This primitive scorer does not integrate the quantity, but records the
minimum quantity.
G4PSNofSecondary This class scores the number of secondary particles generated in the volume. The weight of
the secondary track is taken into account.
G4PSNofStep This class scores the number of steps in the cell. A particle weight is not applied.
G4PSCellCharge This class scored the total charge of particles which has stopped in the volume.
G4VSDFilter is an abstract class that represents a track filter to be associated with G4VSensitiveDetector
or G4VPrimitiveScorer. It defines a virtual method
G4bool Accept(const G4Step*)
that should return true if this particular step should be scored by the G4VSensitiveDetector or
G4VPrimitiveScorer.
While the user can implement his/her own filter class, GEANT4 version 8.0 provides the following concrete filter
classes:
G4SDChargedFilter All charged particles are accepted.
G4SDNeutralFilter All neutral particles are accepted.
G4SDParticleFilter Particle species which are registered to this filter object by Add("particle_name") are
accepted. More than one species can be registered.
G4SDKineticEnergyFilter A track with kinetic energy greater than or equal to EKmin and smaller than EKmin is
accepted. EKmin and EKmax should be defined as arguments of the constructor. The default values of EKmin
and EKmax are zero and DBL_MAX.
G4SDParticleWithEnergyFilter Combination of G4SDParticleFilter and
G4SDParticleWithEnergyFilter.
The use of the G4SDParticleFilter class is demonstrated in Listing 4.15, where filters which accept gamma,
electron, positron and electron/positron are defined.
From GEANT4 Version 10.3 it is possible to attach multiple sensitive detectors to a single geometrical element.
This is achieved via the use of a special proxy class, to which multiple child sensitive detectors are attached:
G4MultiSensitiveDetector. The kernel still sees a single sensitive detector associated to any given logical-
volume, but the proxy will dispatch the calls from kernel to all the attached child sensitive detectors.
When using the G4VUserDetectorConstruction::SetSensitiveDetector(...) utility method the
handling of multiple sensitive detectors is done automatically. Multiple calls to the method passing the same logical
volume will trigger the creation and setup of an instance of G4MultiSensitiveDetector.
For more complex use cases it may be necessary to manually instantiate and setup an instance of
G4MultiSensitiveDetector. For this advanced use case you can refer to the implementation
of the G4VUserDetectorConstruction::SetSensitiveDetector(G4LogicalVolume* logVol,
G4VSensitiveDetector* aSD) utility method.
4.4.8 Utilities
Command-based scoring functionality offers the user a possibility to define a scoring-mesh and various scorers for
commonly-used physics quantities such as dose, flux, etc. via UI commands.
Due to small performance overhead, it does not come by default. To use this functionality, G4ScoringManager
has to be activated after the instantiation of G4RunManager in the main() function, see Listing 4.18. This will create
the UI commands in /score directory.
An example of a macro creating a scoring mesh of box type with two scorers and a filter is given below:
# Define scoring mesh
/score/create/boxMesh boxMesh_1
/score/mesh/boxSize 100. 100. 100. cm
/score/mesh/nBin 30 30 30
# Define a filter
/score/filter/charged
# Close mesh
/score/close
G4ScoringManager provides also a default score writer which dumps every entry of one quantity of a mesh for
all quantities of the mesh one by one in CSV format. To alternate the file format the user can implement his/her own
score writer deriving from G4VUserScoreWriter base class and set it to G4ScoringManager. To demonstrate
this, RE03UserScoreWriter is included in the extended RE03 example in the runAndEvent category.
Since Geant4 10.5, it is also possible to save the scorers hits using Geant4 analysis tools. This functionality is assured
by the G4VScoreNtupleWriter interface.
This feature is demonstrated in the B3aScoreWriter and B4dScoreWriter extended examples in the analysis category.
Both examples are completely based on the basic B3a and B4d examples respectively. Storing hits is activated in the
main () function with instantiating G4ScoreNtupleWriter.
The G4ScoreNtupleWriter and G4ScoreNtupleWriterMessenger classses are provided in the
‘scoreWriter’ directory in each example. These classes are fully independent from the example classes and they
can be reused in any Geant4 application.
The Geant4 UI command defined in G4ScoreNtupleWriterMessenger can be used to choose the output file
type, the file name and the level of verbosity:
/score/writerType root
/score/fileName name
/score/writerVerbose 1
4.5 Digitization
4.5.1 Digi
A hit is created by a sensitive detector when a step goes through it. Thus, the sensitive detector is associated to the
corresponding G4LogicalVolume object(s). On the other hand, a digit is created using information of hits and/or
other digits by a digitizer module. The digitizer module is not associated with any volume, and you have to implicitly
invoke the Digitize() method of your concrete G4VDigitizerModule class.
Typical usages of digitizer module include:
• simulate ADC and/or TDC
• simulate readout scheme
• generate raw data
• simulate trigger logics
• simulate pile up
G4VDigi
G4VDigi is an abstract base class which represents a digit. You have to inherit this base class and derive your own
concrete digit class(es). The member data of your concrete digit class should be defined by yourself. G4VDigi has
two virtual methods, Draw() and Print().
As with G4VHit, authors of subclasses must declare templated G4Allocators for their digit class. They must also
implement operator new() and operator delete() which use these allocators.
G4TDigiCollection
G4TDigiCollection is a template class for digits collections, which is derived from the abstract base class
G4VDigiCollection. G4Event has a G4DCofThisEvent object, which is a container class of collec-
tions of digits. The usages of G4VDigi and G4TDigiCollection are almost the same as G4VHit and
G4THitsCollection, respectively, explained in the previous section.
As with G4THitsCollection, authors of subclasses must declare templated G4Allocators for their collection
class. They must also implement operator new() and operator delete() which use these allocators.
G4VDigitizerModule
G4VDigitizerModule is an abstract base class which represents a digitizer module. It has a pure virtual method,
Digitize(). A concrete digitizer module must have an implementation of this virtual method. The GEANT4 kernel
classes do not have a “built-in” invocation to the Digitize() method. You have to implement your code to invoke
this method of your digitizer module.
In the Digitize() method, you construct your G4VDigi concrete class objects and store them to
your G4TDigiCollection concrete class object(s). Your collection(s) should be associated with the
G4DCofThisEvent object.
G4DigiManager
G4DigiManager is the singleton manager class of the digitizer modules. All of your concrete digitizer modules
should be registered to G4DigiManager with their unique names.
G4DigiManager * fDM = G4DigiManager::GetDMpointer();
MyDigitizer * myDM = new MyDigitizer( "/myDet/myCal/myEMdigiMod" );
fDM->AddNewModule(myDM);
Your concrete digitizer module can be accessed from your code using the unique module name.
G4DigiManager * fDM = G4DigiManager::GetDMpointer();
MyDigitizer * myDM = fDM->FindDigitizerModule( "/myDet/myCal/myEMdigiMod" );
myDM->Digitize();
Also, G4DigiManager has a Digitize() method which takes the unique module name.
G4DigiManager * fDM = G4DigiManager::GetDMpointer();
MyDigitizer * myDM = fDM->Digitize( "/myDet/myCal/myEMdigiMod" );
G4DigiManager has the following methods to access to the hits or digi collections of the currently processing event
or of previous events.
First, you have to get the collection ID number of the hits or digits collection.
G4DigiManager * fDM = G4DigiManager::GetDMpointer();
G4int myHitsCollID = fDM->GetHitsCollectionID( "hits_collection_name" );
G4int myDigiCollID = fDM->GetDigiCollectionID( "digi_collection_name" );
Then, you can get the pointer to your concrete G4THitsCollection object or G4TDigiCollection object of
the currently processing event.
In case you want to access to the hits or digits collection of previous events, add the second argument.
MyHitsCollection * HC = fDM->GetHitsCollection( myHitsCollID, n );
MyDigiCollection * DC = fDM->GetDigiCollection( myDigiCollID, n );
where, n indicates the hits or digits collection of the nth previous event.
The current versions of hadronic string models (FTF & QGS) produce hadronic showers with (a few percent) higher
energy response than the stable released (as used in LHC productions) version of these models. Test-beam and collider
data seem to indicate lower energy response in hadronic showers than currently provided by Geant4 simulations. This
is the main reason why the development versions of the string models were not released in the two recent public
versions of Geant4 (10.3 and 10.4), in spite of providing an overall better description of thin-target data. We think
that the main reason why the simulation overshoots the data regarding the energy response of hadronic showers is
in fact due to an incorrect treatment of the quenching of the signal - the conversion from the energy deposited by
ionizing particles in a sensitive detector to the observed electronic (readout) signal is not linear, with proportionally
less signal for higher densities of deposited energy, for both scintillation light and ionization electron-hole/ion pairs.
This quenching effect is traditionally described by the simple, phenomenological “law” suggested many years ago by
Birks. Its main parameter is fitted from experimental data under the assumption that the observed energy is related
to the incident particle energy loss. This does not consider delta-ray production which will result in lower energy
deposit (density). As a result of this approximation, the density of deposited energy is overestimated, which implies
that the Birks coefficient, as fitted from the experimental data, gets underestimated. Using this Birks coefficient in
simulations where delta rays are emitted (and considered discretely), as in practice for all simulations of high-energy
experiments, results in underestimating the quenching effect, and therefore predicting larger signals than in reality.
The correct Birks coefficient to be used in a simulation depends on the production threshold which is chosen in the
simulation, with lower thresholds producing a larger delta-ray component and therefore reducing the density of the
energy deposition along the ionizing track, and hence requiring an even higher Birks coefficient. We suggest the
following pragmatic approach to incorporating Birks quenching: The calibration of a calorimeter - i.e. the conversion
from the electronic signal produced by a shower and the energy of the primary particle that initiates the shower - is
typically done for test beam data with an electron of a given energy, e.g. 20 GeV. We suggest to add an extra step to this
calibration, in which the Birks coefficient used in the simulation is tuned to reproduce the ratio of the energy response
of a hadron (typically a charged pion or a proton) and the energy response of an electron of the same energy (this
ratio is indicated as “h/e”). It is natural to consider the same beam energy used for the calibration, e.g. 20 GeV, but in
principle it could be a different one; note also that the tuning of the Birks coefficient is idependent from the calibration
constant, given that the latter cancels out from the ratio h/e. Of course, with the tuning of the Birks coefficient as
suggested above we compensate also for some of the intrinsic inaccuracies in the modelling of hadronic interactions;
however, this effect is valid uniquely at the energy where the tuning is done (e.g. 20 GeV), and limited only to the
energy response. For other observables (energy resolution, longitudinal and lateral shower shapes), and for all other
energies, this procedure has a minimal impact, i.e. should not reduce the prediction-power of the simulation.
When a usual (transient) object is created in C++, the object is placed onto the application heap and it ceases to exist
when the application terminates. Persistent objects, on the other hand, live beyond the termination of the application
process and may then be accessed by other processes (in some cases, by processes on other machines).
C++ does not have, as an intrinsic part of the language, the ability to store and retrieve persistent objects. GEANT4
provides an abstract framework for persistency of hits, digits and events.
Two examples demonstrating an implementation of object persistency using one of the tools accessible through the
available interface, is provided in examples/extended/persistency.
Object persistency of GEANT4 objects is also possible by using the Root-I/O features through Root (since release
v6.04/08).
The basic steps that one needs to do in order to use Root-I/O for arbitrary C++ classes is:
1. Generate the dictionary for the given classes from Root (this usually is done by adding the appropriate command
to the makefile)
2. Add initialization of Root-I/O and loading of the generated dictionary for the given classes in the appropriate
part of the code
3. Whenever the objects to be persistified are available, call the WriteObject method of TFile with the pointer
to the appropriate object as argument (usually it is some sort of container, like std::vector containing the
collection of objects to be persistified)
The two examples (P01 and P02) provided in examples/extended/persistency demonstrate how to per-
form object persistency using the Root-I/O mechanism for storing hits and geometry description.
Occasionally, it is not straightforward to define geometries for sensitive detectors, importance geometries or en-
velopes for shower parameterization to be coherently assigned to volumes in the tracking (mass) geometry. The
parallel navigation functionality introduced since release 8.2 of GEANT4, allows the user to define more than one
world simultaneously. The G4CoupledTransportation process will see all worlds simultaneously; steps will
be limited by every boundaries of the mass and parallel geometries. G4Transportation is automatically replaced
G4CoupledTransportation.
In a parallel world, the user can define volumes in arbitrary manner with sensitivity, regions, shower parameterization
setups, and/or importance weight for biasing. Volumes in different worlds may overlap.
Any kind of G4VSensitiveDetector object can be defined in volumes in a parallel world, exactly at the same
manner for the mass geometry. G4Step object given as an argument of ProcessHit() method contains geomet-
rical information of the associated world.
Here are restrictions to be considered for the parallel geometry:
• Production thresholds and EM field are used only from the mass geometry. Even if such physical quantities are
defined in a parallel world, they do not affect to the simulation.
• Although all worlds will be comprehensively taken care by the G4CoupledTransportation process for
the navigation, each parallel world must have its own unique object of G4ParallelWorldProcess process.
• Volumes in a parallel world may have materials. Such materials overwrite the materials defined in the mass
geometry if the "layered mass geometry" switch of the G4ParallelWorldProcess constructor is
set.
A parallel world should be defined in the Construct() virtual method of the user’s class derived from the abstract
base class G4VUserParallelWorld. If needed, sensitive detectors must be defined in the ConstructSD()
method of the same derived class. Please note that EM field cannot be defined in a parallel world.
#include "globals.hh"
#include "G4VUserParallelWorld.hh"
public:
virtual void Construct();
virtual void ConstructSD();
};
#endif
A parallel world must have its unique name, which should be set to the G4VUserParallelWorld base class as an
argument of the base class constructor.
The world physical volume of the parallel world is provided by the G4RunManager as a clone of the mass ge-
ometry. In the Construct() virtual method of the user’s class, the pointer to this cloned world physical volume
is available through the GetWorld() method defined in the base class. The user should fill the volumes in the
parallel world by using this provided world volume. For a logical volume in a parallel world, the material pointer
can be nullptr. Even if specified a valid material pointer, unless "layered mass geometry" switch of the
G4ParallelWorldProcess constructor is set, it will not be taken into account by any physics process.
MyParallelWorld::MyParallelWorld(G4String worldName)
:G4VUserParallelWorld(worldName)
{;}
MyParallelWorld::~MyParallelWorld()
{;}
void MyParallelWorld::Construct()
{
G4VPhysicalVolume* ghostWorld = GetWorld();
G4LogicalVolume* worldLogical = ghostWorld->GetLogicalVolume();
In case the user needs to define more than one parallel worlds, each of them must be implemented through
its dedicated class. Each parallel world should be registered to the mass geometry class using the method
RegisterParallelWorld() available through the class G4VUserDetectorConstruction. The regis-
tration must be done before the mass world is registered to the G4RunManager.
// mass world
//
MyDetectorConstruction* massWorld = new MyDetectorConstruction;
// parallel world
//
G4String paraWorldName = "ParallelWorld";
massWorld->RegisterParallelWorld(new MyParallelWorld(paraWorldName));
// physics list
//
G4VModularPhysicsList* physicsList = new FTFP_BERT;
physicsList->RegisterPhysics(new G4ParallelWorldPhysics(paraWorldName));
runManager->SetUserInitialization(physicsList);
If "layered mass geometry" switch of the G4ParallelWorldProcess constructor is set, that parallel
world is conceptually layered on top of the mass geometry. If more than one parallel worlds are defined, later-defined
world comes on top of others. A track will see the material of the top layer, if it is nullptr, then one layer beneath.
Thus, user has to make sure volumes in a parallel world should have nullptr as their materials except for volumes
he/she really wants to overwrite.
// mass world
//
MyDetectorConstruction* massWorld = new MyDetectorConstruction;
// parallel world
//
G4String paraWorldName = "ParallelWorld";
massWorld->RegisterParallelWorld(new MyParallelWorld(paraWorldName));
// physics list
//
G4VModularPhysicsList* physicsList = new FTFP_BERT;
physicsList->RegisterPhysics(new G4ParallelWorldPhysics(paraWorldName,true));
runManager->SetUserInitialization(physicsList);
For an information to advanced users, instead of using G4ParallelWorldPhysics physics constructor, once can
define G4ParallelWorldProcess in his/her physics list and assign it only to some selected kind of particle types.
In this case, this parallel world will be seen only by these kinds of particles.
4.9.1 Introduction
Command-based scoring in GEANT4 utilizes parallel navigation in a parallel world volume as described in the previous
sections. Through interactive commands, the user can define :
• A parallel world for scoring and three-dimensional mesh in it
• Arbitrary number of physics quantities to be scored and filters
After scoring (i.e. a run), the user can visualize the score and dump scores into a file. All available UI commands are
listed in List of built-in commands.
Command-based scoring is an optional functionality and the user has to explicitly define its use in the main(). To do
this, the method G4ScoringManager::GetScoringManager() must be invoked right after the instantiation
of G4RunManager. The scoring manager is a singleton object, and the pointer accessed above should not be deleted
by the user.
...
}
Once scores are filled, it is possible to visualize the scores. The score is drawn on top of the mass geometry with the
current visualization settings.
Scored data can be visualized using the commands /score/drawProjection and /score/drawColumn. For
details, see examples/extended/runAndEvent/RE03.
By default, entries are linearly mapped to colors (gray - blue - green - red). This color mapping is imple-
mented in G4DefaultLinearColorMap class, and registered to G4ScoringManager with the color map name
"defaultLinearColorMap". The user may alternate color map by implementing a customised color map class
derived from G4VScoreColorMap and register it to G4ScoringManager. Then, for each draw command, one
can specify the preferred color map.
FIVE
5.1 Tracking
Philosophy of Tracking
All GEANT4 processes, including the transportation of particles, are treated generically. In spite of the name “track-
ing”, particles are not transported in the tracking category. G4TrackingManager is an interface class which
brokers transactions between the event, track and tracking categories. An instance of this class handles the mes-
sage passing between the upper hierarchical object, which is the event manager, and lower hierarchical objects in the
tracking category. The event manager is a singleton instance of the G4EventManager class.
The tracking manager receives a track from the event manager and takes the actions required to finish track-
ing it. G4TrackingManager aggregates the pointers to G4SteppingManager, G4Trajectory and
G4UserTrackingAction. Also there is a “use” relation to G4Track and G4Step.
G4SteppingManager plays an essential role in tracking the particle. It takes care of all message passing between
objects in the different categories relevant to transporting a particle (for example, geometry and interactions in matter).
Its public method Stepping() steers the stepping of the particle. The algorithm to handle one step is given below.
1. If the particle stop (i.e. zero kinetic energy), each active AtRest process proposes a step length in time based on
the interaction it describes. And the process proposing the smallest step length will be invoked.
2. Each active discrete or continuous process must propose a step length based on the interaction it describes. The
smallest of these step lengths is taken.
3. The geometry navigator calculates “Safety”, the distance to the next volume boundary. If the minimum physical-
step-length from the processes is shorter than “Safety”, the physical-step-length is selected as the next step
length. In this case, no further geometrical calculations will be performed.
4. If the minimum physical-step-length from the processes is longer than “Safety”, the distance to the next bound-
ary is re-calculated.
5. The smaller of the minimum physical-step-length and the geometric step length is taken.
6. All active continuous processes are invoked. Note that the particle’s kinetic energy will be updated only after
all invoked processes have completed. The change in kinetic energy will be the sum of the contributions from
these processes.
7. The current track properties are updated before discrete processes are invoked. In the same time, the secondary
particles created by processes are stored in SecondaryList. The updated properties are:
• the kinetic energy of the current track particle (note that ‘sumEnergyChange’ is the sum of the energy
difference before and after each process invocation)
• position and time
8. The kinetic energy of the particle is checked to see whether or not it has been terminated by a continuous process.
If the kinetic energy goes down to zero, AtRest processes will be applied at the next step if applicable.
9. The discrete process is invoked. After the invocation,
• the energy, position and time of the current track particle are updated, and
189
Book For Application Developers, Release 10.5
Secondary particles are passed as G4Tracks from a physics process to tracking. G4ParticleChange provides
the following four methods for a physics process:
• AddSecondary( G4Track* aSecondary )
• AddSecondary( G4DynamicParticle* aSecondary )
• AddSecondary( G4DynamicParticle* aSecondary, G4ThreeVector position )
• AddSecondary( G4DynamicParticle* aSecondary, G4double time)
In all but the first, the construction of G4Track is done in the methods using information given by the arguments.
There are two classes which allow the user to intervene in the tracking. These are:
• G4UserTrackingAction, and
• G4UserSteppingAction.
Each provides methods which allow the user access to the GEANT4 kernel at specific points in the tracking.
Note: Users SHOULD NOT (and CAN NOT) change G4Track in UserSteppingAction. The only exception
is the TrackStatus.
Note: Users have to be cautious to implement an unnatural/unphysical action in these user actions. See the section
Killing Tracks in User Actions and Energy Conservation for more details.
The verbose information output flag can be turned on or off. The amount of information printed about the track/step,
from brief to very detailed, can be controlled by the value of the verbose flag, for example,
G4UImanager* UI = G4UImanager::GetUIpointer();
UI->ApplyCommand("/tracking/verbose 1");
G4Trajectory and G4TrajectoryPoint are default concrete classes provided by GEANT4, which are de-
rived from the G4VTrajectory and G4VTrajectoryPoint base classes, respectively. A G4Trajectory
class object is created by G4TrackingManager when a G4Track is passed from the G4EventManager.
G4Trajectory has the following data members:
• ID numbers of the track and the track’s parent
• particle name, charge, and PDG code
• a collection of G4TrajectoryPoint pointers
G4TrajectoryPoint corresponds to a step point along the path followed by the track. Its position is given
by a G4ThreeVector. A G4TrajectoryPoint class object is created in the AppendStep() method of
G4Trajectory and this method is invoked by G4TrackingManager at the end of each step. The first point
is created when the G4Trajectory is created, thus the first point is the original vertex.
The creation of a trajectory can be controlled by invoking G4TrackingManager::SetStoreTrajectory(G4bool).
The UI command /tracking/storeTrajectory _bool_ does the same. The user can set this flag for each individual track
from his/her G4UserTrackingAction::PreUserTrackingAction() method.
Note: The user should not create trajectories for secondaries in a shower due to the large amount of memory con-
sumed.
All the created trajectories in an event are stored in G4TrajectoryContainer class object and this ob-
ject will be kept by G4Event. To draw or print trajectories generated in an event, the user may invoke
the DrawTrajectory() or ShowTrajectory() methods of G4VTrajectory, respectively, from his/her
G4UserEventAction::EndOfEventAction(). The geometry must be drawn before the trajectory drawing.
The color of the drawn trajectory depends on the particle charge:
• negative: red
• neutral: green
• positive: blue
Note: Due to improvements in G4Navigator, a track can execute more than one turn of its spiral trajectory without
being broken into smaller steps as long as the trajectory does not cross a geometrical boundary. Thus a drawn trajectory
may not be circular.
G4Track and G4Step are transient classes; they are not available at the end of the event. Thus, the concrete classes
G4VTrajectory and G4VTrajectoryPoint are the only ones a user may employ for end-of-event analysis
or for persistency. As mentioned above, the default classes which GEANT4 provides, i.e. G4Trajectory and
G4TrajectoryPoint, have only very primitive quantities. The user can customize his/her own trajectory and
trajectory point classes by deriving directly from the respective base classes.
To use the customized trajectory, the user must construct a concrete trajectory class object in the
G4UserTrackingAction::PreUserTrackingAction() method and make its pointer available to
G4TrackingManager by using the SetTrajectory() method. The customized trajectory point class ob-
ject must be constructed in the AppendStep() method of the user’s implementation of the trajectory class. This
AppendStep() method will be invoked by G4TrackingManager.
To customize trajectory drawing, the user can override the DrawTrajectory() method in his/her own trajectory
class.
When a customized version of G4Trajectory declares any new class variables, operator new and operator delete must
be provided. It is also useful to check that the allocation size in operator new is equal to sizeof(G4Trajectory).
These two points do not apply to G4VTrajectory because it has no operator new or operator delete.
5.2.1 Overview
Physics processes describe how particles interact with a material. Seven major categories of processes are provided by
GEANT4:
1. electromagnetic,
2. hadronic,
3. decay,
4. photolepton-hadron,
5. optical,
6. parameterization, and
7. transportation.
The generalization and abstraction of physics processes is a key issue in the design of GEANT4. All physics processes
are treated in the same manner from the tracking point of view. The GEANT4 approach enables anyone to create a
process and assign it to a particle type. This openness should allow the creation of processes for novel, domain-specific
or customised purposes by individuals or groups of users.
Each process has two groups of methods which play an important role in tracking,
GetPhysicalInteractionLength (GPIL) and DoIt. The GPIL method gives the step length from the
current space-time point to the next space-time point. It does this by calculating the probability of interaction based
on the process’s cross section information. At the end of this step the DoIt method should be invoked. The DoIt
method implements the details of the interaction, changing the particle’s energy, momentum, direction and position,
and producing secondary tracks if required. These changes are recorded as G4VParticleChange objects (see
Particle change).
G4VProcess
G4VProcess is the base class for all physics processes. Each physics process must implement virtual methods of
G4VProcess which describe the interaction (DoIt) and determine when an interaction should occur (GPIL). In order
to accommodate various types of interactions G4VProcess provides three DoIt methods:
• G4VParticleChange* AlongStepDoIt( const G4Track& track, const G4Step&
stepData )
This method is invoked while G4SteppingManager is transporting a particle through one step. The cor-
responding AlongStepDoIt for each defined process is applied for every step regardless of which process
produces the minimum step length. Each resulting change to the track information is recorded and accumulated
in G4Step. After all processes have been invoked, changes due to AlongStepDoIt are applied to G4Track,
including the particle relocation and the safety update. Note that after the invocation of AlongStepDoIt, the
endpoint of the G4Track object is in a new volume if the step was limited by a geometric boundary. In order
to obtain information about the old volume, G4Step must be accessed, since it contains information about both
endpoints of a step.
• G4VParticleChange* PostStepDoIt( const G4Track& track, const G4Step&
stepData )
This method is invoked at the end point of a step, only if its process has produced the minimum step length, or if
the process is forced to occur. G4Track will be updated after each invocation of PostStepDoIt, in contrast
to the AlongStepDoIt method.
• G4VParticleChange* AtRestDoIt( const G4Track& track, const G4Step&
stepData )
This method is invoked only for stopped particles, and only if its process produced the minimum step length or
the process is forced to occur.
For each of the above DoIt methods G4VProcess provides a corresponding pure virtual GPIL method:
• G4double PostStepGetPhysicalInteractionLength( const G4Track& track,
G4double previousStepSize, G4ForceCondition* condition )
This method generates the step length allowed by its process. It also provides a flag to force the interaction to
occur regardless of its step length.
• G4double AlongStepGetPhysicalInteractionLength( const G4Track& track,
G4double previousStepSize, G4double currentMinimumStep, G4double&
proposedSafety, G4GPILSelection* selection )
This method generates the step length allowed by its process.
• G4double AtRestGetPhysicalInteractionLength( const G4Track& track,
G4ForceCondition* condition )
This method generates the step length in time allowed by its process. It also provides a flag to force the interac-
tion to occur regardless of its step length.
Other pure virtual methods in G4VProcess follow:
• virtual G4bool IsApplicable(const G4ParticleDefinition&)
returns true if this process object is applicable to the particle type.
• virtual void PreparePhysicsTable(const G4ParticleDefinition&) and
• virtual void BuildPhysicsTable(const G4ParticleDefinition&)
is messaged by the process manager, whenever cross section tables should be prepared and rebuilt due to chang-
ing cut-off values. It is not mandatory if the process is not affected by cut-off values.
• virtual void StartTracking() and
• virtual void EndTracking()
are messaged by the tracking manager at the beginning and end of tracking the current track.
Specialized processes may be derived from seven additional virtual base classes which are themselves derived from
G4VProcess. Three of these classes are used for simple processes:
G4VRestProcess Processes using only the AtRestDoIt method.
example: neutron capture
G4VDiscreteProcess Processes using only the PostStepDoIt method.
example: Compton scattering, hadron inelastic interaction
The other four classes are provided for rather complex processes:
G4VContinuousDiscreteProcess Processes using both AlongStepDoIt and PostStepDoIt methods.
example: transportation, ionisation(energy loss and delta ray)
G4VRestDiscreteProcess Processes using both AtRestDoIt and PostStepDoIt methods.
example: positron annihilation, decay (both in flight and at rest)
G4VRestContinuousProcess Processes using both AtRestDoIt and AlongStepDoIt methods.
G4VRestContinuousDiscreteProcess Processes using AtRestDoIt, AlongStepDoIt and PostStep-
DoIt methods.
Particle change
G4VParticleChange and its descendants are used to store the final state information of the track, including sec-
ondary tracks, which has been generated by the DoIt methods. The instance of G4VParticleChange is the only
object whose information is updated by the physics processes, hence it is responsible for updating the step. The
stepping manager collects secondary tracks and only sends requests via particle change to update G4Step.
G4VParticleChange is introduced as an abstract class. It has a minimal set of methods for updating
G4Step and handling secondaries. A physics process can therefore define its own particle change derived from
G4VParticleChange. Three pure virtual methods are provided,
• virtual G4Step* UpdateStepForAtRest( G4Step* step) ,
• virtual G4Step* UpdateStepForAlongStep( G4Step* step ), and
• virtual G4Step* UpdateStepForPostStep( G4Step* step),
which correspond to the three DoIt methods of G4VProcess. Each derived class should implement these methods.
This section summarizes the electromagnetic (EM) physics processes which are provided with GEANT4. Extended
information are available at EM web pages. For details on the implementation of these processes please refer to the
Physics Reference Manual.
To use the electromagnetic physics data files are needed. The user should set the environment variable G4LEDATA
to the directory with this files. These files are distributed together with GEANT4 and can be obtained via GEANT4
download web page. For GEANT4 version 10.3 G4EMLOW6.50 data set is required.
Electromagnetic Processes
• optional EM physics providing fast but less accurate electron transport due to “Simple” method of step limitation
by multiple scattering and reduced step limitation by ionisation process, Rayleigh scattering is disabled, and
photo-electric effect is using G4PEEffectFluoModel (class name G4EmStandardPhysics_option2)
• EM physics for simulation with high accuracy due to “UseDistanceToBoundary” multiple scattering step
limitation and usage of G4UrbanMscModel for all charged particles, reduced finalRange parameter of
stepping function optimized per particle type, alternative model G4KleinNishinaModel for Comp-
ton scattering, enabled fluorescence, enabled nuclear stopping, G4Generator2BS angular generator for
bremsstrahlung, G4IonParameterisedLossModel for ion ionisation, G4ePairProduction for elec-
tron/positron, 20 bins energy decade of physics tables, and 10 eV low-energy limit for tables (class name
G4EmStandardPhysics_option3)
• Combination of EM models for simulation with high accuracy includes multiple scattering with “UseSafety-
Plus” type of step limitation by combined G4WentzelVIModel and G4eCoulombScatteringModel
for all particle types, for of e+- below 100 MeV G4GoudsmitSaundersonMscModel is used,
RangeFactor = 0.2, Scin = 3 (error free stepping near geometry boundaries), reduced finalRange
parameter of stepping function optimized per particle type, enabled fluorescence, enabled nuclear stop-
ping, enable accurate angular generator for ionisation models, G4LowEPComptonModel below 20 MeV,
G4PenelopeGammaConversionModel below 1 GeV, G4LivermoreIonisationModel for electrons
and positrons below 100 keV, G4IonParameterisedLossModel for ion ionisation, G4Generator2BS
angular generator for bremsstrahlung, G4ePairProduction for electron/positron, and 20 bins per energy
decade of physics tables, (class name G4EmStandardPhysics_option4)
• Models based on Livermore data bases for electrons and gamma, enabled Rayleigh scattering, enabled fluo-
rescence, G4BetheHeitler5DModel is used for gamma conversion, enabled nuclear stopping, enable ac-
curate angular generator for ionisation models, G4IonParameterisedLossModel for ion ionisation, for
of e+- below 100 MeV G4GoudsmitSaundersonMscModel is used with “UseSafetyPlus” multiple scat-
tering step limitation, RangeFactor = 0.2, Scin = 3 (error free stepping near geometry boundaries),
G4Generator2BS angular generator for bremsstrahlung, G4ePairProduction for electron/positron, and
20 bins per energy decade of physics tables, (G4EmLivermorePhysics);
• Models for simulation of linear polarized gamma based on Livermore data bases for electrons and gamma
(G4EmLivermorePolarizedPhysics);
• Models based on Livermore data bases and new model for Compton scattering G4LowEPComptonModel,
G4BetheHeitler5DModel is used for gamma conversion, low-energy model of multiple scattering
G4LowEWenzelMscModel, and new G4LindhardSorensenIonModel for ions above 10 MeV,
G4hBremsstrahlung and G4hPairProduction for ions (G4EmLowEPPhysics);
• Penelope2008 models for electrons, positrons and gamma, enabled Rayleigh scattering, en-
abled fluorescence, enabled nuclear stopping, enable accurate angular generator for ionisation
models, G4IonParameterisedLossModel for ion ionisation, for of e+- below 100 MeV
G4GoudsmitSaundersonMscModel is used with “UseSafetyPlus” multiple scattering step limita-
tion, RangeFactor = 0.2, Scin = 3 (error free stepping near geometry boundaries), and 20 bins per
energy decade of physics tables, (G4EmPenelopePhysics);
• Experimental physics with multiple scattering of e+- below 100 MeV simulated by
G4GoudsmitSaundersonMscModel is done on top of the default EM physics
(G4EmStandardPhysicsGS);
• Experimental physics is done on top of the default EM physics with multiple scattering of e+- below 100 MeV
simulated by a combination of G4WentzelVIModel and G4eCoulombScatteringModel, and for ions
above 2 MeV G4AtimaEnergyLossModel (G4EmStandardPhysicsWVI);
• Experimental physics with single scattering models instead of multiple scattering is done on top of the
default EM physics, for all leptons and hadrons G4eCoulombScatteringModel is used, for ions -
G4IonCoulombScatteringModel (G4EmStandardPhysicsSS);
• Low-energy GEANT4-DNA physics (G4EmDNAPhysics).
• Alternative low-energy GEANT4-DNA physics constructors (G4EmDNAPhysics_optionX, where X is 1 to
8). Refer to GEANT4-DNA section.
Examples of the registration of these physics constructor and construction of alternative combinations of options
are shown in basic, extended and advanced examples, which can be found in the subdirectories examples/
• SetMscRangeFactor(G4double)
• SetMscMuHadRangeFactor(G4double)
• SetMscGeomFactor(G4double)
• SetMscSkin(G4double)
• SetScreeningFactor(G4double)
• SetStepFunction(G4double, G4double)
• SetStepFunctionMuHad(G4double, G4double)
• SetNumberOfBins(G4int)
• SetNumberOfBinsPerDecade(G4int)
• SetVerbose(G4int)
• SetWorkerVerbose(G4int)
• SetMscStepLimitType(G4MscStepLimitType val)
• SetMscMuHadStepLimitType(G4MscStepLimitType val)
• SetNuclearFormFactorType(G4NuclearFormFactorType val)
• SetDNAeSolvationSubType(G4DNAModelSubType val)
• SetConversionType(G4int val)
• SetPIXECrossSectionModel(const G4String&)
• SetPIXEElectronCrossSectionModel(const G4String&)
• AddPAIModel(const G4String& particle, const G4String& region, const G4String& type)
• AddMicroElecModel(const G4String& region)
• AddDNA(const G4String& region, const G4String& type)
• AddMsc(const G4String& region, const G4String& physics_type) - obsolete
• AddPhysics(const G4String& region, const G4String& physics_type)
• SetSubCutoff(G4bool, const G4String& region)
• SetDeexActiveRegion(const G4String& region, G4bool, G4bool, G4bool)
• SetProcessBiasingFactor(const G4String& process, G4double, G4bool)
• ActivateForcedInteraction(const G4String& process, const G4String& region, G4double, G4bool)
• ActivateSecondaryBiasing(const G4String& process, const G4String& region, G4double, G4double)
• SetDirectionalSplitting(G4int v)
• SetDirectionalSplittingTarget(const G4ThreeVector& v)
• SetDirectionalSplittingRadius(G4double)
The old interface class G4EmProcessOptions is still available but but is strongly recommended not to be used. It
will be removed in the next major release.
The corresponding UI command can be accessed in the UI subdirectories “/process/eLoss”, “/process/em”, and “/pro-
cess/msc”. The following types of step limitation by multiple scattering are available:
• fSimple - simplified step limitation (used in _EMV and _EMX Physics Lists)
• fUseSafety - default
• fUseDistanceToBoundary - advance method of step limitation used in EM examples, required parameter skin >
0 , should be used for setup without magnetic field
• fUseSafetyPlus - advanced method may be used with magnetic field
G4EmCalculator is a class which provides access to cross sections and stopping powers. This class can be used
anywhere in the user code provided the physics list has already been initialised (G4State_Idle). G4EmCalculator
has “Get” methods which can be applied to materials for which physics tables are already built, and “Compute”
methods which can be applied to any material defined in the application or existing in the GEANT4 internal database.
The public methods of this class are:
• GetDEDX(kinEnergy,particle,material,const G4Region* r=nullptr)
• GetRangeFromRestrictedDEDX(kinEnergy,particle,material,const G4Region* r=nullptr)
• GetCSDARange(kinEnergy,particle,material,const G4Region* r=nullptr)
• GetRange(kinEnergy,particle,material,const G4Region* r=nullptr)
• GetKinEnergy(range,particle,material,const G4Region* r=nullptr)
• GetCrossSectionPerVolume(kinEnergy,particle,material,const G4Region* r=nullptr)
• GetShellIonisationCrossSectionPerAtom(particle,Z,shell,kinEnergy)
• GetMeanFreePath(kinEnergy,particle,material,const G4Region* r=nullptr)
• PrintDEDXTable(particle)
• PrintRangeTable(particle)
• PrintInverseRangeTable(particle)
• ComputeDEDX(kinEnergy,particle,process,material,cut=DBL_MAX)
• ComputeElectronicDEDX(kinEnergy,particle,material,cut=DBL_MAX)
• ComputeDEDXForCutInRange(kinEnergy,particle,material,cut=DBL_MAX)
• ComputeNuclearDEDX(kinEnergy,particle,material,cut=DBL_MAX)
• ComputeTotalDEDX(kinEnergy,particle,material,cut=DBL_MAX)
• ComputeCrossSectionPerVolume(kinEnergy,particle,process,material,cut=nullptr)
• ComputeCrossSectionPerAtom(kinEnergy,particle,process,Z,A,cut=nullptr)
• ComputeCrossSectionPerShell(kinEnergy,particle,process,Z,shellIdx,cut=nullptr)
• ComputeGammaAttenuationLength(kinEnergy,material)
• ComputeShellIonisationCrossSectionPerAtom(particle,Z,shell,kinEnergy)
• ComputeMeanFreePath(kinEnergy,particle,process,material,cut=nullptr)
• ComputeEnergyCutFromRangeCut(range,particle,material)
• FindParticle(const G4String&)
• FindIon(G4int Z, G4int A)
• FindMaterial(const G4String&)
• FindRegion(const G4String&)
• FindCouple(const G4Material*, const const G4Region* r=nullptr)
• FindProcess(particle, const G4String& processName)
• SetVerbose(G4int)
For these interfaces, particles, materials, or processes may be pointers (const G4ParticleDefinition*,
const G4Material*, ) or strings with names (``const G4String&).
A physical interaction is described by a process class which can handle physics models, described by model classes.
The following is a summary of the Low Energy Electromagnetic physics models available in GEANT4. Further infor-
mation is available in the web pages of the GEANT4 Low Energy Electromagnetic Physics Working Group, accessible
from the GEANT4 web site, “who we are” section, then “working groups”.
The physics content of these models is documented in the GEANT4 Physics Reference Manual. They are based on the
Livermore data library, on the ICRU73 data tables or on the Penelope2008 Monte Carlo code. They adopt the same
software design as the “standard” GEANT4 electromagnetic models.
Examples of the registration of physics constructor with low-energy electromagnetic models are shown in GEANT4 ex-
tended examples (examples/extended/electromagnetic and examples/extended/medical in the
GEANT4 source distribution). Advanced examples (examples/advanced in the GEANT4 source distribution) il-
lustrate alternative instantiation of these processes. Both are available as part of the GEANT4 release.
Production Cuts
Remember that production cuts for secondaries can be specified as range cuts, which are converted at initialisation
time into energy thresholds for secondary gamma, electron, positron and proton production. The cut for proton is
applied by elastic scattering processes to all recoil ions.
A range cut value is set by default to 0.7 mm in GEANT4 reference physics lists. This value can be specified in the
optional SetCuts() method of the user Physics list or via UI commands. For e.g. to set a range cut of 10 micrometers,
one can use:
/run/setCut 0.01 mm
If a range cut equivalent to an energy lower than 990 eV is specified, the energy cut is still set to 990 eV. In order
to decrease this value (for e.g. down to 250 eV, in order to simulate low energy emission lines of the fluorescence
spectrum), one may use the following UI command before the “/run/initialize” command:
/cuts/setLowEdge 250 eV
or alternatively directly in the user Physics list, in the optional SetCuts() method, using:
G4ProductionCutsTable::GetProductionCutsTable()->SetEnergyRange(250*eV, 1*GeV);
A command is also available in order to disable usage of production threshold for fluorescence and Auger electron
production:
/process/em/deexcitationIgnoreCut true
Angular Generators
For part of EM processes it is possible to factorise out sampling of secondary energy and direction. Using an interface
G4VEmModel base class SetAngularDistribution(G4VEmAngularDistribution*) it is possible to
substitute default angular generator of a model. Angular generators in standard and lowenergy sub-packages follow
the same abstract interface.
For photoelectric models several angular generators are available:
• G4SauterGavrilaAngularDistribution (default);
• G4PhotoElectricAngularGeneratorSauterGavrila;
• G4PhotoElectricAngularGeneratorPolarized.
For bremsstrahlung models following angular generators are available:
• G4ModifiedTsai (default);
• G4DipBustGenerator;
• G4Generator2BS;
• G4Generator2BN;
• G4PenelopeBremsstrahlungAngular.
For gamma conversion models following angular generators are available:
• G4ModifiedTsai (default);
• G4DipBustGenerator.
For models of ionisation a new optional angular generator is available:
• G4DeltaAngle.
It may be useful to create more than one secondary at an interaction. For example, electrons incident on a target in a
medical linac produce photons through bremsstrahlung. The variance reduction technique of bremsstrahlung splitting
involves choosing N photons from the expected distribution, and assigning each a weight of 1/N.
Similarly, if the secondaries are not important, one can kill them with a survival probability of 1/N. The weight of the
survivors is increased by a factor N. This is known as Russian roulette.
Neither biasing technique is applied if the resulting daughter particles would have a weight below 1/N, in the case of
brem splitting, or above 1, in the case of Russian roulette.
These techniques can be enabled in GEANT4 electromagnetics with the macro commands
/process/em/setSecBiasing processName Region factor energyLimit energyUnit
where: processName is the name of the process to apply the biasing to; Region is the region in which to apply biasing;
factor is the inverse of the brem splitting or Russian roulette factor (1/N); energyLimit energyUnit is the high energy
limit. If the first secondary has energy above this limit, no biasing is applied.
For example,
/process/em/setSecBiasing eBrem target 10 100 MeV
will result in electrons undergoing bremsstrahlung in the target region being split 10 times (if the first photon sampled
has an energy less than 100 MeV).
Note that the biasing needs to be specified for each process individually. To apply Russian Roulette to daughter
electrons from interactions of photons, issue the macro command for the processes phot, compt, conv.
Directional splitting
This biasing may be enabled based on the direction of the outgoing particles (“directional splitting”). The user may
specify a spherical volume of interest by giving the center and radius of the volume. In an interaction, if the incident
particle has high weight, the outgoing particles are split. N particles from the distribution are created, each with weight
1/N. For each particle, if it is not directed towards the volume of interest, Russian Roulette is played. Typically one
will want directional splitting to take place for all interactions.
For example,
/process/em/setDirectionalSplitting true
/process/em/setDirectionalSplittingTarget 1000 0 0 mm # x, y, z components of center
/process/em/setDirectionalSplittingRadius 10 cm
/process/em/setSecBiasing eBrem world 100 100 MeV
/process/em/setSecBiasing Rayl world 100 100 MeV
/process/em/setSecBiasing phot world 100 100 MeV
/process/em/setSecBiasing compt world 100 100 MeV
/process/em/setSecBiasing annihil world 100 100 MeV
Reference: BEAMnrc Users Manual, D.W.O Rogers, B. Walters, I. Kawrakow. NRCC Report PIRS-0509(A)revL,
available at http://www.irs.inms.nrc.ca/inms/irs/BEAM/beamhome.html
• Photon models
– Photo-electric effect (class G4LivermorePhotoElectricModel)
– Polarized Photo-electric effect (class G4LivermorePolarizedPhotoElectricModel)
– Compton scattering (class G4LivermoreComptonModel)
– Compton scattering (class G4LowEPComptonModel)
– Polarized Compton scattering (class G4LivermorePolarizedComptonModel)
– Rayleigh scattering (class G4LivermoreRayleighModel)
– Polarized Rayleigh scattering (class G4LivermorePolarizedRayleighModel)
– Gamma conversion (also called pair production, class G4LivermoreGammaConversionModel)
• Photon models
– Compton scattering (class G4PenelopeComptonModel)
– Rayleigh scattering (class G4PenelopeRayleighModel)
– Gamma conversion (also called pair production, class G4PenelopeGammaConversionModel)
– Photo-electric effect (class G4PenelopePhotoElectricModel)
• Electron models
– Bremsstrahlung (class G4PenelopeBremsstrahlungModel)
– Ionisation and delta ray production (class G4PenelopeIonisationModel)
• Positron models
– Bremsstrahlung (class G4PenelopeBremsstrahlungModel)
– Ionisation and delta ray production (class G4PenelopeIonisationModel)
– Positron annihilation (class G4PenelopeAnnihilationModel)
All Penelope models can be applied up to a maximum energy of 100 GeV, although it is advisable not to use them
above a few hundreds of MeV.
Options are available in the all Penelope Models, allowing to set (and retrieve) the verbosity level of the model, namely
the amount of information which is printed on the screen.
• SetVerbosityLevel(G4int)
• GetVerbosityLevel()
The default verbosity level is 0 (namely, no textual output on the screen). The default value should be used in general
for normal runs. Higher verbosity levels are suggested only for testing and debugging purposes.
The verbosity scale defined for all Penelope processes is the following:
• 0 = no printout on the screen (default)
• 1 = issue warnings only in the case of energy non-conservation in the final state (should never happen)
• 2 = reports full details on the energy budget in the final state
• 3 = writes also information on cross section calculation, data file opening and sampling of atoms
• 4 = issues messages when entering in methods
The GEANT4 low energy electromagnetic Physics package has been extended down to energies of a few electron Volts
suitable for the simulation of radiation effects in liquid water for applications in micro/nanodosimetry at the cellular
and sub-cellular level. These developments take place in the framework of the on-going GEANT4-DNA project (see
more in the Geant4-DNA web pages or in the web pages of the Geant4 Low Energy Electromagnetic Physics Working
Group).
The GEANT4 -DNA process and model classes apply to electrons, protons, hydrogen, alpha particles and their charge
states, in liquid water (“G4_WATER” material).
Electron processes and models
• Elastic scattering:
– process class is G4DNAElastic
– four alternative model classes are: G4DNAScreenedRutherfordElasticModel or
G4DNAChampionElasticModel (default) or G4DNAUeharaScreenedRutherfordElasticModel or
G4DNACPA100ElasticModel
• Excitation
– process class is G4DNAExcitation
– model class is G4DNABornExcitationModel (default) or G4DNAEmfietzoglouExcitationModel or
G4DNACPA100ExcitationModel
• Ionisation
– process class is G4DNAIonisation
– model class is G4DNABornIonisationModel (default) or G4DNAEmfietzoglouIonisationModel or
G4DNACPA100IonisationModel
• Attachment
– process class is G4DNAAttachment
– model class is G4DNAMeltonAttachmentModel
• Vibrational excitation
– process class is G4DNAVibExcitation
– model class is G4DNASancheExcitationModel
Proton processes and models
• Elastic scattering:
– process class is G4DNAElastic
– G4DNAIonElasticModel
• Excitation
– process class is G4DNAExcitation
– two complementary model classes are G4DNAMillerGreenExcitationModel (below 500 keV) and
G4DNABornExcitationModel (above)
• Ionisation
– process class is G4DNAIonisation
– two complementary model classes are G4DNARuddIonisationModel (below 500 keV) and
G4DNABornIonisationModel (above)
• Charge decrease
– process class is G4DNAChargeDecrease
• Ionisation
– process class is G4DNAIonisation
– model classes is G4DNARuddIonisationModel
• Charge decrease
– process class is G4DNAChargeDecrease
– model classes is G4DNADingfelderChargeDecreaseModel
Li, Be, B, C, N, O, Si, Fe processes and models
• Ionisation
– process class is G4DNAIonisation
– model class is G4DNARuddIonisationExtendedModel
Examples of the registration of these processes in a physics list are given in the G4EmDNAPhysics* constructors
(in source/physics_lists/constructors/electromagnetic in the GEANT4 source distribution). An
example of the usage of these constructors in a physics list is given in the “dnaphysics” extended example, which
explains how to extract basic information from GEANT4-DNA Physics processes.
GEANT4-DNA physics constructors are described at the Geant4-DNA website.
The “microdosimetry” extended example illustrates how to combine GEANT4-DNA processes with Standard electro-
magnetic processes (combination of discrete and condensed history GEANT4 electromagnetic processes at different
scales).
A set of GEANT4-DNA models applicable to biological materials is available since release 10.4. These
models are named G4DNAPTBElasticModel, G4DNAPTBExcitationModel, G4DNAPTBIonisationModel and
G4DNAPTBAugerModel. They can be used for electrons in THF, PY, PU, TMP precursors and in backbone, cy-
tosine, thymine, adenine, guanine materials of DNA. The G4DNAPTBIonisationModel can also be used with protons
in THF, PY and TMP. Their usage is illustrated in the “icsd” extended example.
Since GEANT4 release 10.1, GEANT4-DNA can also be used for the modelling of water radiolysis (physico-chemistry
and chemistry stages). Three extended examples, “chem1”, “chem2”, “chem3” and “chem4” illustrate this. More
information is available from the Geant4-DNA website.
To run the GEANT4-DNA extension, data files need to be copied by the user to his/her code repository. These files
are distributed together with the GEANT4 release. The user should set the environment variable G4LEDATA to the
directory where he/she has copied the files.
A full list of publications regarding GEANT4-DNA is directly available from the Geant4-DNA website or from the
Geant4@IN2P3 web site).
Atomic Deexcitation
A unique interface named G4VAtomicDeexcitation is available in GEANT4 for the simulation of atomic deexcitation
using Standard, Low Energy and Very Low Energy electromagnetic processes. Atomic deexcitation includes fluores-
cence and Auger electron emission induced by photons, electrons and ions (PIXE); see more details in:
A. Mantero et al., PIXE Simulation in Geant4 , X-Ray Spec. , 40, 135-140, 2011.
It can be activated for processes producing vacancies in atomic shells. Currently these processes are the photoelectric
effect, ionization and Compton scattering.
Activation of atomic deexcitation
The activation of atomic deexcitation in continuous processes in a user physics list can be done through the following
G4EmParameters class methods described above or via UI commands:
/process/em/deexcitation region true true true
/process/em/fluo true
(continues on next page)
One can define parameters in the G4State_PreInit or G4State_Idle states. Fluorescence from photons and electrons is
activated by default in Option3, Option4, Livermore and Penelope physics constructors, while Auger production and
PIXE are not.
The alternative set of data by Bearden et al. (1967) for the modelling of fluorescence lines had been added to the
G4LEDATA archive. This set can be selected via UI command:
/process/em/fluoBearden true
Another important UI commands enable simulation of the full Auger and/or fluorescence cascade:
/process/em/deexcitationIgnoreCut true
where the name can be “Empirical”, “ECPSSR_FormFactor” or “ECPSSR_Analytical” corresponds to different PIXE
cross sections. Following shell cross sections models are available : “ECPSSR_Analytical” models derive from an
analytical calculation of the ECPSSR theory (see A. Mantero et al., X-Ray Spec.40 (2011) 135-140) and it reproduces
K and L shell cross sections over a wide range of energies; “ECPSSR_FormFactor” models derive from A. Taborda
et al. calculations (see A. Taborda et al., X-Ray Spec. 40 (2011) 127-134) of ECPSSR values directly form Form
Factors and it covers K, L shells on the range 0.1-100 MeV and M shells in the range 0.1-10 MeV; the “empirical”
models are from Paul “reference values” (for protons and alphas for K-Shell) and Orlic empirical model for L shells
(only for protons and ions with Z>2). The later ones are the models used by default. Out of the energy boundaries,
“ECPSSR_Analytical” model is used. We recommend to use default settings if not sure what to use.
Example
The TestEm5 extended/electromagetic example shows how to simulate atomic deexcitation (see for e.g. the pixe.mac
macro).
Very Low energy Electromagnetic Processes in Silicon for microelectronics application (GEANT4-
MuElec extension)
A new Compton scattering model for unpolarised photons has been developed in the relativistic impulse approxima-
tion. The model was developed as an alternative to low energy electromagnetic Compton scattering models developed
from Ribberfors’ Compton scattering framework (Livermore, Penelope Compton models). The model class is named
named G4LowEPComptonModel.
G4LowEPComptonModel has been added to the physics constructor G4EmStandardPhysics_option4, containing the
most accurate models from the Standard and Low Energy Electromagnetic physics working groups.
Multi-scale Processes
The G4hImpactIonisation process deals with ionisation by impact of hadrons and alpha particles, and the fol-
lowing generation of PIXE (Particle Induced X-ray Emission). This process and related classes can be found in
source/processes/electromagnetic/pii.
Further documentation about PIXE simulation with this process is available here.
A detailed description of the related physics features can be found in:
M. G. Pia et al., PIXE Simulation with Geant4 , IEEE Trans. Nucl. Sci. , vol. 56, no. 6, pp. 3614-3649, 2009.
A brief summary of the related physics features can be found in the GEANT4 Physics Reference Manual.
An example of how to use this process is shown below. A more extensive example is available in the eRosita GEANT4
advanced example (see examples/advanced/eRosita in your GEANT4 installation source).
#include "G4hImpactIonisation.hh"
[...]
void eRositaPhysicsList::ConstructProcess()
{
[...]
theParticleIterator->reset();
while( (*theParticleIterator)() )
{
G4ParticleDefinition* particle = theParticleIterator->value();
G4ProcessManager* processManager = particle->GetProcessManager();
G4String particleName = particle->GetParticleName();
if (particleName == "proton")
{
(continues on next page)
// Select the cross section models to be applied for K, L and M shell vacancy creation
// (here the ECPSSR model is selected for K, L and M shell; one can mix and match
// different models for each shell)
hIonisation->SetPixeCrossSectionK("ecpssr");
hIonisation->SetPixeCrossSectionL("ecpssr");
hIonisation->SetPixeCrossSectionM("ecpssr");
The G4PIIDATA environment variable must be defined to refer to the location of the G4PII PIXE data library in your
filesystem; for instance, if you use a c-like shell:
setenv G4PIIDATA path_to_where_G4PII_has_been_downloaded
This section briefly introduces the hadronic physics processes installed in GEANT4. For details of the implementation
of hadronic interactions available in GEANT4, please refer to the Physics Reference Manual.
Each hadronic process object (derived from G4HadronicProcess) may have one or more cross section data sets
associated with it. The term “data set” is meant, in a broad sense, to be an object that encapsulates methods and data
for calculating total cross sections for a given process. The methods and data may take many forms, from a simple
equation using a few hard-wired numbers to a sophisticated parameterisation using large data tables. Cross section data
sets are derived from the abstract class G4VCrossSectionDataSet, and are required to implement the following
methods:
G4bool IsApplicable( const G4DynamicParticle*, const G4Element* )
This method must return True if the data set is able to calculate a total cross section for the given particle and material,
and False otherwise.
G4double GetCrossSection( const G4DynamicParticle*, const G4Element* )
This method, which will be invoked only if True was returned by IsApplicable, must return a cross section, in
GEANT4 default units, for the given particle and material.
void BuildPhysicsTable( const G4ParticleDefinition& )
This method may be invoked to request the data set to recalculate its internal database or otherwise reset its state after
a change in the cuts or other parameters of the given particle type.
void DumpPhysicsTable( const G4ParticleDefinition& ) = 0
This method may be invoked to request the data set to print its internal database and/or other state information, for the
given particle type, to the standard output stream.
Cross section data sets are used by the process for the calculation of the physical interaction length. A given cross
section data set may only apply to a certain energy range, or may only be able to calculate cross sections for a particular
type of particle. The class G4CrossSectionDataStore has been provided to allow the user to specify, if desired,
a series of data sets for a process, and to arrange the priority of data sets so that the appropriate one is used for a given
energy range, particle, and material. It implements the following public methods:
G4CrossSectionDataStore()
~G4CrossSectionDataStore()
and
G4double GetCrossSection( const G4DynamicParticle*, const G4Element* )
For a given particle and material, this method returns a cross section value provided by one of the collection of
cross section data sets listed in the data store object. If there are no known data sets, a G4Exception is thrown
and DBL_MIN is returned. Otherwise, each data set in the list is queried, in reverse list order, by invoking its
IsApplicable method for the given particle and material. The first data set object that responds positively will
then be asked to return a cross section value via its GetCrossSection method. If no data set responds positively,
a G4Exception is thrown and DBL_MIN is returned.
void AddDataSet( G4VCrossSectionDataSet* aDataSet )
This method adds the given cross section data set to the end of the list of data sets in the data store. For the evaluation
of cross sections, the list has a LIFO (Last In First Out) priority, meaning that data sets added later to the list will
have priority over those added earlier to the list. Another way of saying this, is that the data store, when given a
GetCrossSection request, does the IsApplicable queries in the reverse list order, starting with the last data
set in the list and proceeding to the first, and the first data set that responds positively is used to calculate the cross
section.
void BuildPhysicsTable( const G4ParticleDefinition& aParticleType )
This method may be invoked to indicate to the data store that there has been a change in the cuts or other parameters
of the given particle type. In response, the data store will invoke the BuildPhysicsTable of each of its data sets.
void DumpPhysicsTable( const G4ParticleDefinition& )
This method may be used to request the data store to invoke the DumpPhysicsTable method of each of its data
sets.
The defaults for total cross section data and calculations have been encapsulated in the single-
ton class G4HadronCrossSections. Each hadronic process: G4HadronInelasticProcess,
G4HadronElasticProcess, G4HadronFissionProcess, and G4HadronCaptureProcess, comes
already equipped with a cross section data store and a default cross section data set. The data set objects are really
just shells that invoke the singleton G4HadronCrossSections to do the real work of calculating cross sections.
The default cross sections can be overridden in whole or in part by the user. To this end, the base class
G4HadronicProcess has a get method:
G4CrossSectionDataStore* GetCrossSectionDataStore()
which gives public access to the data store for each process. The user’s cross section data sets can be added to the data
store according to the following framework:
G4Hadron...Process aProcess(...)
MyCrossSectionDataSet myDataSet(...)
aProcess.GetCrossSectionDataStore()->AddDataSet( &MyDataSet )
The added data set will override the default cross section data whenever so indicated by its IsApplicable method.
In addition to the get method, G4HadronicProcess also has the method
which allows the user to completely replace the default data store with a new data store.
It should be noted that a process does not send any information about itself to its associated data store (and hence data
set) objects. Thus, each data set is assumed to be formulated to calculate cross sections for one and only one type of
process. Of course, this does not prevent different data sets from sharing common data and/or calculation methods,
as in the case of the G4HadronCrossSections class mentioned above. Indeed, G4VCrossSectionDataSet
specifies only the abstract interface between physics processes and their data sets, and leaves the user free to implement
whatever sort of underlying structure is appropriate.
The current implementation of the data set G4HadronCrossSections reuses the total cross-sections for inelastic
and elastic scattering, radiative capture and fission as used with GHEISHA to provide cross-sections for calculation
of the respective mean free paths of a given particle in a given material.
The cross section data for low energy neutron transport are organized in a set of files that are read in by the corre-
sponding data set classes at time zero. Hereby the file system is used, in order to allow highly granular access to
the data. The ‘‘root” directory of the cross-section directory structure is accessed through an environment variable,
G4NEUTRONHPDATA, which is to be set by the user. The classes accessing the total cross-sections of the individual
processes, i.e., the cross-section data set classes for low energy neutron transport, are G4NeutronHPElasticData,
G4NeutronHPCaptureData, G4NeutronHPFissionData, and G4NeutronHPInelasticData.
For detailed descriptions of the low energy neutron total cross-sections, they may be registered by the user as described
above with the data stores of the corresponding processes for neutron interactions.
It should be noted that using these total cross section classes does not require that the neutron_hp models also be used.
It is up to the user to decide whether this is desirable or not for his particular problem.
A prototype of the compact version of neutron cross sections derived from HP database are provided
with new classes G4NeutronHPElasticData, G4NeutronCaptureXS, G4NeutronElasticXS, and
G4NeutronInelasticXS.
The cross-section data for low-energy charged particle transport are organized in a set of files that are read at ini-
tialization, similarly to the case of low-energy neutron transport. The “root” directory of the cross-section directory
structure is accessed through an environment variable, G4PARTICLEHPDATA, which has to be set by the user. This
variable has to point to the directory where the low-energy charged particle data have been installed, e.g. G4TENDL1.
3 for the GEANT4 release 10.3 (note that the download of this data library from the GEANT4 web site is not done
automatically, i.e. it must be done manually by the user):
export G4PARTICLEHPDATA=/your/path/G4TENDL1.3/.
It is expected that the directory $G4PARTICLEHPDATA has the following five subdirectories, corresponding to
the charged particles that can be handled by the low-energy charged particle transport: Proton/, Deuteron/,
Triton/, He3/, Alpha/. It is possible for the user to overwrite the default directory structure with individual
environment variables pointing to custom data libraries for each particle type. This is considered an advanced/expert
user feature. These directories are set by the following environment variables: G4PROTONHPDATA, for proton;
G4DEUTERONHPDATA, for deuteron; G4TRITONHPDATA, for triton; G4HE3HPDATA, for He3; G4ALPHAHPDATA,
for alpha. Note that if any of these variables is not defined explicitly, e.g. G4TRITONHPDATA, then the corresponding
data library is expected to be a subdirectory of $G4PARTICLEHPDATA/, e.g. $G4PARTICLEHPDATA/Triton/.
If instead all the above five environmental variables are set, then G4PARTICLEHPDATA does not need to be specified;
even if it is set, then its value will be ignored (because the per-particle ones take precedence).
Hadrons at Rest
Hadrons in Flight
For hadrons in motion, there are four physics process classes. Table 5.1 shows each process and the particles for which
it is relevant.
To register an inelastic process model for a particle, a proton for example, first get the pointer to the particle’s process
manager:
G4ParticleDefinition *theProton = G4Proton::ProtonDefinition();
G4ProcessManager *theProtonProcMan = theProton->GetProcessManager();
Create an instance of the model which determines the secondaries produced in the interaction, and calculates the
momenta of the particles, for instance the Bertini cascade model:
G4CascadeInterface *theProtonIE = new G4CascadeInterface();
theProtonIEProc->RegisterMe( theProtonIE );
Finally, add the particle’s inelastic process to the list of discrete processes:
theProtonProcMan->AddDiscreteProcess( theProtonIEProc );
The particle’s inelastic process class, G4ProtonInelasticProcess in the example above, derives
from the G4HadronicInelasticProcess class, and simply defines the process name and calls the
G4HadronicInelasticProcess constructor. All of the specific particle inelastic processes derive from the
G4HadronicInelasticProcess class, which calls the PostStepDoIt function, which returns the particle
change object from the G4HadronicProcess function GeneralPostStepDoIt. This class also gets the mean
free path, builds the physics table, and gets the microscopic cross section. The G4HadronicInelasticProcess
class derives from the G4HadronicProcess class, which is the top level hadronic process class. The
G4HadronicProcess class derives from the G4VDiscreteProcess class. The inelastic, elastic, capture, and
fission processes derive from the G4HadronicProcess class. This pure virtual class also provides the energy range
manager object and the RegisterMe access function.
In-flight, final-state hadronic models derive, directly or indirectly, from the G4InelasticInteraction
class, which is an abstract base class since the pure virtual function ApplyYourself is not defined there.
G4InelasticInteraction itself derives from the G4HadronicInteraction abstract base class. This class
is the base class for all the model classes. It sorts out the energy range for the models and provides class utilities. The
G4HadronicInteraction class provides the Set/GetMinEnergy and the Set/GetMaxEnergy functions
which determine the minimum and maximum energy range for the model. An energy range can be set for a specific
element, a specific material, or for general applicability:
void SetMinEnergy( G4double anEnergy, G4Element *anElement )
void SetMinEnergy( G4double anEnergy, G4Material *aMaterial )
void SetMinEnergy( const G4double anEnergy )
void SetMaxEnergy( G4double anEnergy, G4Element *anElement )
void SetMaxEnergy( G4double anEnergy, G4Material *aMaterial )
void SetMaxEnergy( const G4double anEnergy )
In GEANT4, any model can be run together with any other model without the need for the implementation of a special
interface, or batch suite, and the ranges of applicability for the different models can be steered at initialisation time.
This way, highly specialised models (valid only for one material and particle, and applicable only in a very restricted
energy range) can be used in the same application, together with more general code, in a coherent fashion.
Each model has an intrinsic range of applicability, and the model chosen for a simulation depends very much on the
use-case. Consequently, there are no ‘‘defaults’‘. However, physics lists are provided which specify sets of models for
various purposes.
Two types of hadronic shower models have been implemented: data driven models and theory driven models.
• Data driven models are available for the transport of low energy neutrons in matter in sub-directory
hadronics/models/neutron_hp. The modeling is based on the data formats of ENDF/B-VI, and all
distributions of this standard data format are implemented. The data sets used are selected from data libraries
that conform to these standard formats. The file system is used in order to allow granular access to, and flexibil-
ity in, the use of the cross sections for different isotopes, and channels. The energy coverage of these models is
from thermal energies to 20 MeV.
• Theory driven models are available for inelastic scattering in a first implementation, covering the full energy
range of LHC experiments. They are located in sub-directory hadronics/models/generator. The
current philosophy implies the usage of parton string models at high energies, of intra-nuclear transport models
at intermediate energies, and of statistical break-up models for de-excitation.
Nuclear models fail (sometimes catastrophically) at predicting with reasonable accuracies the nuclear cross sections
of neutrons (and other particles). For this reason, all physical quantities relevant for an accurate modeling of nuclear
reactions in Monte Carlo simulations need to be provided as a database which includes, ideally:
• cross sections
• angular distributions of the emitted particles
• energy spectra of the emitted particles
• energy-angle correlated spectrum (double-differential cross sections, DDX)
• neutrons per fission
• fission spectra
• fission product yields
• photo production data
For the case of neutron induced reactions, such databases are called “evaluated data”, in the sense that they contain
recommended values for different quantities that rely on compilations of experimental nuclear data and usually com-
pleted with theoretical predictions, benchmarked against available experimental data (i.e. integral and differential
experiments) when possible. It should be noticed that the information available varies from isotope to isotope and can
be incomplete or totally missing.
The G4NeutronHP package in GEANT4 allows using evaluated nuclear data libraries in the G4NDL format. GEANT4
users should know that any simulation involving neutrons with energies below 20 MeV and not using the G4NeutronHP
package can lead to unreliable results. GEANT4 users are therefore encouraged to use it, although they should be aware
of the limitations of using evaluated nuclear data libraries.
An example about how to implement the G4NeutronHP package into physics list in a GEANT4 application can be found
in the example case (among others distributed with GEANT4) extended/radioactivedecay/rdecay02.
Three different processes are included in that example: elastic, capture and inelastic. The inelastic reactions in
G4NeutronHP are all reactions except elastic, capture and fission, so fission should also be included in the physics list,
if needed, and it is done in the same way as it is done for the other three.
The G4NeutronHP package must be used together with evaluated nuclear data libraries. They are distributed by the
GEANT4 collaboration (http://geant4.web.cern.ch/geant4/support/download.shtml) and from the IAEA nuclear data
web site (https://www-nds.iaea.org/geant4/) where a larger set of different libraries, including isotopes with Z > 92, is
available.
The evaluated nuclear data libraries do differ and thus the results of the Monte Carlo simulations will depend on
the library used. It is a safe practice to perform simulations with (at least) two different libraries for estimating the
uncertainties associated to the nuclear data.
Together with a good implementation of the physics list, users must be very careful with the definition of the materials
performed in a Monte Carlo simulation when low energy neutron transport is relevant. In contrast to other kind of
simulations, the isotopic composition of the elements which compose the different materials can strongly affect the
obtained simulation results. Because of this, it is strongly recommended to define specifically the isotopic composition
of each element used in the simulation, as it is described in the GEANT4 user’s manual. In principle, such a practice
is not mandatory if natural isotopic compositions are used, since GEANT4 contains them in their databases. However,
by defining them explicitly some unexpected problems may be avoided and a better control of the simulation will be
achieved.
It is highly recommended or mandatory to set the following UNIX environment variables running a GEANT4 applica-
tion:
G4NEUTRONHPDATA [path to the G4NDL format data libraries] (mandatory).
G4NEUTRONHP_SKIP_MISSING_ISOTOPES=1 It sets to zero the cross section of the isotopes which are not
present in the neutron library. If GEANT4 doesn’t find an isotope, then it looks for the natural composition data
of that element. Only if the element is not found then the cross section is set to zero. On the contrary, if this
variable is not defined, GEANT4 looks then for the neutron data of another isotope close in Z and A, which will
have completely different nuclear properties and lead to incorrect results (highly recommended).
G4NEUTRONHP_DO_NOT_ADJUST_FINAL_STATE=1 If this variable is not defined, a GEANT4 model that at-
tempts to satisfy the energy and momentum conservation in some nuclear reactions, by generating artificial
gamma rays. By setting such a variable one avoids the correction and leads to the result obtained with the
ENDF-6 libraries. Even though energy and momentum conservation are desirable, the ENDF-6 libraries do
not provide the necessary correlations between secondary particles for satisfying them in all cases. On the
contrary, ENDF-6 libraries intrinsically violate energy and momentum conservation for several processes and
have been built for preserving the overall average quantities such as average energy releases, average number of
secondaries. . . (highly recommended).
AllowForHeavyElements=1 Activates the physics for isotopes with Z>92 (recommended).
The G4NDL format libraries are based on the ENDF-6 format libraries, which contain evaluated (i.e. recommended)
nuclear data prepared for their use in transport codes. These data are essentially nuclear reaction cross sections
together with the distribution in energy and angle of the secondary reaction products. As a consequence of how the
data is written in the ENDF files, there are some features that may be or may be not expected in the results of a Monte
Carlo calculation.
The information concerning the creation of the reaction products can be incomplete and/or uncorrelated, in the sense
that is described below:
1. Incomplete information.
This applies when there is no information about how to generate a secondary particle. As an example, it is
possible to have only the cross section data of an (n,p) reaction, without any information concerning the energy
and angle of the secondary proton. In this case GEANT4 will produce the proton considering that it is emitted
isotropically in the center of mass frame, with an energy which is deduced from assuming that the residual
nucleus is in its ground state.
2. Uncorrelated information.
This applies when:
1. The energy and angle distributions of a reaction product may be uncorrelated. As a consequence, the
reaction products can be generated with an unphysical energy-angle relationship.
2. The energy-angle distributions of different reaction products of a certain reaction are always uncorrelated.
As an example, consider that in a (n, 2p) reaction at a certain neutron energy both resulting protons can
be emitted with energies ranging from 0 to 5MeV. In this case the energy and angle of each proton will be
sampled independently of the energy and angle of the other proton, so there will be events in which both
protons will be emitted with energies close to 5 MeV and there will also be events in which both protons
will be emitted with energies close to 0 MeV. As a consequence, energy and angular momentum won’t be
conserved event by event. However, energy will be conserved in average and the resulting proton energy
spectrum will be correctly produced.
3. Concatenated reactions.
There are some cases where several nuclear reactions are put together as if they were a single reaction (MT=5
reaction, in ENDF-6 format nomenclature). In those cases the information consists in a cross section, which is
the sum of all of them, plus a reaction product yield and energy-angle distributions for each secondary particle.
In this case the amount of each secondary particle produced has to be sampled every time the reaction occurs,
and it is done independently of the amount of the other secondary particles produced.
Thus, in this case neither the energy and angular momentum nor the number of nucleons is conserved event by
event, but all the quantities should be conserved in average. As a consequence, it is also not possible to deduce
which are the residual nuclei produced, since no information is available concerning what are the specific nuclear
reactions which take place. It has to be said that sometimes ENDF libraries include the residual nuclei as an
outgoing particle. However, GEANT4 does not manage that information, at present. This situation is quite
uncommon in neutron data libraries up to 20 MeV. However, it is quite common to find it in charged particle
libraries below 20 MeV or in neutron libraries above 20 MeV.
As a consequence of what has been presented above, some general features can be expected in the results of a Monte
Carlo calculation performed with the G4NeutronHP package:
• The neutron transport, which means how the neutron looses energy in the collisions, when and how it is ab-
sorbed. . . , is quite trustable, since the main purpose of the ENDF neutron libraries is to perform this neutron
transport.
• The production of neutrons due to neutron induced nuclear reactions is usually trustable, with the exception of
the energy-angle correlations when several neutrons are produced in the same nuclear reaction.
• The results concerning the production of charged particles have to be always questioned. A look into the ENDF
format library used can indicate which results are trustable and which are not. This can be done, for example,
in http://t2.lanl.gov/nis/data.html, among other websites.
• The results concerning the production of 𝛾-rays have to be questioned always. For example, the information on
the number and energies of 𝛾-rays emitted in the neutron capture process is incomplete for almost all the nuclei
and is frequently also uncorrelated. When the information is available, it will be used, but one can obtain results
which are quite far from reality on an event by event basis: the total energy of the cascade won’t be correct in
many cases and only some specific 𝛾-rays which are stored in the neutron databases will be emitted. If there
isn’t any information concerning these 𝛾-rays, GEANT4 will use a simple a model instead which is generally
missing the relevant spectroscopic information. The results concerning the generation of residual nuclei (for
example, in activation calculations) are usually trustable, with the exception of libraries with MT=5 reactions,
as described above (uncorrelated).
As a general conclusion, users should always be critical with the results obtained with Monte Carlo simulation codes,
and this also applies to GEANT4. They have to anticipate which results can be trusted and which results should be
questioned. For the particular case of the a closer look into the underlying evaluated nuclear data in the ENDF format
libraries will allow to check what is the information available in a certain library for some specific isotope and a certain
reaction. There are several public nuclear data sites like http://t2.lanl.gov/nis/data.html.
The transport of very low energy neutrons (below 5 eV) has to be performed using the thermal neutron data libraries.
At these energies, the fact that the nuclei are in atoms which form part of a certain molecule inside a material (crystal
lattice, liquid, plastic. . . ) plays an important role, since there can be a transference of momentum between the neutron
and the whole structure of the material, not only with the nucleus. This is of particular importance for material used as
neutron moderators, i.e., materials with low A (mass number) used to decrease the incident neutron energy in only a
few collisions. Since the property is related to the nucleus in the material, as an example, there is the need for having
different thermal libraries for Hydrogen in polyethylene, Hydrogen in water and so on.
If neutron collisions at these energies are relevant for the problem to be simulated, thermal libraries should be used for
the materials if they are available. If they are not, the results obtained from the simulation will not be trustable in the
neutron energy range below 5 eV, especially when using low mass elements in the simulation.
To use the thermal libraries the following lines should be included in the physics list:
G4HadronElasticProcess* theNeutronElasticProcess = new G4HadronElasticProcess;
// Cross Section Data set
G4NeutronHPElasticData* theHPElasticData = new G4NeutronHPElasticData;
theNeutronElasticProcess->AddDataSet(theHPElasticData);
G4NeutronHPThermalScatteringData* theHPThermalScatteringData = new
˓→G4NeutronHPThermalScatteringData;
theNeutronElasticProcess->AddDataSet(theHPThermalScatteringData);
// Models
G4NeutronHPElastic* theNeutronElasticModel = new G4NeutronHPElastic;
theNeutronElasticModel->SetMinEnergy(4.0*eV);
theNeutronElasticProcess->RegisterMe(theNeutronElasticModel);
G4NeutronHPThermalScattering* theNeutronThermalElasticModel = new G4NeutronHPThermalScattering;
theNeutronThermalElasticModel->SetMaxEnergy(4.0*eV);
theNeutronElasticProcess->RegisterMe(theNeutronThermalElasticModel);
// Apply Processes to Process Manager of Neutron
G4ProcessManager* pmanager = G4Neutron::Neutron()->GetProcessManager();
pmanager->AddDiscreteProcess(theNeutronElasticProcess);
And the materials should be defined with a specific name. For example, to use the thermal library for Hydrogen in
water, the water should be defined as:
where the important thing is the name “TS_H_of_Water”, which is a specific name used by G4NeutronHP. In order
to see which thermal libraries are available, they can be found in the G4NDL4.0/ThermalScattering folder (or equiva-
lent, for other neutron libraries). Then, one has to look into the G4NeutronHPThermalScatteringNames.cc
source file, under source/processes/hadronic/models/neutron_hp/src. There are some lines similar
to:
names.insert(std::pair<G4String,G4String>("TS_H_of_Water", "h_water"));
Due to the coupling between the configuration for neutrons and charged particles in ParticleHP, the default one is not
the recommended one from the physics point of view for all particles. A consistent configuration with thorough testing
will hopefully be introduced in the next release. For the time being, in order to improve the physics performance for
primary charged particles the following environment variable should be set:
export DO_NOT_SET_PHP_AS_HP=1
Note that this environmental variable is a configuration option which is used only at compilation, not at run time, and
it affects both primary neutrons and charged particles. It is not expected to dramatically change the behaviour for
neutrons.
For further improvement with projectile charged particles, it is also recommended to set the following environmental
variable used at run-time:
export G4PHP_DO_NOT_ADJUST_FINAL_STATE=1
which avoids the default adjustment of the final state to ensure better conservation laws (for charge, energy, momentum,
baryon number).
The adjustment of the final state is recommended for realistic detector response in the case of neutron interactions.
For the use-case of reactor physics and dosimetry, where average quantities are important, not adjusting the final state
(i.e. setting the above environment variable) improves accuracy.
Note that, for the time being, setting G4PHP_DO_NOT_ADJUST_FINAL_STATE affects both primary neutrons
and charged particles, so be careful which is the use-case you are interested in. To summarize: if you use Par-
ticleHP for primary neutrons, you can safely take the default; no harm is expected if you build ParticleHP with
DO_NOT_SET_PHP_AS_HP set; be very careful instead if you set G4PHP_DO_NOT_ADJUST_FINAL_STATE. If
you use ParticleHP for primary charged particles, then it is recommended to build with DO_NOT_SET_PHP_AS_HP
set, and then run with DO_NOT_SET_PHP_AS_HP set.
Nuclear reactions at intermediate energies (from a few MeV to a few GeV) are typically modelled in two stages.
The first, fast reaction stage is described by a dynamical model (quantum molecular dynamics, intranuclear cascade,
pre-compound, etc.) and often results in the production of one or several excited nuclei. The second reaction stage
describes the de-excitation of the excited nuclei and it is usually handled by statistical de-excitation models. The
models for the two reaction stages can in principle be chosen independently, but the current design of the GEANT4
hadronics framework makes it difficult to do this at the physics-list level. However, another solution exists.
GEANT4 provides several nuclear de-excitation modules. The default one is G4ExcitationHandler, which is
described in detail in the Physics Reference Manual. The Bertini-style G4CascadeInterface uses an internal
de-excitation model. The ABLA V3 model is also available.
Options are available for steering of the pre-compound model and the de-excitation module. These op-
tions may be invoked by the new C++ interface class G4DeexPrecoParameters. The interface
G4NuclearLevelData::Instance()->GetParameters() is thread safe, parameters are shared between
threads, and parameters are shared between all de-excitation and pre-compound classes. Parameters may be modified
at G4State_PreInit state of GEANT4. This class has the following public methods:
• Dump()
• StreamInfo(std::ostream&)
• SetLevelDensity(G4double)
• SetR0(G4double)
• SetTransitionsR0(G4double)
• SetFBUEnergyLimit(G4double)
• SetFermiEnergy(G4double)
• SetPrecoLowEnergy(G4double)
• SetPhenoFactor(G4double)
• SetMinExcitation(G4double)
• SetMaxLifeTime(G4double)
• SetMinExPerNucleounForMF(G4double)
• SetMinEForMultiFrag(G4double)
• SetMinZForPreco(G4int)
• SetMinAForPreco(G4int)
• SetPrecoModelType(G4int)
• SetDeexModelType(G4int)
• SetTwoJMAX(G4int)
• SetNeverGoBack(G4bool)
• SetUseSoftCutoff(G4bool)
• SetUseCEM(G4bool)
• SetUseGNASH(G4bool)
• SetUseHETC(G4bool)
• SetUseAngularGen(G4bool)
• SetPrecoDummy(G4bool)
• SetCorrelatedGamma(G4bool)
• SetStoreICLevelData(G4bool)
• SetStoreAllLevels(G4bool) - obsolete
• SetInternalConversionFlag(G4bool)
• SetLevelDensityFlag(G4bool)
• SetDeexChannelType(G4DeexChannelType)
It is possible to replace the default de-excitation model with ABLA V3 for any intranuclear-cascade model in GEANT4
except G4CascadeInterface. The easiest way to do this is to call the SetDeExcitation() method of the
relevant intranuclear-cascade-model interface. This can be done even if you are using one of the reference physics
lists. The technique is the following.
For clarity’s sake, assume you are using the FTFP_INCLXX physics list, which uses INCL++, the Liege Intranuclear
Cascade model (G4INCLXXInterface) at intermediate energies. You can couple INCL++ to ABLA V3 by adding
a run action (Usage of User Actions) and adding the following code snippet to BeginOfRunAction().
This technique may be applied to any intranuclear-cascade model (i.e. models that inherit from
G4VIntraNuclearTransportModel), except G4CascadeInterface. For example, if your physics list re-
lies on the Binary-Cascade model (e.g. FTF_BIC), you’ll need to do
// Get hold of a pointer to the Binary-Cascade model interface
std::vector<G4HadronicInteraction *> interactions = G4HadronicInteractionRegistry::Instance()
->FindAllModels("Binary Cascade");
for(std::vector<G4HadronicInteraction *>::const_iterator iInter=interactions.begin(),
˓→e=interactions.end();
iInter!=e; ++iInter) {
G4BinaryCascade *theBICInterface = static_cast<G4BinaryCascade*>(*iInter);
if(theBICInterface) {
This section briefly introduces decay processes installed in GEANT4. For details of the implementation of particle
decays, please refer to the Physics Reference Manual.
GEANT4 provides a G4Decay class for both at rest and in flight particle decays. G4Decay can be applied
to all particles except:
Decay Table
Each particle has its G4DecayTable, which stores information on the decay modes of the particle. Each de-
cay mode, with its branching ratio, corresponds to an object of various “decay channel” classes derived from
G4VDecayChannel. Default decay modes are created in the constructors of particle classes. For example, the
decay table of the neutral pion has G4PhaseSpaceDecayChannel and G4DalitzDecayChannel as follows:
// create a decay channel
G4VDecayChannel* mode;
// pi0 -> gamma + gamma
mode = new G4PhaseSpaceDecayChannel("pi0",0.988,2,"gamma","gamma");
table->Insert(mode);
// pi0 -> gamma + e+ + e-
mode = new G4DalitzDecayChannel("pi0",0.012,"e-","e+");
table->Insert(mode);
Decay modes and branching ratios defined in GEANT4 are listed in Definition of a particle.
Branching ratios and life time can be set in tracking time.
// set lifetime
G4Neutron::Neutron()->SetPDGLifeTime(885.7*second);
// allow neutron decay
G4Neutron::Neutron()->SetPDGStable(false);
Branching ratios and life time can be modified by using user commands, also.
Example: Set 100% br for dalitz decay of pi0
Idle> /particle/select pi0
Idle> /particle/property/decay/select 0
Idle> /particle/property/decay/br 0
Idle> /particle/property/decay/select 1
Idle> /particle/property/decay/br 1
Idle> /particle/property/decay/dump
G4DecayTable: pi0
0: BR: 0 [Phase Space] : gamma gamma
1: BR: 1 [Dalitz Decay] : gamma e- e+
Decays of heavy flavor particles such as B mesons are very complex, with many varieties of decay modes and decay
mechanisms. There are many models for heavy particle decay provided by various event generators and it is impossible
to define all the decay modes of heavy particles by using G4VDecayChannel. In other words, decays of heavy
particles cannot be defined by the GEANT4 decay process, but should be defined by event generators or other external
packages. GEANT4 provides two ways to do this: pre-assigned decay mode and external decayer.
In the latter approach, the class G4VExtDecayer is used for the interface to an external package which defines
decay modes for a particle. If an instance of G4VExtDecayer is attached to G4Decay, daughter particles will be
generated by the external decay handler.
In the former case, decays of heavy particles are simulated by an event generator and the primary event contains the
decay information. G4VPrimaryGenerator automatically attaches any daughter particles to the parent particle as
the PreAssignedDecayProducts member of G4DynamicParticle. G4Decay adopts these pre-assigned daughter
particles instead of asking G4VDecayChannel to generate decay products.
In addition, the user may assign a pre-assigned decay time for a specific track in its rest frame (i.e. de-
cay time is defined in the proper time) by using the G4PrimaryParticle::SetProperTime() method.
G4VPrimaryGenerator sets the PreAssignedDecayProperTime member of G4DynamicParticle. G4Decay
uses this decay time instead of the life time of the particle type.
Gamma-nuclear and lepto-nuclear reactions are handled in GEANT4 as hybrid processes which typically require both
electromagnetic and hadronic models for their implementation. While neutrino-induced reactions are not currently
provided, the GEANT4 hadronic framework is general enough to include their future implementation as a hybrid of
weak and hadronic models.
The general scheme followed is to factor the full interaction into an electromagnetic (or weak) vertex, in which a
virtual particle is generated, and a hadronic vertex in which the virtual particle interacts with a target nucleus. In most
cases the hadronic vertex is implemented by an existing GEANT4 model which handles the intra-nuclear propagation.
The cross sections for these processes are parameterizations, either directly of data or of theoretical distributions
determined from the integration of lepton-nucleon cross sections double differential in energy loss and momentum
transfer.
For the most part gammas can be treated as hadrons and in fact they interact that way with the nucleus when the
Bertini-style cascade G4CascadeInterface and QGSP models are used. These models may be assigned to
G4PhotoNuclearProcess as shown in the following partial code:
G4TheoFSGenerator* theHEModel = new G4TheoFSGenerator;
G4QGSModel* theStringModel = new G4QGSModel<G4GammaParticipants>;
G4ExcitedStringDecay* theStringDecay =
new G4ExcitedStringDecay(theFragmentation=new G4QGSMFragmentation);
theStringModel->SetFragmentationModel(theStringDecay);
theHEModel->SetHighEnergyGenerator(theStringModel);
theHEModel->SetTransport(new G4GeneratorPrecompoundInterface);
theHEModel->SetMinEnergy(8*GeV);
A photon is considered to be optical when its wavelength is much greater than the typical atomic spacing. In GEANT4
optical photons are treated as a class of particle distinct from their higher energy gamma cousins. This implementation
allows the wave-like properties of electromagnetic radiation to be incorporated into the optical photon process. Be-
cause this theoretical description breaks down at higher energies, there is no smooth transition as a function of energy
between the optical photon and gamma particle classes.
For the simulation of optical photons to work correctly in GEANT4, they must be imputed a linear polarization. This is
unlike most other particles in GEANT4 but is automatically and correctly done for optical photons that are generated as
secondaries by existing processes in GEANT4. Not so, if the user wishes to start optical photons as primary particles.
In this case, the user must set the linear polarization using particle gun methods, the General Particle Source, or his/her
PrimaryGeneratorAction. For an unpolarized source, the linear polarization should be sampled randomly for each new
primary photon.
The GEANT4 catalogue of processes at optical wavelengths includes refraction and reflection at medium boundaries,
bulk absorption, Mie and Rayleigh scattering. Processes which produce optical photons include the Cerenkov ef-
fect and scintillation. Optical photons are generated in GEANT4 without energy conservation and their energy must
therefore not be tallied as part of the energy balance of an event.
The optical properties of the medium which are key to the implementation of these types of processes are stored as
entries in a G4MaterialPropertiesTable which is linked to the G4Material in question. These properties
may be constants or they may be expressed as a function of the photon’s energy. This table is a private data member of
the G4Material class. The G4MaterialPropertiesTable is implemented as a hash directory, in which each
entry consists of a value and a key. The key is used to quickly and efficiently retrieve the corresponding value. All
values in the dictionary are either instantiations of G4double or the class G4MaterialPropertyVector, and
all keys are of type G4String.
A G4MaterialPropertyVector is a typedef of G4PhysicsOrderedFreeVector. The entries are a pair of numbers,
which in the case of an optical property, are the photon energy and corresponding property value. It is possible for
the user to add as many material (optical) properties to the material as he wishes using the methods supplied by
the G4MaterialPropertiesTable class. An example of this is shown in Listing 5.3. In this example the
interpolation of the G4MaterialPropertyVector is to be done by a spline fit. The default is a linear interpolation.
The radiation of Cerenkov light occurs when a charged particle moves through a dispersive medium faster than the
group velocity of light in that medium. Photons are emitted on the surface of a cone, whose opening angle with respect
to the particle’s instantaneous direction decreases as the particle slows down. At the same time, the frequency of the
photons emitted increases, and the number produced decreases. When the particle velocity drops below the local speed
of light, the radiation ceases and the emission cone angle collapses to zero. The photons produced by this process have
an inherent polarization perpendicular to the cone’s surface at production.
The flux, spectrum, polarization and emission of Cerenkov radiation in the AlongStepDoIt method of the class
G4Cerenkov follow well-known formulae, with two inherent computational limitations. The first arises from step-
wise simulation, and the second comes from the requirement that numerical integration calculate the average number of
Cerenkov photons per step. The process makes use of a G4PhysicsTable which contains incremental integrals to
expedite this calculation. The Cerenkov process in GEANT4 is limited to normally dispersive media, i.e., 𝑑𝑛(𝐸)/𝑑𝐸 ≥
0.
The time and position of Cerenkov photon emission are calculated from quantities known at the beginning of a
charged particle’s step. The step is assumed to be rectilinear even in the presence of a magnetic field. The user
may limit the step size by specifying a maximum (average) number of Cerenkov photons created during the step,
using the SetMaxNumPhotonsPerStep(const G4int NumPhotons) method. The actual number gener-
ated will necessarily be different due to the Poissonian nature of the production. In the present implementation, the
production density of photons is distributed evenly along the particle’s track segment, even if the particle has slowed
significantly during the step. The step can also be limited with the SetMaxBetaChangePerStep method, where
the argument is the allowed change in percent).
The frequently very large number of secondaries produced in a single step (about 300/cm in water), compelled the
idea in GEANT3.21 of suspending the primary particle until all its progeny have been tracked. Despite the fact that
GEANT4 employs dynamic memory allocation and thus does not suffer from the limitations of GEANT3.21 with its
fixed large initial ZEBRA store, GEANT4 nevertheless provides for an analogous functionality with the public method
SetTrackSecondariesFirst. An example of the registration of the Cerenkov process is given in Listing 5.4.
void ExptPhysicsList::ConstructOp(){
theCerenkovProcess->SetTrackSecondariesFirst(true);
theCerenkovProcess->SetMaxBetaChangePerStep(10.0);
theCerenkovProcess->SetMaxNumPhotonsPerStep(MaxNumPhotons);
theParticleIterator->reset();
while( (*theParticleIterator)() ){
G4ParticleDefinition* particle = theParticleIterator->value();
G4ProcessManager* pmanager = particle->GetProcessManager();
G4String particleName = particle->GetParticleName();
if (theCerenkovProcess->IsApplicable(*particle)) {
pmanager->AddProcess(theCerenkovProcess);
pmanager->SetProcessOrdering(theCerenkovProcess,idxPostStep);
}
}
}
Every scintillating material has a characteristic light yield, SCINTILLATIONYIELD, and an intrinsic resolution,
RESOLUTIONSCALE, which generally broadens the statistical distribution of generated photons. A wider in-
trinsic resolution is due to impurities which are typical for doped crystals like NaI(Tl) and CsI(Tl). On the
other hand, the intrinsic resolution can also be narrower when the Fano factor plays a role. The actual num-
ber of emitted photons during a step fluctuates around the mean number of photons with a width given by
ResolutionScale*sqrt(MeanNumberOfPhotons). The average light yield, MeanNumberOfPhotons,
has a linear dependence on the local energy deposition, but it may be different for minimum ionizing and non-minimum
ionizing particles.
A scintillator is also characterized by its photon emission spectrum and by the exponential decay of its time spectrum.
In GEANT4 the scintillator can have a fast and a slow component. (Only one component is required, and if there
is only one component it can be either fast or slow.) The relative strength of the fast component as a fraction of
total scintillation yield is given by the YIELDRATIO. Scintillation may be simulated by specifying these empirical
parameters for each material. It is sufficient to specify in the user’s DetectorConstruction class a relative
spectral distribution as a function of photon energy for the scintillating material. An example of this is shown in Listing
5.5. For each time constant, the spectrum must be specified by FASTCOMPONENT or SLOWCOMPONENT. The
time constant must be specified by FASTTIMECONSTANT or SLOWTIMECONSTANT. Rise times may optionally
be specified with FASTSCINTILLATIONRISETIME and SLOWSCINTILLATIONRISETIME.
G4Material* Scnt;
G4MaterialPropertiesTable* Scnt_MPT = new G4MaterialPropertiesTable();
Scnt_MPT->AddConstProperty("SCINTILLATIONYIELD", 5000./MeV);
Scnt_MPT->AddConstProperty("RESOLUTIONSCALE", 2.0);
Scnt_MPT->AddConstProperty("FASTTIMECONSTANT", 1.*ns);
Scnt_MPT->AddConstProperty("SLOWTIMECONSTANT", 10.*ns);
Scnt_MPT->AddConstProperty("YIELDRATIO", 0.8);
Scnt->SetMaterialPropertiesTable(Scnt_MPT);
In cases where the scintillation yield of a scintillator depends on the particle type, different scintilla-
tion processes may be defined for them. How this yield scales to the one specified for the mate-
rial is expressed with the ScintillationYieldFactor in the user’s PhysicsList as shown in
the Listing 5.6 below. In those cases where the fast to slow excitation ratio changes with particle
type, the method SetScintillationExcitationRatio can be called for each scintillation process
(see the advanced underground_physics example). This overwrites the YieldRatio obtained from the
G4MaterialPropertiesTable.
theMuonScintProcess->SetTrackSecondariesFirst(true);
theMuonScintProcess->SetScintillationYieldFactor(0.8);
theParticleIterator->reset();
while( (*theParticleIterator)() ){
G4ParticleDefinition* particle = theParticleIterator->value();
G4ProcessManager* pmanager = particle->GetProcessManager();
G4String particleName = particle->GetParticleName();
if (theMuonScintProcess->IsApplicable(*particle)) {
if (particleName == "mu+") {
pmanager->AddProcess(theMuonScintProcess);
pmanager->SetProcessOrderingToLast(theMuonScintProcess, idxAtRest);
pmanager->SetProcessOrderingToLast(theMuonScintProcess, idxPostStep);
}
}
}
A Gaussian-distributed number of photons is generated according to the energy lost during the
step. A resolution scale of 1.0 produces a statistical fluctuation around the average yield set with
AddConstProperty("SCINTILLATIONYIELD"), while values > 1 broaden the fluctuation. A value of
zero produces no fluctuation. Each photon’s frequency is sampled from the empirical spectrum. The photons originate
evenly along the track segment and are emitted uniformly into 4𝜋 with a random linear polarization and at times
characteristic for the scintillation component. The SCINTILLATIONYIELD specified here is the differential yield.
When there are multiple scintillators in the simulation and/or when the scintillation yield is a non-linear function of the
energy deposited, the user can also define an array of total scintillation light yields as a function of the energy deposited
and particle type. The available particles are protons, electrons, deuterons, tritons, alphas, and carbon ions. These are
the particles known to significantly effect the scintillation light yield, of for example, BC501A (NE213/EJ301) liquid
organic scintillator and BC420 plastic scintillator as function of energy deposited.
The method works as follows:
1. In the user’s physics lists, the user must set a G4bool flag that allows scintillation light emission to depend on
the energy deposited by particle type:
theScintProcess->SetScintillationByParticleType(true);
2. The user must also specify and add, via the AddProperty method of the MPT, the scintillation light yield as func-
tion of incident particle energy with new keywords, PROTONSCINTILLATIONYIELD, DEUTERONSCIN-
TILLATIONYIELD, TRITONSCINTILLATIONYIELD, ALPHASCINTILLATIONYIELD, IONSCINTIL-
LATIONYIELD, and ELECTRONSCINTILLATIONYIELD, and pairs of protonEnergy and scintLightYield.
These particle-specific yields are the total yields (not differential) as a function of energy.
Wavelength Shifting (WLS) fibers are used in many high-energy particle physics experiments. They absorb light at
one wavelength and re-emit light at a different wavelength and are used for several reasons. For one, they tend to
decrease the self-absorption of the detector so that as much light reaches the PMTs as possible. WLS fibers are also
used to match the emission spectrum of the detector with the input spectrum of the PMT.
A WLS material is characterized by its photon absorption and photon emission spectrum and by a possible time
delay between the absorption and re-emission of the photon. Wavelength Shifting may be simulated by specify-
ing these empirical parameters for each WLS material in the simulation. It is sufficient to specify in the user’s
DetectorConstruction class a relative spectral distribution as a function of photon energy for the WLS material.
WLSABSLENGTH is the absorption length of the material as a function of the photon’s energy. WLSCOMPONENT
is the relative emission spectrum of the material as a function of the photon’s energy, and WLSTIMECONSTANT ac-
counts for any time delay which may occur between absorption and re-emission of the photon. An example is shown
in the Listing 5.7.
G4double RIndexFiber[nEntries] =
{ 1.60, 1.60, 1.60, 1.60, 1.60, 1.60, 1.60, 1.60, 1.60 };
G4double AbsFiber[nEntries] =
{0.1*mm,0.2*mm,0.3*mm,0.4*cm,1.0*cm,10*cm,1.0*m,10.0*m,10.0*m};
G4double EmissionFiber[nEntries] =
{0.0, 0.0, 0.0, 0.1, 0.5, 1.0, 5.0, 10.0, 10.0 };
G4Material* WLSFiber;
G4MaterialPropertiesTable* MPTFiber = new G4MaterialPropertiesTable();
MPTFiber->AddProperty("RINDEX",PhotonEnergy,RIndexFiber,nEntries);
MPTFiber->AddProperty("WLSABSLENGTH",PhotonEnergy,AbsFiber,nEntries);
MPTFiber->AddProperty("WLSCOMPONENT",PhotonEnergy,EmissionFiber,nEntries);
MPTFiber->AddConstProperty("WLSTIMECONSTANT", 0.5*ns);
WLSFiber->SetMaterialPropertiesTable(MPTFiber);
The process is defined in the PhysicsList in the usual way. The process class name is G4OpWLS. It should be
instantiated with theWLSProcess = new G4OpWLS(“OpWLS”) and attached to the process manager of the opti-
cal photon as a DiscreteProcess. The way the WLSTIMECONSTANT is used depends on the time profile method
chosen by the user. If in the PhysicsList theWLSProcess->UseTimeGenerator(“exponential”) option is set, the time
delay between absorption and re-emission of the photon is sampled from an exponential distribution, with the de-
cay term equal to WLSTIMECONSTANT. If, on the other hand, theWLSProcess->UseTimeGenerator(“delta”) is
chosen, the time delay is a delta function and equal to WLSTIMECONSTANT. The default is “delta” in case the
Absorption
The implementation of optical photon bulk absorption, G4OpAbsorption, is trivial in that the process merely kills
the particle. The procedure requires the user to fill the relevant G4MaterialPropertiesTable with empirical
data for the absorption length, using ABSLENGTH as the property key in the public method AddProperty. The
absorption length is the average distance traveled by a photon before being absorbed by the medium; i.e. it is the mean
free path returned by the GetMeanFreePath method.
Rayleigh Scattering
The differential cross section in Rayleigh scattering, 𝑑𝜎/𝑑Ω, is proportional to 1 + cos2 𝜃, where 𝜃 is the polar of the
new polarization vector with respect to the old polarization vector. The G4OpRayleigh scattering process samples
this angle accordingly and then calculates the scattered photon’s new direction by requiring that it be perpendicular to
the photon’s new polarization in such a way that the final direction, initial and final polarizations are all in one plane.
This process thus depends on the particle’s polarization (spin). The photon’s polarization is a data member of the
G4DynamicParticle class.
A photon which is not assigned a polarization at production, either via the SetPolarization method
of the G4PrimaryParticle class, or indirectly with the SetParticlePolarization method of the
G4ParticleGun class, may not be Rayleigh scattered. Optical photons produced by the G4Cerenkov process
have inherently a polarization perpendicular to the cone’s surface at production. Scintillation photons have a random
linear polarization perpendicular to their direction.
The process requires a G4MaterialPropertiesTable to be filled by the user with Rayleigh scattering length
data. The Rayleigh scattering attenuation length is the average distance traveled by a photon before it is Rayleigh scat-
tered in the medium and it is the distance returned by the GetMeanFreePath method. The G4OpRayleigh class
provides a RayleighAttenuationLengthGenerator method which calculates the attenuation coefficient of a
medium following the Einstein-Smoluchowski formula whose derivation requires the use of statistical mechanics, in-
cludes temperature, and depends on the isothermal compressibility of the medium. This generator is convenient when
the Rayleigh attenuation length is not known from measurement but may be calculated from first principles using the
above material constants. For a medium named Water and no Rayleigh scattering attenuation length specified by the
user, the program automatically calls the RayleighAttenuationLengthGenerator which calculates it for 10
degrees Celsius liquid water.
Mie Scattering
Mie Scattering (or Mie solution) is an analytical solution of Maxwell’s equations for scattering of optical photons
by spherical particles. It is significant only when the radius of the scattering object is of order of the wave length.
The analytical expressions for Mie Scattering are very complicated since they are a series sum of Bessel functions.
One common approximation made is call Henyey-Greenstein (HG). The implementation in GEANT4 follows the HG
approximation (for details see the Physics Reference Manual. ) and the treatment of polarization and momentum are
similar to that of Rayleigh scattering. We require the final polarization direction to be perpendicular to the momentum
direction. We also require the final momentum, initial polarization and final polarization to be in the same plane.
The process requires a G4MaterialPropertiesTable to be filled by the user with Mie scattering length data (entered with
the name: MIEHG) analogous to Rayleigh scattering. The Mie scattering attenuation length is the average distance
traveled by a photon before it is Mie scattered in the medium and it is the distance returned by the GetMeanFreePath
method. In practice, the user not only needs to provide the attenuation length of Mie scattering, but also needs to
provide the constant parameters of the approximation: g_f, g_b, and r_f. (with AddConstProperty and with the
names: MIEHG_FORWARD, MIEHG_BACKWARD, and MIEHG_FORWARD_RATIO, respectively; see extended
example optical/OpNovice.)
Boundary Process
One implementation of the G4OpBoundaryProcess class employs the UNIFIED model [A. Levin and C. Moisan,
A More Physical Approach to Model the Surface Treatment of Scintillation Counters and its Implementation into
DETECT, TRIUMF Preprint TRI-PP-96-64, Oct. 1996] of the DETECT program [G.F. Knoll, T.F. Knoll and T.M.
Henderson, Light Collection Scintillation Detector Composites for Neutron Detection, IEEE Trans. Nucl. Sci., 35
(1988) 872.]. It applies to dielectric-dielectric interfaces and tries to provide a realistic simulation, which deals with
all aspects of surface finish and reflector coating. The surface may be assumed as smooth and covered with a metallized
coating representing a specular reflector with given reflection coefficient, or painted with a diffuse reflecting material
where Lambertian reflection occurs. The surfaces may or may not be in optical contact with another component and
most importantly, one may consider a surface to be made up of micro-facets with normal vectors that follow given
distributions around the nominal normal for the volume at the impact point. For very rough surfaces, it is possible for
the photon to inversely aim at the same surface again after reflection of refraction and so multiple interactions with the
boundary are possible within the process itself and without the need for relocation by G4Navigator.
Fig. 5.1: Diagram of the UNIFIED Model for Optical Surfaces (courtesy A. Shankar)
The UNIFIED model (Fig. 5.1) provides for a range of different reflection mechanisms. The specular lobe constant
represents the reflection probability about the normal of a micro facet. The specular spike constant, in turn, illustrates
the probability of reflection about the average surface normal. The diffuse lobe constant is for the probability of
internal Lambertian reflection, and finally the back-scatter spike constant is for the case of several reflections within
a deep groove with the ultimate result of exact back-scattering. The four probabilities must add up to one, with the
diffuse lobe constant being implicit. The reader may consult the reference for a thorough description of the model.
The original GEANT3.21 implementation of this process is also available via the GLISUR methods flag. [GEANT4
Detector Description and Simulation Tool, Application Software Group, Computing and Networks Division, CERN,
PHYS260-6 tp 260-7.].
The reflectivity off a metal surface can also be calculated by way of a complex index of refraction. Instead of stor-
ing the REFLECTIVITY directly, the user stores the real part (REALRINDEX) and the imaginary part (IMAGI-
NARYRINDEX) as a function of photon energy separately in the G4MaterialPropertyTable. GEANT4 then calculates
the reflectivity depending on the incident angle, photon energy, degree of TE and TM polarization, and this complex
refractive index.
The program defaults to the GLISUR model and polished surface finish when no specific model and surface finish is
specified by the user. In the case of a dielectric-metal interface, or when the GLISUR model is specified, the only
surface finish options available are polished or ground. For dielectric-metal surfaces, the G4OpBoundaryProcess
also defaults to unit reflectivity and zero detection efficiency. In cases where the user specifies the UNIFIED model (fig-
unified-surface-model), but does not otherwise specify the model reflection probability constants, the default becomes
Lambertian reflection.
Martin Janecek and Bill Moses (Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory) built an instrument for measuring the an-
gular reflectivity distribution inside of BGO crystals with common surface treatments and reflectors applied. These
results have been incorporated into the GEANT4 code. A third class of reflection type besides dielectric_metal and
dielectric_dielectric is added: dielectric_LUT. The distributions have been converted to 21 look-up-tables (LUT); so
far for 1 scintillator material (BGO) x 3 surface treatments x 7 reflector materials. The modified code allows the
user to specify the surface treatment (rough-cut, chemically etched, or mechanically polished), the attached reflector
(Lumirror, Teflon, ESR film, Tyvek, or TiO2 paint), and the bonding type (air-coupled or glued). The glue used is
MeltMount, and the ESR film used is VM2000. Each LUT consists of measured angular distributions with 4º by 5º
resolution in theta and phi, respectively, for incidence angles from 0º to 90º degrees, in 1º-steps. The code might
in the future be updated by adding more LUTs, for instance, for other scintillating materials (such as LSO or NaI).
To use these LUT the user has to download them from Geant4 Software Download and set an environment variable,
G4REALSURFACEDATA, to the directory of geant4/data/RealSurface1.0. For details see: M. Janecek, W.
W. Moses, IEEE Trans. Nucl. Sci. 57 (3) (2010) 964-970.
The enumeration G4OpticalSurfaceFinish has been extended to include (what follows should be a 2 column table):
polishedlumirrorair, // mechanically polished surface, with lumirror
polishedlumirrorglue, // mechanically polished surface, with lumirror & meltmount
polishedair, // mechanically polished surface
polishedteflonair, // mechanically polished surface, with teflon
polishedtioair, // mechanically polished surface, with tio paint
polishedtyvekair, // mechanically polished surface, with tyvek
polishedvm2000air, // mechanically polished surface, with esr film
polishedvm2000glue, // mechanically polished surface, with esr film & meltmount
etchedlumirrorair, // chemically etched surface, with lumirror
etchedlumirrorglue, // chemically etched surface, with lumirror & meltmount
etchedair, // chemically etched surface
etchedteflonair, // chemically etched surface, with teflon
etchedtioair, // chemically etched surface, with tio paint
etchedtyvekair, // chemically etched surface, with tyvek
etchedvm2000air, // chemically etched surface, with esr film
etchedvm2000glue, // chemically etched surface, with esr film & meltmount
groundlumirrorair, // rough-cut surface, with lumirror
groundlumirrorglue, // rough-cut surface, with lumirror & meltmount
groundair, // rough-cut surface
groundteflonair, // rough-cut surface, with teflon
groundtioair, // rough-cut surface, with tio paint
groundtyvekair, // rough-cut surface, with tyvek
groundvm2000air, // rough-cut surface, with esr film
groundvm2000glue // rough-cut surface, with esr film & meltmount
To use a look-up-table, all the user needs to specify for an G4OpticalSurface is:
SetType(dielectric_LUT), SetModel(LUT) and for example, SetFinish(polishedtyvekair).
A newly implemented model for optical transport is called the LUT Davis model [RoncaliCherry2013],
[Stockhoff2017], [Roncali2017]. The model is based on measured surface data and allows the user to choose from
a list of available surface finishes. Provided are a rough and a polished L(Y)SO surface that can be used without
reflector, or in combination with a specular reflector (e.g. ESR) or a Lambertian reflector (e.g. Teflon). The specular
reflector can be coupled to the crystal with air or optical grease. Teflon tape is wrapped around the crystal with 4
layers.
The user can extend the list of finishes with custom measured surface data. In future releases, a tool to calculate LUTs
will be provided in form of a graphical user interface.
In the LUT database, typical roughness parameters obtained from the measurements are provided to characterize the
type of surface modelled:
5.2.7 Parameterization
In this section we describe how to use the parameterization or “fast simulation” facilities of GEANT4. Examples are
provided in the examples/novice/N05 directory.
Generalities:
The GEANT4 parameterization facilities allow you to shortcut the detailed tracking in a given volume and for given
particle types in order for you to provide your own implementation of the physics and of the detector response.
Parameterisations are bound to a G4Region object, which, in the case of fast simulation is also called an envelope.
Prior to release 8.0, parameterisations were bound to a G4LogicalVolume, the root of a volume hierarchy. These
Fig. 5.2: Old Momentum to New Momentum. The old momentum is the unit vector that describes the incident photon.
The reflected/transmitted photon is the New Momentum described by two angles 𝜑 and 𝜃
root volumes are now attributes of the G4Region. Envelopes often correspond to the volumes of sub-detectors: elec-
tromagnetic calorimeters, tracking chambers, etc. With GEANT4 it is also possible to define envelopes by overlaying
a parallel or “ghost” geometry as discussed in Parameterisation Using Ghost Geometries.
In GEANT4, parameterisations have three main features. You must specify:
• the particle types for which your parameterisation is valid;
• the dynamics conditions for which your parameterisation is valid and must be triggered;
• the parameterisation itself: where the primary will be killed or moved, whether or not to create it or create
secondaries, etc., and where the detector response will be computed.
GEANT4 will message your parameterisation code for each step starting in any root G4LogicalVolume (including
daughters. sub-daughters, etc. of this volume) of the G4Region. It will proceed by first asking the available param-
eterisations for the current particle type if one of them (and only one) wants to issue a trigger. If so it will invoke its
parameterisation. In this case, the tracking *will not apply physics* to the particle in the step. Instead, the UserStep-
pingAction will be invoked.
Parameterisations look like a “user stepping action” but are more advanced because:
• parameterisation code is messaged only in the G4Region to which it is bound;
• parameterisation code is messaged anywhere in the G4Region , that is, any volume in which the track is located;
• GEANT4 will provide information to your parameterisation code about the current root volume of the G4Region
in which the track is travelling.
The GEANT4 components which allow the implementation and control of parameterisations are:
G4VFastSimulationModel This is the abstract class for the implementation of parameterisations. You must
inherit from it to implement your concrete parameterisation model.
G4FastSimulationManager The G4VFastSimulationModel objects are attached to the G4Region
through a G4FastSimulationManager. This object will manage the list of models and will message
them at tracking time.
G4Region/Envelope As mentioned before, an envelope in GEANT4 is a G4Region. The parameterisation is
bound to the G4Region by setting a G4FastSimulationManager pointer to it.
Fig. 5.3 shows how the G4VFastSimulationModel and G4FastSimulationManager objects are
bound to the G4Region. Then for all root G4LogicalVolume’s held by the G4Region, the fast simulation
code is active.
Constructors
The G4VFastSimulationModel class has two constructors. The second one allows you to get started quickly:
G4VFastSimulationModel(const G4String& aName): Here aName identifies the parameterisation
model.
G4VFastSimulationModel(const G4String& aName, G4Region*, G4bool IsUnique=false):
In addition to the model name, this constructor accepts a G4Region pointer. The needed
G4FastSimulationManager object is constructed if necessary, passing to it the G4Region pointer
and the Boolean value. If it already exists, the model is simply added to this manager. Note that the
G4VFastSimulationModel object will not keep track of the G4Region passed in the constructor. The
Boolean argument is there for optimization purposes: if you know that the G4Region has a unique root
G4LogicalVolume, uniquely placed, you can set the Boolean value to “true”.
Virtual methods
The G4VFastSimulationModel has three pure virtual methods which must be overridden in your concrete class:
G4VFastSimulationModel(const G4String& aName): Here aName identifies the parameterisation
model.
G4bool ModelTrigger( const G4FastTrack&): You must return “true” when the dynamic conditions to
trigger your parameterisation are fulfilled. G4FastTrack provides access to the current G4Track, gives simple
access to the current root G4LogicalVolume related features (its G4VSolid, and G4AffineTransform references
between the global and the root G4LogicalVolume local coordinates systems) and simple access to the position
and momentum expressed in the root G4LogicalVolume coordinate system. Using these quantities and the
G4VSolid methods, you can for example easily check how far you are from the root G4LogicalVolume boundary.
G4bool IsApplicable(const G4ParticleDefinition&): In your implementation, you must re-
turn “true” when your model is applicable to the G4ParticleDefinition passed to this method. The
G4ParticleDefinition provides all intrinsic particle information (mass, charge, spin, name . . . ).
If you want to implement a model which is valid only for certain particle types, it is recommended for efficiency
that you use the static pointer of the corresponding particle classes.
As an example, in a model valid for gammas only, the IsApplicable() method should take the form:
#include "G4Gamma.hh"
G4bool ModelTrigger(const G4FastTrack&): You must return “true” when the dynamic conditions to
trigger your parameterisation are fulfilled. The G4FastTrack provides access to the current G4Track, gives
simple access to envelope related features (G4LogicalVolume, G4VSolid, and G4AffineTransform references
between the global and the envelope local coordinates systems) and simple access to the position and momentum
expressed in the envelope coordinate system. Using these quantities and the G4VSolid methods, you can for
example easily check how far you are from the envelope boundary.
void DoIt(const G4FastTrack&, G4FastStep&): The details of your parameterisation will be imple-
mented in this method. The G4FastTrack reference provides the input information, and the final state of the
particles after parameterisation must be returned through the G4FastStep reference. Tracking for the final state
particles is requested after your parameterisation has been invoked.
G4FastSimulationManager functionalities regarding the use of ghost volumes are explained in Parameterisation Using
Ghost Geometries.
Constructor
This G4VProcess serves as an interface between the tracking and the parameterisation. At tracking time, it collaborates
with the G4FastSimulationManager of the current volume, if any, to allow the models to trigger. If no manager exists
or if no model issues a trigger, the tracking goes on normally.
In the present implementation, you must set this process in the G4ProcessManager of the particles you parameterise
to enable your parameterisation.
The processes ordering is:
[n-3] ...
[n-2] Multiple Scattering
[n-1] G4FastSimulationManagerProcess
[ n ] G4Transportation
This ordering is important if you use ghost geometries, since the G4FastSimulationManagerProcess will provide nav-
igation in the ghost world to limit the step on ghost boundaries.
The G4FastSimulationManager must be added to the process list of a particle as a continuous and discrete process if
you use ghost geometries for this particle. You can add it as a discrete process if you don’t use ghosts.
The following code registers the G4FastSimulationManagerProcess with all the particles as a discrete and continuous
process:
void MyPhysicsList::addParameterisation()
{
G4FastSimulationManagerProcess*
theFastSimulationManagerProcess = new G4FastSimulationManagerProcess();
theParticleIterator->reset();
while( (*theParticleIterator)() )
{
G4ParticleDefinition* particle = theParticleIterator->value();
G4ProcessManager* pmanager = particle->GetProcessManager();
pmanager->AddProcess(theFastSimulationManagerProcess, -1, 0, 0);
}
}
Presently, you will mainly need to use the GlobalFastSimulationManager if you use ghost geometries.
In some cases, volumes of the tracking geometry do not allow envelopes to be defined. This may be the case with a
geometry coming from a CAD system. Since such a geometry is flat, a parallel geometry must be used to define the
envelopes.
Another interesting case involves defining an envelope which groups the electromagnetic and hadronic calorimeters
of a detector into one volume. This may be useful when parameterizing the interaction of charged pions. You will
very likely not want electrons to see this envelope, which means that ghost geometries have to be organized by particle
flavours.
Using ghost geometries implies some more overhead in the parameterisation mechanism for the particles sensitive
to ghosts, since navigation is provided in the ghost geometry by the G4FastSimulationManagerProcess. Usually,
however, only a few volumes will be placed in this ghost world, so that the geometry computations will remain rather
cheap.
In the existing implementation (temporary implementation with G4Region but before parallel geometry im-
plementation), you may only consider ghost G4Regions with just one root G4LogicalVolume. The
G4GlobalFastSimulationManager provides the construction of the ghost geometry by making first an empty “clone”
of the world for tracking provided by the construct() method of your G4VUserDetectorConstruction concrete
class. You provide the placement of the G4Region root G4LogicalVolume relative to the ghost world coordi-
nates in the G4FastSimulationManager objects. A ghost G4Region is recognized by the fact that its associated
G4FastSimulationManager retains a non-empty list of placements.
The G4GlobalFastSimulationManager will then use both those placements and the IsApplicable() methods of the
models attached to the G4FastSimulationManager objects to build the flavour-dependent ghost geometries.
Then at the beginning of the tracking of a particle, the appropriate ghost world, if any, will be selected.
The steps required to build one ghost G4Region are:
1. built the ghost G4Region : myGhostRegion;
2. build the root G4LogicalVolume: myGhostLogical, set it to myGhostRegion;
3. build a G4FastSimulationManager object, myGhostFSManager, giving myGhostRegion as argument of the con-
structor;
4. give to the G4FastSimulationManager the placement of the myGhostLogical, by invoking for the
G4FastSimulationManager method:
AddGhostPlacement(G4RotationMatrix*, const G4ThreeVector&);
or:
AddGhostPlacement(G4Transform3D*);
where the rotation matrix and translation vector of the 3-D transformation describe the placement relative to the
ghost world coordinates.
5. build your G4VFastSimulationModel objects and add them to the myGhostFSManager. The IsApplicable()
methods of your models will be used by the G4GlobalFastSimulationManager to build the ghost geometries
corresponding to a given particle type.
6. Invoke the G4GlobalFastSimulationManager method:
G4GlobalFastSimulationManager::getGlobalFastSimulationManager()->
CloseFastSimulation();
This last call will cause the G4GlobalFastSimulationManager to build the flavour-dependent ghost geometries. This
call must be done before the RunManager closes the geometry. (It is foreseen that the run manager in the future will
invoke the CloseFastSimulation() to synchronize properly with the closing of the geometry).
Visualization facilities are provided for ghosts geometries. After the CloseFastSimulation() invocation, it is possible
to ask for the drawing of ghosts in an interactive session. The basic commands are:
• /vis/draw/Ghosts particle_name
which makes the drawing of the ghost geometry associated with the particle specified by name in the command
line.
• /vis/draw/Ghosts
which draws all the ghost geometries.
Gflash Parameterization
This section describes how to use the Gflash library. Gflash is a concrete parameterization which is based on the
equations and parameters of the original Gflash package from H1(hep-ex/0001020, Grindhammer & Peters, see
physics manual) and uses the “fast simulation” facilities of GEANT4 described above. Briefly, whenever a e-/e+
particle enters the calorimeter, it is parameterized if it has a minimum energy and the shower is expected to be
contained in the calorimeter (or ” parameterization envelope”). If this is fulfilled the particle is killed, as well as
all secondaries, and the energy is deposited according to the Gflash equations. An example, provided in exam-
ples/extended/parametrisation/gflash/, shows how to interface Gflash to your application. The simulation time is
measured, so the user can immediately see the speed increase resulting from the use of Gflash.
To use Gflash “out of the box” the following steps are necessary:
• The user must add the fast simulation process to his process manager:
void MyPhysicsList::addParameterisation()
{
G4FastSimulationManagerProcess*
theFastSimulationManagerProcess = new G4FastSimulationManagerProcess();
theParticleIterator->reset();
while( (*theParticleIterator)() )
{
G4ParticleDefinition* particle = theParticleIterator->value();
G4ProcessManager* pmanager = particle->GetProcessManager();
pmanager->AddProcess(theFastSimulationManagerProcess, -1, 0, 0);
}
}
• The envelope in which the parameterization should be performed must be specified (below: G4Region
m_calo_region) and the GFlashShowerModel must be assigned to this region. Furthermore, the classes GFlash-
ParticleBounds (which provides thresholds for the parameterization like minimal energy etc.), GflashHitMaker(a
helper class to generate hits in the sensitive detector) and GFlashHomoShowerParamterisation (which does the
computations) must be constructed (by the user at the moment) and assigned to the GFlashShowerModel. Please
note that at the moment only homogeneous calorimeters are supported.
m_theFastShowerModel = new GFlashShowerModel("fastShowerModel",m_calo_region);
m_theParametrisation = new GFlashHomoShowerParamterisation(matManager->getMaterial(mat));
m_theParticleBounds = new GFlashParticleBounds();
m_theHMaker = new GFlashHitMaker();
m_theFastShowerModel->SetParametrisation(*m_theParametrisation);
m_theFastShowerModel->SetParticleBounds(*m_theParticleBounds) ;
m_theFastShowerModel->SetHitMaker(*m_theHMaker);
The user must also set the material of the calorimeter, since the computation depends on the material.
• It is mandatory to use G4VGFlashSensitiveDetector as (additional) base class for the sensitive detector.
class ExGflashSensitiveDetector: public G4VSensitiveDetector ,public
˓→G4VGFlashSensitiveDetector
Here it is necessary to implement a separate interface, where the GFlash spots are processed.
(ProcessHits(G4GFlashSpot*aSpot ,G4TouchableHistory* ROhist))
A separate interface is used, because the Gflash spots naturally contain less information than the full simulation.
Since the parameters in the Gflash package are taken from fits to full simulations with Geant3, some retuning might
be necessary for good agreement with GEANT4 showers. For experiment-specific geometries some retuning might be
necessary anyway. The tuning is quite complicated since there are many parameters (some correlated) and cannot be
described here (see again hep-ex/0001020). For brave users the Gflash framework already foresees the possibility of
passing a class with the (users) parameters,GVFlashHomoShowerTuning, to the GFlashHomoShowerParamterisa-
tion constructor. The default parameters are the original Gflash parameters:
GFlashHomoShowerParameterisation(G4Material * aMat, GVFlashHomoShowerTuning * aPar = 0);
The sampling structure of the calorimeter is taken into account by using an “effective medium” to compute the shower
shape.
All material properties needed are calculated automatically. If tuning is required, the user can pass his own parameter
set in the class GFlashSamplingShowerTuning. Here the user can also set his calorimeter resolution.
All in all the constructor looks the following:
GFlashSamplingShowerParamterisation(G4Material * Mat1, G4Material * Mat2,G4double d1,G4double d2,
GVFlashSamplingShowerTuning * aPar = 0);
An implementation of some tools that should help the user to tune the parameterization is foreseen.
A Transportation process is required for every particle which is tracked in a simulation. The GEANT4 transportation
processes are responsible for several key functions for tracking:
• polling the Geometry Modeller via G4Navigator to obtain the distance to the next boundary for uncharged
particles or charged particles in a volume / region without an electromagnetic field;
• handing off the tracking of charged particles in an EM field to G4PropagatorInField which finds either
the endpoint of integration of the equations of motion of the particle or the state of the particle at the location in
which it intersects with the next volume boundary;
• updating the time of flight of the particle, using the full step length (not the geometrical step length, which is
reduced by multiple scattering.)
• killing tracks which are found to loop inside a (magnetic) field, without making adequate progress after
O(thousand) integration steps. A description of this is provided below.
Transportation comes in two flavours:
• the ‘standard’ G4Transportation process, used for most applications, and
• the G4CoupledTransportation process, which is activated when multiple geometries are active.
Multiple geometries can be created in order to cope with different use cases:
• when a mass overlay geometry is used to overlap a set of ‘top’ volume onto a complex existing geometry,
• when the GEANT4 scoring and/or biasing capabilities are activated.
The registration of the relevant Transportation process is handled by the G4PhysicsListHelper, which chooses
the correct type depending on whether any of the features which require parallel geometries have been used.
In brief there is one main difference between G4Transportation and G4CoupledTransportation. The
G4Transportation process uses the G4Navigator of the Geant4 Geometry Modeller to obtain the dis-
tance to the next boundary along a straight line (for a neutral particle, or a charged particle in zero field). The
G4CoupledTransportation process uses the G4PathFinder class to obtain the shortest length to a boundary
amongst the geometries registered for the current particle - in effect multiplexing the different geometries.
In addition the transportation processes estimates the time of flight for the current step. For a neutral particle or a
charged particle inside a pure magnetic field, this is estimated from the initial and final velocity of the particle. This
taking into account roughly the effect of energy loss from ionisation. Since the full path length is used (rather than the
geometrical one) the path lengthening due to multiple scattering is also taken into account.
For a charged particle in an EM field with a non-zero electric component, or a gravity field, the time of flight is
calculated taking into account the change in velocity.
For the propagation in an external field, electromagnetic or other, the Transportation processes rely on the capabilities
of G4PropagatorInField and the integration methods detailed in the subsection ElectroMagnetic Field
Note that the integration currently is done without taking into account either energy loss along the trajectory of motion
or multiple scattering, which is applied independently at the endpoint (if it is not on a boundary.)
Further details about the caveats and control of transportation within a magnetic field are given in the Appendix:
Transportation in Magnetic Field - Further Details.
5.3 Particles
There are a large number of elementary particles and nuclei. GEANT4 provides the G4ParticleDefinition class
to represent particles, and various particles, such as the electron, proton, and gamma have their own classes derived
from G4ParticleDefinition.
We do not need to make a class in GEANT4 for every kind of particle in the world. There are more than 100 types
of particles defined in GEANT4 by default. Which particles should be included, and how to implement them, is
determined according to the following criteria. (Of course, the user can define any particles he wants. Please see the
User’s Guide: For ToolKit Developers).
This list includes all particles in GEANT4 and you can see properties of particles such as
• PDG encoding
• mass and width
• electric charge
• spin, isospin and parity
• magnetic moment
• quark contents
• life time and decay modes
Here is a list of particles in GEANT4. This list is generated automatically by using GEANT4 functionality, so listed
values are same as those in your GEANT4 application (as far as you do not change source codes).
Categories
• gluon / quarks / di-quarks
• leptons
• mesons
• baryons
• ions
• others
Classification of particles
Implementation of particles
G4ParticleDefinition
The G4ParticleDefinition class has “read-only” properties to characterize individual particles, such as name,
mass, charge, spin, and so on. These properties are set during initialization of each particle. Methods to get these
properties are listed in Table 5.3.
Table 5.4 shows the methods of G4ParticleDefinition for getting information about decay modes and the life
time of the particle.
Table 5.4: Methods to get particle decay modes and life time.
G4bool GetPDGStable() stable flag
G4double GetPDGLifeTime() life time
G4DecayTable* GetDecayTable() decay table
Users can modify these properties, though the other properties listed above can not be change without rebuilding the
libraries.
Each particle has its own G4ProcessManger object that manages a list of processes applicable to the particle.(see
Managing Processes)
The G4DynamicParticle class has kinematics information for the particle and is used for describing the dynamics
of physics processes. The properties in G4DynamicParticle are listed in the Table 5.5.
Here, the dynamical mass is defined as the mass for the dynamic particle. For most cases, it is same as the mass
defined in G4ParticleDefinition class ( i.e. mass value given by GetPDGMass() method). However, there
are two exceptions.
• resonance particle
• ions
Resonance particles have large mass width and the total energy of decay products at the center of mass system can be
different event by event.
As for ions, G4ParticleDefintion defines a nucleus and G4DynamicParticle defines an atom.
G4ElectronOccupancy describes state of orbital electrons. So, the dynamic mass can be different from the
PDG mass by the mass of electrons (and their binding energy). In addition, the dynamical charge, spin and magnetic
moment are those of the atom/ion (i.e. including nucleus and orbit electrons).
Decay products of heavy flavor particles are given in many event generators. In such cases,
G4VPrimaryGenerator sets this information in *thePreAssignedDecayProducts. In addition,
decay time of the particle can be set arbitrarily time by using PreAssignedDecayProperTime.
We have to fulfill two contradictory requirements. It is the responsibility of each individual process to produce
secondary particles according to its own capabilities. On the other hand, it is only the GEANT4 kernel (i.e., tracking)
which can ensure an overall coherence of the simulation.
The general principles in GEANT4 are the following:
1. Each process has its intrinsic limit(s) to produce secondary particles.
2. All particles produced (and accepted) will be tracked up to zero range.
3. Each particle has a suggested cut in range (which is converted to energy for all materials), and defined via a
SetCut() method (see Range Cuts).
Points 1 and 2 imply that the cut associated with the particle is a (recommended) production threshold of secondary
particles.
As already mentioned, each kind of particle has a suggested production threshold. Some of the processes will not use
this threshold (e.g., decay), while other processes will use it as a default value for their intrinsic limits (e.g., ionisation
and bremsstrahlung).
See Range Cuts to see how to set the production threshold.
The DoIt methods of each process can produce secondary particles. Two cases can happen:
• a process sets its intrinsic limit greater than or equal to the recommended production threshold. OK. Nothing
has to be done (nothing can be done !).
• a process sets its intrinsic limit smaller than the production threshold (for instance 0).
The list of secondaries is sent to the SteppingManager via a ParticleChange object.
Before being recopied to the temporary stack for later tracking, the particles below the production threshold will be
kept or deleted according to the safe mechanism explained hereafter.
• The ParticleDefinition (or ParticleWithCuts) has a Boolean data member: ApplyCut.
• ApplyCut is OFF: do nothing. All the secondaries are stacked (and then tracked later on), regardless of their
initial energy. The GEANT4 kernel respects the best that the physics can do, but neglects the overall coherence
and the efficiency. Energy conservation is respected as far as the processes know how to handle correctly the
particles they produced! This is the main used during GEANT4 tracking.
• ApplyCut in ON: this feature is not normally used but is potentially available; the TrackingManager checks
the range of each secondary against the production threshold and against the safety. The particle is stacked if
range > min(cut,safety).
– If not, check if the process has nevertheless set the flag “good for tracking” and then stack it (see
Why produce secondaries below threshold in some processes? below for the explanation of the
GoodForTracking flag).
– If not, recuperate its kinetic energy in the localEnergyDeposit, and set tkin=0.
– Then check in the ProcessManager if the vector of ProcessAtRest is not empty. If yes, stack the particle
for performing the “Action At Rest” later. If not, and only in this case, abandon this secondary.
With this sophisticated mechanism we have the global cut that we wanted, but with energy conservation, and we respect
boundary constraint (safety) and the wishes of the processes (via “good for tracking”). Note, that for electromagnetic
processes for gamma incident a specific ApplyCut option is used which guarantees energy balance and is more
efficient because secondary tracks are not produced at all.
A process may have good reasons to produce particles below the recommended threshold:
• checking the range of the secondary versus geometrical quantities like safety may allow one to realize the
possibility that the produced particle, even below threshold, will reach a sensitive part of the detector;
• another example is the gamma conversion: the positron is always produced, even at zero energy, for further
annihilation;
• if a process is rare there is not practical reason make it complicate checking cut value.
These secondary particles are sent to the “Stepping Manager” with a flag GoodForTracking to pass the filter
explained in the previous section (even when ApplyCut is ON).
The cuts in stopping range allow one to say that the energy has been released at the correct space position, limiting
the approximation within a given distance. On the contrary, cuts in energy imply accuracies of the energy depositions
which depend on the material.
5.4.6 Summary
In summary, we do not have tracking cuts; we only have production thresholds in range. All particles produced and
accepted are tracked up to zero range.
It must be clear that the overall coherency that we provide cannot go beyond the capability of processes to produce
particles down to the recommended threshold.
In other words a process can produce the secondaries down to the recommended threshold, and by interrogating the
geometry, or by realizing when mass-to-energy conversion can occur, recognize when particles below the threshold
have to be produced.
One may need to cut given particle types in given volumes for optimisation reasons. This decision is under user
control, and can happen for particles during tracking as well.
The user must be able to apply these special cuts only for the desired particles and in the desired volumes, without
introducing an overhead for all the rest.
The approach is as follows:
• special user cuts are registered in the UserLimits class (or its descendant), which is associated with the logical
volume class.
The current default list is:
– max allowed step size
– max total track length
– max total time of flight
– min kinetic energy
– min remaining range
The user can instantiate a UserLimits object only for the desired logical volumes and do the association.
The first item (max step size) is automatically taken into account by the G4 kernel while the others items must
be managed by the user, as explained below.
Example(see basic/B2/B2a or B2b): in the Tracker region, in order to force the step size not to exceed
one half of the Tracker chamber thickness (chamberWidth), it is enough to put the following code in
B2aDetectorConstruction::DefineVolumes():
G4double maxStep = 0.5*chamberWidth;
fStepLimit = new G4UserLimits(maxStep);
trackerLV->SetUserLimits(fStepLimit);
and in PhysicsList, the process G4StepLimiter needs to be attached to each particle’s process manager
where step limitation in the Tracker region is required:
// Step limitation seen as a process
G4StepLimiter* stepLimiter = new G4StepLimiter();
pmanager->AddDiscreteProcess(StepLimiter);
If a provided GEANT4 physics list is used, then a SpecialCutsBuilder class can be defined in a similar
way as G4StepLimiterPhysics and added to the physics list in the main() function:
G4VModularPhysicsList* physicsList = new FTFP_BERT;
physicsList->RegisterPhysics(new SpecialCutsBuilder());
runManager->SetUserInitialization(physicsList);
Beginning with GEANT4 version 5.1, the concept of a region has been defined for use in geometrical descriptions.
Details about regions and how to use them are available in Sub-detector Regions. As an example, suppose a user
defines three regions, corresponding to the tracking volume, the calorimeter and the bulk structure of a detector. For
performance reasons, the user may not be interested in the detailed development of electromagnetic showers in the
insensitive bulk structure, but wishes to maintain the best possible accuracy in the tracking region. In such a use
case, GEANT4 allows the user to set different production thresholds (“cuts”) for each geometrical region. This ability,
referred to as “cuts per region”, is also a new feature provided by the GEANT4 5.1 release. The general concepts of
production thresholds were presented in the Production Threshold versus Tracking Cut.
Please note that this new feature is intended only for users who
1. are simulating the most complex geometries, such as an LHC detector, and
2. are experienced in simulating electromagnetic showers in matter.
We strongly recommend that results generated with this new feature be compared with results using the same geometry
and uniform production thresholds. Setting completely different cut values for individual regions may break the
coherent and comprehensive accuracy of the simulation. Therefore cut values should be carefully optimized, based on
a comparison with results obtained using uniform cuts.
The world volume is treated as a region by default. A G4Region object is automatically assigned to the world volume
and is referred to as the “default region”. The production cuts for this region are the defaults which are defined in the
UserPhysicsList. Unless the user defines different cut values for other regions, the cuts in the default region will be
used for the entire geometry.
Please note that the default region and its default production cuts are created and set automatically by
G4RunManager. The user is not allowed to set a region to the world volume, nor to assign other production cuts to
the default region.
In the SetCuts() method of the user’s physics list, the user must first define the default cuts. Then a
G4ProductionCuts object must be created and initialized with the cut value desired for a given region. This
object must in turn be assigned to the region object, which can be accessed by name from the G4RegionStore. An
example SetCuts() code follows.
regName = "tracker";
region = G4RegionStore::GetInstance()->GetRegion(regName);
(continues on next page)
regName = "calorimeter";
region = G4RegionStore::GetInstance()->GetRegion(regName);
cuts = new G4ProductionCuts;
cuts->SetProductionCut(0.01*mm,G4ProductionCuts::GetIndex("gamma"));
cuts->SetProductionCut(0.1*mm,G4ProductionCuts::GetIndex("e-"));
cuts->SetProductionCut(0.1*mm,G4ProductionCuts::GetIndex("e+"));
cuts->SetProductionCut(0.1*mm,G4ProductionCuts::GetIndex("proton"));
region->SetProductionCuts(cuts);
}
In GEANT4, physics processes use many tables of cross sections, energy losses and other physics values. Before the ex-
ecution of an event loop, PreparePhysicsTable() and BuildPhysicsTable() methods of G4VProcess
are invoked for all processes and as a part of initialisation procedure cross section tables are prepared. Energy loss
processes calculate cross section and/or energy loss values for each pair of material and production cut value used in
geometry for a give run. A change in production cut values therefore require these cross sections to be re-calculated.
Cross sections for hadronic processes and gamma processes do not depend on the production cut but sampling of final
state may depend on cuts, so full re-initialisation is performed.
The G4PhysicsTable class is used to handle cross section tables. G4PhysicsTable is a collection of instances
of G4PhysicsVector (and derived classes), each of which has cross section values for a particle within a given
energy range traveling in a material. By default the linear interpolation is used, alternatively spline may be used if the
flag of spline is activated by SetSpline method of the G4PhysicsVector
Users can assign different production cuts to different regions (see Cuts per Region). This means that if the same
material is used in regions with different cut values, the processes need to prepare several different cross sections for
that material.
The G4ProductionCutsTable has G4MaterialCutsCouple objects, each of which consists of a material
paired with a cut value. These G4MaterialCutsCouples are numbered with an index which is the same as the
index of a G4PhysicsVector for the corresponding G4MaterialCutsCouplein the G4PhysicsTable. The
list of MaterialCutsCouples used in the current geometry setup is updated before starting the event loop in each run.
Calculated physics tables for electromagnetic processes can be stored in files. The user may thus eliminate the time
required for the calculation of physics tables by retrieving them from the files.
Using the built-in user command “storePhysicsTable” (see Built-in Commands), stores physics tables in files. Infor-
mation on materials and cuts defined in the current geometry setup are stored together with physics tables because cal-
culated values in the physics tables depend on MaterialCutsCouple. Note that physics tables are calculated before the
event loop, not in the initialization phase. So, at least one event must be executed before using the “storePhysicsTable”
command.
Calculated physics tables can be retrieved from files by using the “retrievePhysicsTable” command. Materials
and cuts from files are compared with those defined in the current geometry setup, and only physics vectors cor-
responding to the MaterialCutsCouples used in the current setup are restored. Note that nothing happens just after
the “retrievePhysicsTable” command is issued. Restoration of physics tables will be executed in parallel with the
calculation of physics tables.
The user can define artificial limits affecting to the GEANT4 tracking.
G4UserLimits(G4double uStepMax = DBL_MAX,
G4double uTrakMax = DBL_MAX,
G4double uTimeMax = DBL_MAX,
G4double uEkinMin = 0.,
G4double uRangMin = 0. );
where:
Note that uStepMax is affecting to each step, while all other limits are affecting to a track.
The user can assign G4UserLimits to logical volume and/or to a region. User limits assigned to logical volume
do not propagate to daughter volumes, while User limits assigned to region propagate to daughter volumes unless
daughters belong to another region. If both logical volume and associated region have user limits, those of logical
volume win.
A G4UserLimits object must be instantiated for the duration of whatever logical volume or region to which it is
assigned. It is the responsibility of the user’s code to delete the object after the assigned volume(s)/region(s) have
been deleted.
In addition to instantiating G4UserLimits and setting it to logical volume or region, the user has to assign the
following process(es) to particle types he/she wants to affect. If none of these processes is assigned, that kind of
particle is not affected by G4UserLimits.
Limitation to step (uStepMax) G4StepLimiter process must be defined to affected particle types. This process
limits a step, but it does not kill a track.
Limitations to track (uTrakMax, uTimeMax, uEkinMin, uRangMin) G4UserSpecialCuts process
must be defined to affected particle types. This process limits a step and kills the track when the track comes to
one of these limits. Step limitation occurs only for the final step.
Example of G4UserLimits can be found in examples/basic/B2 : see B2aDetectorConstruction (or
B2bDetectorConstruction). The G4StepLimiter process is added in the GEANT4 physics list via the
G4StepLimiterPhysics class in the main() function in exampleB4a.cc (or exampleB4b.cc).
The error propagation package serves to propagate one particle together with its error from a given trajectory state
until a user-defined target is reached (a surface, a volume, a given track length,. . . ).
5.8.1 Physics
The error propagator package computes the average trajectory that a particle would follow. This means that the physics
list must have the following characteristics:
• No multiple scattering
• No random fluctuations for energy loss
• No creation of secondary tracks
• No hadronic processes
It has also to be taken into account that when the propagation is done backwards (in the direction opposed to the one
the original track traveled) the energy loss has to be changed into an energy gain.
All this is done in the G4ErrorPhysicsList class, that is automatically set by G4ErrorPropagatorManager
as the GEANT4 physics list. It sets G4ErrorEnergyLoss as unique electromagnetic process. This process uses the
GEANT4 class G4EnergyLossForExtrapolator to compute the average energy loss for forwards or backwards
propagation. To avoid getting too different energy loss calculation when the propagation is done forwards (when the
energy at the beginning of the step is used) or backwards (when the energy at the end of the step is used, always smaller
than at the beginning) G4ErrorEnergyLoss computes once the energy loss and then replaces the original energy
loss by subtracting/adding half of this value (what is approximately the same as computing the energy loss with the
energy at the middle of the step). In this way, a better calculation of the energy loss is obtained with a minimal impact
on the total CPU time.
The user may use his/her own physics list instead of G4ErrorPhysicsList. As it is not needed to define a
physics list when running this package, the user may have not realized that somewhere else in his/her application
it has been defined; therefore a warning will be sent to advert the user that he is using a physics list different to
G4ErrorPhysicsList. If a new physics list is used, it should also initialize the G4ErrorMessenger with the
classes that serve to limit the step:
To ease the use of this package in the reconstruction code, the physics list, whether G4ErrorPhysicsList or the
user’s one, will be automatically initialized before starting the track propagation if it has not been done by the user.
The user has to provide the particle trajectory state at the initial point. To do this it has to create an object of one of the
children classes of G4ErrorTrajState, providing:
• Particle type
• Position
• Momentum
• Trajectory error matrix
G4ErrorTrajState( const G4String& partType,
const G4Point3D& pos,
const G4Vector3D& mom,
const G4ErrorTrajErr& errmat = G4ErrorTrajErr(5,0) );
A particle trajectory is characterized by five independent variables as a function of one parameter (e.g. the path length).
Among the five variables, one is related to the curvature (to the absolute value of the momentum), two are related to
the direction of the particle and the other two are related to the spatial location.
There are two possible representations of these five parameters in the error propagator package: as
a free trajectory state, class G4ErrorTrajStateFree, or as a trajectory state on a surface, class
G4ErrorTrajStateonSurface.
In the free trajectory state representation the five trajectory parameters are
• G4double fInvP
• G4double fLambda
• G4double fPhi
• G4double fYPerp
• G4double fZPerp
where fInvP is the inverse of the momentum. fLambda and fPhi are the dip and azimuthal angles related to the
momentum components in the following way:
p\_x = p cos(lambda) cos(phi) p\_y = p cos(lambda) sin(phi) p\_z = p
sin(lambda), that is, lambda = 90 - theta, where theta is the usual angle with respect to the Z
axis.
fYperp and fZperp are the coordinates of the trajectory in a local orthonormal reference frame with the X axis
along the particle direction, the Y axis being parallel to the X-Y plane (obtained by the vectorial product of the global
Z axis and the momentum).
In the trajectory state on a surface representation the five trajectory parameters are
• G4double fInvP
• G4double fPV
• G4double fPW
• G4double fV
• G4double fW
where fInvP is the inverse of the momentum; fPV and fPW are the momentum components in an orthonormal
coordinate system with axis U, V and W; fV and fW are the position components on this coordinate system.
For this representation the user has to provide the plane where the parameters are calculated. This can be done by
providing two vectors, V and W, contained in the plane:
G4ErrorSurfaceTrajState( const G4String& partType,
const G4Point3D& pos,
const G4Vector3D& mom,
const G4Vector3D& vecV,
const G4Vector3D& vecW,
const G4ErrorTrajErr& errmat = G4ErrorTrajErr(5,0) );
or by providing a plane
G4ErrorSurfaceTrajState( const G4String& partType,
const G4Point3D& pos,
const G4Vector3D& mom,
const G4Plane3D& plane,
const G4ErrorTrajErr& errmat = G4ErrorTrajErr(5,0) );
In this second case the vector V is calculated as the vector in the plane perpendicular to the global vector X (if the
plane normal is equal to X, Z is used instead) and W is calculated as the vector in the plane perpendicular to V.
The 5X5 error matrix should also be provided at the creation of the trajectory state as a G4ErrorTrajErr object.
If it is not provided a default object will be created filled with null values.
Currently the G4ErrorTrajErr is a G4ErrorSymMatrix, a simplified version of CLHEP HepSymMatrix.
The error matrix is given in units of GeV and cm. Therefore you should do the conversion if your code is using other
units.
5.8.4 Targets
The user has to define up to where the propagation must be done: the target. The target can be a surface
G4ErrorSurfaceTarget, which is not part of the GEANT4 geometry. It can also be the surface of a GEANT4 vol-
ume G4ErrorGeomVolumeTarget, so that the particle will be stopped when it enters this volume. Or it can be that
the particle is stopped when a certain track length is reached, by implementing a G4ErrorTrackLengthTarget.
Surface target
When the user chooses a G4ErrorSurfaceTarget as target, the track is propagated until the surface is
reached. This surface is not part of GEANT4 geometry, but usually traverses many GEANT4 volumes. The class
G4ErrorNavigator takes care of the double navigation: for each step the step length is calculated as the minimum
of the step length in the full geometry (up to a GEANT4 volume surface) and the distance to the user-defined surface.
To do it, G4ErrorNavigator inherits from G4Navigator and overwrites the methods ComputeStep() and
ComputeSafety(). Two types of surface are currently supported (more types could be easily implemented at user
request): plane and cylindrical.
G4ErrorPlaneSurfaceTarget implements an infinite plane surface. The surface can be given as the four coef-
ficients of the plane equation ax+by+cz+d = 0:
G4ErrorPlaneSurfaceTarget(G4double a=0,
G4double b=0,
G4double c=0,
G4double d=0);
G4ErrorCylSurfaceTarget implements an infinite-length cylindrical surface (a cylinder without end-caps). The surface
can be given as the radius, the translation and the rotation
G4ErrorCylSurfaceTarget( const G4double& radius,
const G4ThreeVector& trans=G4ThreeVector(),
const G4RotationMatrix& rotm=G4RotationMatrix() );
When the user chooses a G4ErrorGeomVolumeTarget as target, the track is propagated until the surface of a
GEANT4 volume is reached. User can choose if the track will be stopped only when the track enters the volume, only
when the track exits the volume or in both cases.
The object has to be instantiated giving the name of a logical volume existing in the geometry:
G4ErrorGeomVolumeTarget( const G4String& name );
When the user chooses a G4ErrorTrackLengthTarget as target, the track is propagated until the given track
length is reached.
The object has to be instantiated giving the value of the track length:
G4ErrorTrackLengthTarget(const G4double maxTrkLength );
The user needs to propagate just one track, so there is no need of run and events. neither of
G4VPrimaryGeneratorAction. G4ErrorPropagator creates a track from the information given in the
G4ErrorTrajState and manages the step propagation. The propagation is done by the standard GEANT4 meth-
ods, invoking G4SteppingManager::Stepping() to propagate each step.
After one step is propagated, G4ErrorPropagator takes cares of propagating the track errors for this step, what
is done by G4ErrorTrajStateFree::PropagateError(). The equations of error propagation are only
implemented in the representation of G4ErrorTrajStateFree. Therefore if the user has provided instead a
G4ErrorTrajStateOnSurface object, it will be transformed into a G4ErrorTrajStateFree at the begin-
ning of tracking, and at the end it is converted back into G4ErrorTrajStateOnSurface on the target surface
(on the normal plane to the surface at the final point).
The user G4VUserTrackingAction::PreUserTrackingAction( const G4Track* ) and
G4VUserTrackingAction::PreUserTrackingAction( const G4Track* ) are also invoked at
the beginning and at the end of the track propagation.
G4ErrorPropagator stops the tracking when one of the three conditions is true:
• Energy is exhausted
• World boundary is reached
• User-defined target is reached
In case the defined target is not reached, G4ErrorPropagator::Propagate() returns a negative value.
The propagation of a trajectory state until a user defined target can be done by invoking the method of
G4ErrorPropagatorManager
G4int Propagate( G4ErrorTrajState* currentTS, const G4ErrorTarget* target,
G4ErrorMode mode = G4ErrorMode_PropForwards );
You can get the pointer to the only instance of G4ErrorPropagatorManager with
G4ErrorPropagatorManager* g4emgr = G4ErrorPropagatorManager::GetErrorPropagatorManager();
Another possibility is to invoke the propagation step by step, returning control to the user after each step. This can be
done with the method
G4int PropagateOneStep( G4ErrorTrajState* currentTS,
G4ErrorMode mode = G4ErrorMode_PropForwards );
In this case you should register the target first with the command
G4ErrorPropagatorData::GetG4ErrorPropagatorData()->SetTarget( theG4eTarget );
Error propagation
As in the GEANT3-based GEANE package, the error propagation is based on the equations of the European Muon
Collaboration, that take into account:
• Error from curved trajectory in magnetic field
• Error from multiple scattering
There are three ways to limit the step. The first one is by using a fixed length value. This can be set by invoking the
user command:
G4UImanager::GetUIpointer()->ApplyCommand("/geant4e/limits/stepLength MY_VALUE MY_UNIT");
The second one is by setting the maximum percentage of energy loss in the step (or energy gain is propagation is
backwards). This can be set by invoking the user command:
G4UImanager::GetUIpointer()->ApplyCommand("/geant4e/limits/energyLoss MY_VALUE");
The last one is by setting the maximum difference between the value of the magnetic field at the beginning and at the
end of the step. Indeed what is limited is the curvature, or exactly the value of the magnetic field divided by the value
of the momentum transverse to the field. This can be set by invoking the user command:
G4UImanager::GetUIpointer()->ApplyCommand("/geant4e/limits/magField MY_VALUE");
The classes that limit the step are implemented as GEANT4 processes. Therefore, the invoca-
tion of the above-mentioned commands should only be done after the initialization (for example after
G4ErrorPropagatorManager::InitGeant4e().
The GEANT4 toolkit has recently been extended to include “exotic physics”. This covers the area of phonon propaga-
tion and crystal channelling. These two domains are applicable for Dark Matter experiments (phonon excitation) and
beam extraction and collimation (crystal channelling). The framework within GEANT4 is similar in that a macroscopic
periodic crystal lattice is required for both and wave functions are propagated within the medium (rather than discrete
particles as in the case of conventional GEANT4). Contained here is a brief description of how to modify a GEANT4
application to include the crystal as both a material and a geometry (plane orientations).
5.9.1 Physics
For a more complete description and understanding the user is referred to the extended examples category “exotic-
physics” and the references therein.
5.9.2 Material
The implementation of solid-state processes in GEANT4 requires the addition of two important features, the crystal
unit cell with all its parameters and the support for other data required by the processes. The extended data for a mate-
rial is stored in a class derived from the virtual class G4VMaterialExtension. The G4ExtenededMaterial
class collects the pointers to concrete instances of G4VMaterialExtension. The G4CrystalExtension
class is a derived class of G4VMaterialExtension and collects information on the physics properties of a per-
fect crystal. In particular, the class contains a pointer to a G4CrystalUnitCell object, the elasticity tensor,
a map of G4CrystalAtomBase objects associated with a G4Element and a vector of G4AtomicBond. The
G4CrystalUnitCell class collects information on the mathematical description of the crystal unit cell, i.e. the
sizes and the angles of the unit cell, the space group, the Bravais lattice and the lattice system, and methods for
the calculation of the volume in the direct and reciprocal space, the spacing between two planes, the angle be-
tween two planes, and for the filling of the reduced elasticity tensor. The G4CrystalExtension constructor
takes as argument a pointer to a G4Material object and has to be registered to the G4ExtendedMaterial to
which it is attached. The G4CrystalAtomBase class stores the position of atoms in the crystal unit cell. Since
the G4CrystalAtomBase class is mapped to a G4Element in the G4CrystalMaterial, each G4Element
should have an associated G4CrystalAtomBase. The G4AtomicBond class contains information on the atomic
bond in the crystal. For each instance of the class two G4Elements have to be specified as well as the atom number
in the G4CrystalAtomBase associated to the G4Element.
5.9.3 Geometry
SIX
USER ACTIONS
GEANT4 has two user initialization classes and one user action class whose methods the user must override in order
to implement a simulation. They require the user to define the detector, specify the physics to be used, and define how
initial particles are to be generated. These classes are described in Mandatory User Actions and Initializations.
Additionally, users may define any of several optional user actions, to collect data during event generation from steps,
tracks, or whole events, to accumulate data during runs, or to modify the state of new tracks as they are created. These
user actions are described in Optional User Actions.
To support the accumulation of data in the actions mentioned above, users may define subclasses for some of the
container objects used during event generation and tracking. These are described in User Information Classes.
Three user initialization class objects are registered with the run manager (Manage the run procedures) in the user’s
main() program, which takes ownership. The user must not delete these objects directly, and they must be cre-
ated using ‘new’. Within the G4UserActionInitialization class ( User Action Initialization), the user must
instantiate and register a concrete G4VUserPrimaryGeneratorAction subclass, which generates the primary
particles for each event.
6.2.1 G4VUserDetectorConstruction
public:
virtual G4VPhysicalVolume* Construct() = 0;
virtual void ConstructSDandField() = 0;
};
In the Construct() method, material and geometry has to be described. Detailed discussions on material and
geometry are given in How to Specify Materials in the Detector and How to Define a Detector Geometry. Detector
sensitivity and electromagnetic field should be defined in ConstructSDandField(), as objects defined in this
method are thread-local if they are used in multi-threaded mode. Detailed discussions on Detector sensitivity and
electromagnetic field are given in Hits and Electromagnetic Field.
259
Book For Application Developers, Release 10.5
The concept of a physics list arises from the fact that GEANT4 can not offer a single modeling algorithm to cover the
entire energy domain from zero to the TeV scale, for all known processes and particles. Instead, a combination of
ideas and approaches is typically used to perform a simulation task.
A schematic view of the GEANT4 modeling of the processes of particle passage through matter may be presented as
follows:
• Physics Model = final state generator
• Physics Process = cross section + model
• Physics List = list of processes for each particle
The “patchwork” concept is especially true in the GEANT4 hadronic physics domain: models are valid only over finite
energy ranges, and there maybe competing models in the same range or one model maybe working better than the
other for a specific group of particles, while its competitor may be better for other species. For this reason models
have to be combined to cover the large energy range; every two adjacent models may have an overlap in their validity
range.
G4VUserPhysicsList
This is an abstract class for constructing particles and processes. An introduction into the concept of the GEANT4
Physics List and the GEANT4 Physics Processes is also given in How to Specify Physics Processes and further in
Physics Processes.
While the fabrication of a physics list is, in principle, a choice of a user, the toolkit is distributed with a number of
pre-fabricated physics lists for the convenience of many user applications. These physics lists are supported by the
GEANT4 development team and can be recommended for specific physics tasks. However, based on the interests and
needs of a specific project, a user may want to implement her or his own custom physics list.
The following sections offer several examples that show how to instantiate or select one or another pre-fabricated
Physics List from the GEANT4 standard collection, as well as guidance composing a custom Physics List from pre-
fabricated components or even entirely from scratch.
To view the contents of a Physics List, there are two useful methods: DumpList() and
DumpCutValueTable(G4int flag).
Number of ready to use Physics Lists are available with GEANT4 kernel. Below an example of instantiation of
FTFP_BERT Physics List class is shown. The full set of reference Physics Lists is described in GEANT4 web.
GEANT4 provides a class G4PhysListFactory allowing to defined Physics List by its name. The last for charac-
ters in the name defines an electromagnetic (EM) physics options. By default standard EM physics is used, “_EMV”
corresponding to standard option1, “_EMX” - to standard option2, “_LIV” to EM Livermore physics, “_PEN” - to
EM Penelope physics.
The class G4PhysListFactory provides also another interface allowing to defined Physics List by the environment
variable PHYSLIST.
Technically speaking, one can implement physics list in a “flat-out” manner, i.e. specify all necessary particles and
associated processes in a single piece of code, as it will be shown later in this document. However, for practical
purposes it is often more convenient to group together certain categories and make implementation more modular.
One very useful concept is a Modular Physics List, G4VModularPhysicsList, that is a sub-class of
G4VUserPhysicsLists and allows a user to organize physics processes into “building blocks”, or “modules”,
then compose a physics list of such modules. The concept allows to group together, at a relatively high level, desired
combinations of selected particles and related processes. One of the advantages of such approach is that it allows to
combine pre-fabricated physics modules that are centrally provided by GEANT4 kernel with user’s applications.
G4ModularPhysicsList has all the functionalities as G4VUserPhysicsList class, plus several additional
functionalities. One of the important methods is RegisterPhysics(G4VPhysicsConstructor* ) for “reg-
istering” the above mentioned pre-fabricated physics modules. There also methods for removing or replacing physics
modules.
Example below shows how G4VModularPhysList can be implemented.
// EM Physics
RegisterPhysics( new G4EmStandardPhysics(ver) );
// Hadron physics
RegisterPhysics( new G4HadronElasticPhysicsXS(ver) );
RegisterPhysics( new G4QStoppingPhysics(ver) );
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Note that each module to be registered with a Modular Physics List is a G4VPhysicsConstructor (or a derived
object), i.e. a “sublist” that holds groups of particles and accompanying physics processes. A user can find these and
other similar modules in the source/physics_lists/list area of GEANT4 core code, and can combine selected ones with
custom modules, if desired.
In order to compose a custom physics module, two mandatory methods of a G4VPhysicsConstructor must be
implemented: ConstructParticle() and ConstructProcess(); beyond that the implementation can be
structured according to the developer’s taste.
Another useful concept in the modular approach to composing a Physics List is the concept of so called “builders”.
This concept allows to encapsulate certain implementation details into smaller-scale software components, and offers
the flexibility of re-using those component in different modules. At the general level, the scheme is this:
• Particles (hadrons) are created, and physics models to be used to simulate applicable processes are specified,
usually in a particular range of validity.
• Physics processes for each particle type in the builder are created, and each process is outfitted with one or more
hadronic physics models, as specified.
• If necessary, a cross section data set for a given particle type is added.
This concept is widely used through the GEANT4 hadronic domain, but the idea would be equally applicable in the
electromagnetic area.
All builders can be found in the source/physics_lists/builders directory. There are basically two types of builders:
• Particle Builders
• Particle-Model Builders
A particle builder is somewhat “superior” here, as it specifies a particle or a group of particles, what category of
processes are applicable, how to outfit a process with specified model(s), and how processes are to be registered with
the G4ProcessManager. A particle-model builder instantiates a given model and implements details of associating
it with one or more processes applicable to a given particle type. Some models can not be instantiated through a single
interface class, but instead they need, in turn, to be composed from several components (examples are QGS and FTF).
Useful example builders to review and to consider as inspirations can be the following:
• G4PiKBuilder (.hh and .cc) - groups pions and kaons, together with a list of associated hadronic processes.
• G4BertiniPiKBuilder (.hh and .cc) - instantiates Bertini cascade model and implements how to outfit pion and
kaon physics processes with this model. It also sets default validity range for the model.
• G4FTFPPiKBuilder (.hh and .cc) - composes a high energy FTF-based model and implements how to outfit
hadronic processes for pions and kaons with the model. This example illustrates that a hadronic model does
not always have a single interface class, but it needs to be created from several components. In particular, in
this builder a “high energy generator” object (G4TheoFSGenerator) is created and is outfitted with G4FTFModel
string model (which also gives this builder its name), we well as string fragmentation algorithm and intra-nuclear
transport model. Please note that the quasi-elastic scattering is not set as FTF model has its own mechanism for
it. A cross-section data set is specified for pions. A default validity range is also specified.
One detail to remember is that, in principle, the validity range for a given model can be setup for each particle type
individually. But in these referenced applications the validity range is setup to be the same for a group of particles
(i.e. for a number of corresponding inelastic hadronic processes). Once a builder is instantiated, one can override
the default validity range (via SetMinEnergy or SetMaxEnergy methods), but the new value will be, again, given to
a group of particles/processes. Also note that the validity range can be overridden only before calling the Build()
method of a builder. Again, the approach is just a specifics of this particular implementation. Obviously, if a limited
validity range is selected for a specific particle/model/process, one has to supplement another model or several models,
to cover the entire range.
One more useful class is the ‘‘ G4PhysicsListHelper‘‘ which is a service class that wraps around the technicalities
of the physics process registering in GEANT4 and allows a user to easily associate a process with a particles, without
knowing many details about various types of processes (discrete, continuous, etc.) and their internal ordering with
G4ProcessManager. Curious users may eventually want to go deeper into details of G4ProcessManager class and,
in particular, its group of AddProcess(...) methods, as it is the basis of G4PhysicsListHelper implementation.
But for practical purposes, the use of G4PhysicsListHelper is likely to be sufficient in most cases.
Other useful details, including several elements of the software design philosophy and class diagrams, are given in
How to Specify Physics Processes.
The user must derive a concrete class from G4VUserPhysicsList and implement three virtual methods:
• ConstructParticle() to instantiate each requested particle type;
• ConstructPhysics() to instantiate the desired physics processes and register each of them;
• SetCuts(G4double aValue) to set a cut value in range for all particles in the particle table, which invokes
the rebuilding of the physics table.
At early stage of the initialisation of GEANT4 the method ConstructParticle() of G4VUserPhysicsList is
invoked. The ConstructProcess() method must always invoke the AddTransportation() method in order
to insure particle transportation. AddTransportation() must never be overridden. This is done automatically if
G4VUserPhysicsList inherits of G4VModularPhysicsList. It is recommended for users as the most robust
interface to Physics List. GEANT4 examples demonstrate different methods how to create user Physics List.
All user action classes must be defined through the protected method SetUserAction(). Build()
methods should be used for defining user action classes for worker threads as well as for the sequen-
tial mode. BuildForMaster() should be used only for defining UserRunAction for the master thread.
BuildForMaster() is not invoked in the sequential mode. In case the user uses his/her own SteppingVerbose
class, it must be instantiated in the method InitializeSteppingVerbose() and returned.
G4VUserActionInitialization
public:
virtual void Build() const = 0;
virtual void BuildForMaster() const;
virtual G4VSteppingVerbose* InitializeSteppingVerbose() const;
protected:
void SetUserAction(G4VUserPrimaryGeneratorAction*) const;
void SetUserAction(G4UserRunAction*) const;
void SetUserAction(G4UserEventAction*) const;
void SetUserAction(G4UserStackingAction*) const;
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G4VUserPrimaryGeneratorAction
public:
virtual void GeneratePrimaries(G4Event* anEvent) = 0;
};
There are five virtual classes whose methods the user may override in order to gain control of the simulation at various
stages. Each method of each action class has an empty default implementation, allowing the user to inherit and
implement desired classes and methods.
Objects of user action classes must be registered with G4RunManager (Manage the run procedures), which takes
ownership of them. The user must not delete these objects directly, and they must be created using ‘new’.
G4UserRunAction
This class has three virtual methods which are invoked by G4RunManager for each run:
• GenerateRun() This method is invoked at the beginning of BeamOn. Because the user can inherit
the class G4Run and create his/her own concrete class to store some information about the run, the
GenerateRun() method is the place to instantiate such an object. It is also the ideal place to set
variables which affect the physics table (such as production thresholds) for a particular run, because
GenerateRun() is invoked before the calculation of the physics table.
• BeginOfRunAction() This method is invoked before entering the event loop. A typical use of this method
would be to initialize and/or book histograms for a particular run. This method is invoked after the calcu-
lation of the physics tables.
• EndOfRunAction() This method is invoked at the very end of the run processing. It is typically used for a
simple analysis of the processed run.
public:
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G4UserEventAction
This class has two virtual methods which are invoked by G4EventManager for each event:
• beginOfEventAction() This method is invoked before converting the primary particles to G4Track
objects. A typical use of this method would be to initialize and/or book histograms for a particular event.
• endOfEventAction() This method is invoked at the very end of event processing. It is typically used for
a simple analysis of the processed event. If the user wants to keep the currently processing event until
the end of the current run, the user can invoke fpEventManager->KeepTheCurrentEvent(); so
that it is kept in G4Run object. This should be quite useful if you simulate quite many events and want to
visualize only the most interest ones after the long execution. Given the memory size of an event and its
contents may be large, it is the user’s responsibility not to keep unnecessary events.
G4UserStackingAction
This class has three virtual methods, ClassifyNewTrack, NewStage and PrepareNewEvent which the user
may override in order to control the various track stacking mechanisms. ExampleN04 could be a good example to
understand the usage of this class.
ClassifyNewTrack() is invoked by G4StackManager whenever a new G4Track object is
“pushed” onto a stack by G4EventManager. ClassifyNewTrack() returns an enumerator,
G4ClassificationOfNewTrack, whose value indicates to which stack, if any, the track will be sent.
This value should be determined by the user. G4ClassificationOfNewTrack has four possible values:
• fUrgent - track is placed in the urgent stack
• fWaiting - track is placed in the waiting stack, and will not be simulated until the urgent stack is empty
• fPostpone - track is postponed to the next event
• fKill - the track is deleted immediately and not stored in any stack.
These assignments may be made based on the origin of the track which is obtained as follows:
G4int parent_ID = aTrack->get_parentID();
where
• parent_ID = 0 indicates a primary particle
• parent_ID > 0 indicates a secondary particle
• parent_ID < 0 indicates postponed particle from previous event.
NewStage() is invoked when the urgent stack is empty and the waiting stack contains at least one G4Track
object. Here the user may kill or re-assign to different stacks all the tracks in the waiting stack by calling the
stackManager->ReClassify() method which, in turn, calls the ClassifyNewTrack() method. If no user
action is taken, all tracks in the waiting stack are transferred to the urgent stack. The user may also decide to abort
the current event even though some tracks may remain in the waiting stack by calling stackManager->clear().
This method is valid and safe only if it is called from the G4UserStackingAction class. A global method of
event abortion is
G4UImanager * UImanager = G4UImanager::GetUIpointer();
UImanager->ApplyCommand("/event/abort");
PrepareNewEvent() is invoked at the beginning of each event. At this point no primary particles have been
converted to tracks, so the urgent and waiting stacks are empty. However, there may be tracks in the postponed-to-
next-event stack; for each of these the ClassifyNewTrack() method is called and the track is assigned to the
appropriate stack.
class G4UserStackingAction
{
public:
G4UserStackingAction();
virtual ~G4UserStackingAction();
protected:
G4StackManager * stackManager;
public:
//---------------------------------------------------------------
// virtual methods to be implemented by user
//---------------------------------------------------------------
//
virtual G4ClassificationOfNewTrack ClassifyNewTrack(const G4Track*);
virtual void NewStage();
virtual void PrepareNewEvent();
};
G4UserTrackingAction
class G4UserTrackingAction
{
public:
// Member functions
virtual void PreUserTrackingAction(const G4Track*){}
virtual void PostUserTrackingAction(const G4Track*){}
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protected:
G4TrackingManager* fpTrackingManager;
};
G4UserSteppingAction
class G4UserSteppingAction
{
public:
// Member functions
virtual void UserSteppingAction(const G4Step*){}
protected:
G4SteppingManager* fpSteppingManager;
};
In either of user action classes described in the previous section, the user can implement an unnatural/unphysical
action. A typical example is to kill a track, which is under the simulation, in the user stepping action. In this case the
user have to be cautious of the total energy conservation. The user stepping action itself does not take care the energy
or any physics quantity associated with the killed track. Therefore if the user want to keep the total energy of an event
in this case, the lost track energy need to be recorded by the user.
The same is true for user stacking or tracking actions. If the user has killed a track in these actions the all physics
information associated with it would be lost and, for example, the total energy conservation be broken.
If the user wants the GEANT4 kernel to take care the total energy conservation automatically when he/she has killed ar-
tificially a track, the user has to use a killer process. For example if the user uses G4UserLimits and G4UserSpecialCuts
process, energy of the killed track is added to the total energy deposit.
Additional user information can be associated with various GEANT4 classes. There are basically two ways for the user
to do this:
• derive concrete classes from base classes used in GEANT4. These are classes for run, hit, digit, trajectory and
trajectory point, which are discussed in Optional User Actions for G4Run, Hits for G4VHit, Digitization for
G4VDigit, and Tracking for G4VTrajectory and G4VTrajectoryPoint
• create concrete classes from provided abstract base classes and associate them with classes used in GEANT4.
GEANT4 classes which can accommodate user information classes are G4Event, G4Track, G4PrimaryVertex,
G4PrimaryParticle and G4Region. These classes are discussed here.
6.4.1 G4VUserEventInformation
G4VUserEventInformation is an abstract class from which the user can derive his/her own concrete class for
storing user information associated with a G4Event class object. It is the user’s responsibility to construct a concrete
class object and set the pointer to a proper G4Event object.
Within a concrete implementation of G4UserEventAction, the SetUserEventInformation() method of
G4EventManager may be used to set a pointer of a concrete class object to G4Event, given that the G4Event
object is available only by “pointer to const”. Alternatively, the user may modify the GenerateEvent() method of
his/her own RunManager to instantiate a G4VUserEventInformation object and set it to G4Event.
The concrete class object is deleted by the GEANT4 kernel when the associated G4Event object is deleted.
6.4.2 G4VUserTrackInformation
This is an abstract class from which the user can derive his/her own concrete class for storing user information associ-
ated with a G4Track class object. It is the user’s responsibility to construct a concrete class object and set the pointer
to the proper G4Track object.
Within a concrete implementation of G4UserTrackingAction, the SetUserTrackInformation() method of
G4TrackingManager may be used to set a pointer of a concrete class object to G4Track, given that the G4Track
object is available only by “pointer to const”.
The ideal place to copy a G4VUserTrackInformation object from a mother track to its daughter tracks is
G4UserTrackingAction::PostUserTrackingAction().
The concrete class object is deleted by the GEANT4 kernel when the associated G4Track object is deleted. In case the
user wants to keep the information, it should be copied to a trajectory corresponding to the track.
These abstract classes allow the user to attach information regarding the generated primary vertex and primary
particle. Concrete class objects derived from these classes should be attached to G4PrimaryVertex and
G4PrimaryParticle class objects, respectively.
The concrete class objects are deleted by the GEANT4 kernel when the associated G4PrimaryVertex or
G4PrimaryParticle class objects are deleted along with the deletion of G4Event.
6.4.4 G4VUserRegionInformation
This abstract base class allows the user to attach information associated with a region. For example, it would be quite
beneficial to add some methods returning a Boolean flag to indicate the characteristics of the region (e.g. tracker,
calorimeter, etc.). With this example, the user can easily and quickly identify the detector component.
private:
G4bool isWorld;
G4bool isTracker;
G4bool isCalorimeter;
public:
inline void SetWorld(G4bool v=true) {isWorld = v;}
inline void SetTracker(G4bool v=true) {isTracker = v;}
inline void SetCalorimeter(G4bool v=true) {isCalorimeter = v;}
inline G4bool IsWorld() const {return isWorld;}
inline G4bool IsTracker() const {return isTracker;}
inline G4bool IsCalorimeter() const {return isCalorimeter;}
};
The following code is an example of a stepping action. Here, a track is suspended when it enters the “calorimeter
region” from the “tracker region”.
// check if it is alive
G4Track * theTrack = theStep->GetTrack();
if(theTrack->GetTrackStatus()!=fAlive) { return; }
Starting from GEANT4 Version 10.3 it is possible to attach multiple instances of the same type of user action to
a single run manager. This is achieved via the use of a special proxy classes to which multiple child user actions
are attached. This is allowed for run-, event-, tracking- and stepping-type user actions (G4UserRunAction,
G4UserEventAction,G4UserTrackingAction,G4UserSteppingAction).
The kernel still sees a single user action of each type, the proxy will forward the calls from kernel to all the attached
child user actions.
6.5.1 Exceptions
This functionality is not implemented for the the stacking user action and primary generation action. There is no
multiple G4UserStackingAction equivalent since this would require a complex handling of the case in which
conflicting classifications are issued. For the case of G4VUserPrimaryGeneratorAction the use case of the
multiple user actions is already addressed by the design of the class itself. User can implement one or more generators
in the actions.
For the case of G4MultiRunAction only one of the child user actions can implement the
G4UserRunAction::GenerateRun() method returning a non null, user derived G4Run object, other-
wise an exception is thrown.
SEVEN
CONTROL
GEANT4 has various built-in user interface commands, each of which corresponds roughly to a GEANT4 category.
These commands can be used
• interactively via a (Graphical) User Interface - (G)UI,
• in a macro file via /control/execute <command>,
• within C++ code with the ApplyCommand method of G4UImanager.
Note: The availability of individual commands, the ranges of parameters, the available candidates on individual
command parameters vary according to the implementation of your application and may even vary dynamically during
the execution of your job.
The following is a short summary of available commands. You can also see the all available commands by executing
‘help’ in your UI session.
• List of built-in commands
7.2.1 G4UImessenger
G4UImessenger is a base class which represents a messenger that delivers command(s) to the destination class
object. Concrete messengers are instantiated by, and owned by, the functional classes for which they provide a user
interface; messengers should be deleted by those classes in their own destructors.
Your concrete messenger should have the following functionalities.
• Construct your command(s) in the constructor of your messenger.
• Destruct your command(s) in the destructor of your messenger.
These requirements mean that your messenger should keep all pointers to your command objects as its data members.
You can use G4UIcommand derived classes for the most frequent types of command. These derived classes have
their own conversion methods according to their types, and they make implementation of the SetNewValue() and
GetCurrentValue() methods of your messenger much easier and simpler.
G4UIcommand objects are owned by the messenger. If instantiated via new, they should be deleted in the messenger
destructor.
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For complicated commands which take various parameters, you can use the G4UIcommand base class, and construct
G4UIparameter objects by yourself. You don’t need to delete G4UIparameter object(s).
In the SetNewValue() and GetCurrentValue() methods of your messenger, you can compare the
G4UIcommand pointer given in the argument of these methods with the pointer of your command, because your
messenger keeps the pointers to the commands. Thus, you don’t need to compare by command name. Please remem-
ber, in the cases where you use G4UIcommand derived classes, you should store the pointers with the types of these
derived classes so that you can use methods defined in the derived classes according to their types without casting.
G4UImanager/G4UIcommand/G4UIparameter have very powerful type and range checking routines. You are
strongly recommended to set the range of your parameters. For the case of a numerical value (int or double), the
range can be given by a G4String using C++ notation, e.g., "X > 0 && X < 10". For the case of a string type
parameter, you can set a candidate list. Please refer to the detailed descriptions below.
GetCurrentValue() will be invoked after the user’s application of the corresponding command, and before the
SetNewValue() invocation. This GetCurrentValue() method will be invoked only if
• at least one parameter of the command has a range
• at least one parameter of the command has a candidate list
• at least the value of one parameter is omitted and this parameter is defined as omittable and currentValueAsDe-
fault
For the first two cases, you can re-set the range or the candidate list if you need to do so, but these “re-set” parameters
are needed only for the case where the range or the candidate list varies dynamically.
A command can be “state sensitive”, i.e., the command can be accepted only for a certain
G4ApplicationState(s). For example, the /run/beamOn command should not be accepted when GEANT4
is processing another event (“G4State_EventProc” state). You can set the states available for the command with the
AvailableForStates() method.
These are methods defined in the G4UIcommand base class which should be used from the derived classes.
• void SetGuidance(char*)
Define a guidance line. You can invoke this method as many times as you need to give enough amount of
guidance. Please note that the first line will be used as a title head of the command guidance.
• void availableForStates(G4ApplicationState s1,...)
If your command is valid only for certain states of the GEANT4 kernel, specify these states by this
method. Currently available states are G4State_PreInit, G4State_Init, G4State_Idle,
G4State_GeomClosed, and G4State_EventProc. Refer to the as a state machine for meaning of
each state. Please note that the Pause state had been removed from G4ApplicationState.
• void SetRange(char* range)
Define a range of the parameter(s). Use C++ notation, e.g., "x > 0 && x < 10", with variable name(s)
defined by the SetParameterName() method. For the case of a G4ThreeVector, you can set the relation
between parameters, e.g., "x > y".
G4UIdirectory
This is a G4UIcommand derived class for defining a directory containing commands. It is owned by, and should
be deleted in the destructor of, the associated G4UImessenger class, after all of its contained commands have been
deleted.
• G4UIdirectory(char* directoryPath)
Constructor. Argument is the (full-path) directory, which must begin and terminate with “/:.
G4UIcmdWithoutParameter
G4UIcmdWithABool
This is a G4UIcommand derived class which takes one Boolean type parameter.
• G4UIcmdWithABool(char* commandpath,G4UImanager* theMessenger)
Constructor. Arguments are the (full-path) command name and the pointer to your messenger.
• void SetParameterName(char* paramName, G4bool omittable)
Define the name of the Boolean parameter and set the omittable flag. If omittable is true, you should define the
default value using the next method.
• void SetDefaultValue(G4bool defVal)
Define the default value of the Boolean parameter.
• G4bool GetNewBoolValue(G4String paramString)
Convert G4String parameter value given by the SetNewValue() method of your messenger into Boolean.
• G4String convertToString(G4bool currVal)
Convert the current Boolean value to G4String which should be returned by the GetCurrentValue()
method of your messenger.
G4UIcmdWithAnInteger
This is a G4UIcommand derived class which takes one integer type parameter.
• G4UIcmdWithAnInteger(char* commandpath, G4UImanager* theMessenger)
Constructor. Arguments are the (full-path) command name and the pointer to your messenger.
• void SetParameterName(char* paramName, G4bool omittable)
Define the name of the integer parameter and set the omittable flag. If omittable is true, you should define the
default value using the next method.
• void SetDefaultValue(G4int defVal)
Define the default value of the integer parameter.
• G4int GetNewIntValue(G4String paramString)
Convert G4String parameter value given by the SetNewValue() method of your messenger into integer.
• G4String convertToString(G4int currVal)
Convert the current integer value to G4String, which should be returned by the GetCurrentValue()
method of your messenger.
G4UIcmdWithADouble
This is a G4UIcommand derived class which takes one double type parameter.
• G4UIcmdWithADouble(char* commandpath, G4UImanager* theMessenger)
Constructor. Arguments are the (full-path) command name and the pointer to your messenger.
• void SetParameterName(char* paramName, G4bool omittable)
Define the name of the double parameter and set the omittable flag. If omittable is true, you should define the
default value using the next method.
G4UIcmdWithAString
This is a G4UIcommand derived class which takes one string type parameter.
• G4UIcmdWithAString(char* commandpath, G4UImanager* theMessenger)
Constructor. Arguments are the (full-path) command name and the pointer to your messenger.
• void SetParameterName(char* paramName, G4bool omittable)
Define the name of the string parameter and set the omittable flag. If omittable is true, you should define the
default value using the next method.
• void SetDefaultValue(char* defVal)
Define the default value of the string parameter.
• void SetCandidates(char* candidateList)
Define a candidate list which can be taken by the parameter. Each candidate listed in this list should be separated
by a single space. If this candidate list is given, a string given by the user but which is not listed in this list will
be rejected.
G4UIcmdWith3Vector
This is a G4UIcommand derived class which takes one three vector parameter.
• G4UIcmdWith3Vector(char* commandpath, G4UImanager* theMessenger)
Constructor. Arguments are the (full-path) command name and the pointer to your messenger.
• void SetParameterName(char* paramNamX, char* paramNamY, char* paramNamZ,
G4bool omittable)
Define the names of each component of the three vector and set the omittable flag. If omittable is true, you
should define the default value using the next method.
• void SetDefaultValue(G4ThreeVector defVal)
Define the default value of the three vector.
• G4ThreeVector GetNew3VectorValue(G4String paramString)
Convert the G4String parameter value given by the SetNewValue() method of your messenger into a
G4ThreeVector.
• G4String convertToString(G4ThreeVector currVal)
Convert the current three vector to G4String, which should be returned by the GetCurrentValue()
method of your messenger.
G4UIcmdWithADoubleAndUnit
This is a G4UIcommand derived class which takes one double type parameter and its unit.
• G4UIcmdWithADoubleAndUnit(char* commandpath, G4UImanager* theMessenger)
Constructor. Arguments are the (full-path) command name and the pointer to your messenger.
• void SetParameterName(char* paramName, G4bool omittable)
Define the name of the double parameter and set the omittable flag. If omittable is true, you should define the
default value using the next method.
G4UIcmdWith3VectorAndUnit
This is a G4UIcommand derived class which takes one three vector parameter and its unit.
• G4UIcmdWith3VectorAndUnit(char* commandpath, G4UImanager* theMessenger)
Constructor. Arguments are the (full-path) command name and the pointer to your messenger.
• void SetParameterName(char* paramNamX, char* paramNamY, char* paramNamZ,
G4bool omittable)
Define the names of each component of the three vector and set the omittable flag. If omittable is true, you
should define the default value using the next method.
• void SetDefaultValue(G4ThreeVector defVal)
Define the default value of the three vector.
• void SetUnitCategory(char* unitCategory)
Define acceptable unit category.
• void SetDefaultUnit(char* defUnit)
Define the default unit. Please use this method and the SetUnitCategory() method alternatively.
• G4ThreeVector GetNew3VectorValue(G4String paramString)
Convert a G4String parameter value given by the SetNewValue() method of your messenger into a
G4ThreeVector. Please note that the return value has already been multiplied by the value of the given
unit.
• G4ThreeVector GetNew3VectorRawValue(G4String paramString)
Convert a G4String parameter value given by the SetNewValue() method of your messenger into three
vector, but without multiplying the value of the given unit.
• G4double GetNewUnitValue(G4String paramString)
Convert a G4String unit value given by the SetNewValue() method of your messenger into a double.
• G4String convertToString(G4ThreeVector currVal, char* unitName)
Convert the current three vector to a G4String which should be returned by the GetCurrentValue()
method of your messenger. The three vector value will be divided by the value of the given unit and converted
to a string. Given unit will be added to the string.
You can add one additional argument of G4bool type for every SetParameterName() method mentioned above.
This additional argument is named currentAsDefaultFlag and the default value of this argument is false. If
you assign this extra argument as true, the default value of the parameter will be overridden by the current value of
the target class.
class G4ParticleGun;
class G4ParticleTable;
class G4UIcommand;
class G4UIdirectory;
class G4UIcmdWithoutParameter;
class G4UIcmdWithAString;
class G4UIcmdWithADoubleAndUnit;
class G4UIcmdWith3Vector;
class G4UIcmdWith3VectorAndUnit;
#include "G4UImessenger.hh"
#include "globals.hh"
public:
void SetNewValue(G4UIcommand * command,G4String newValues);
G4String GetCurrentValue(G4UIcommand * command);
private:
G4ParticleGun * fParticleGun;
G4ParticleTable * particleTable;
private: //commands
G4UIdirectory * gunDirectory;
G4UIcmdWithoutParameter * listCmd;
G4UIcmdWithAString * particleCmd;
G4UIcmdWith3Vector * directionCmd;
G4UIcmdWithADoubleAndUnit * energyCmd;
G4UIcmdWith3VectorAndUnit * positionCmd;
G4UIcmdWithADoubleAndUnit * timeCmd;
};
#endif
G4ParticleGunMessenger::G4ParticleGunMessenger(G4ParticleGun * fPtclGun)
:fParticleGun(fPtclGun)
{
particleTable = G4ParticleTable::GetParticleTable();
G4ParticleGunMessenger::~G4ParticleGunMessenger()
{
delete listCmd;
(continues on next page)
void G4ParticleGunMessenger::SetNewValue(
G4UIcommand * command,G4String newValues)
{
if( command==listCmd )
{ particleTable->dumpTable(); }
else if( command==particleCmd )
{
G4ParticleDefinition* pd = particleTable->findParticle(newValues);
if(pd != NULL)
{ fParticleGun->SetParticleDefinition( pd ); }
}
else if( command==directionCmd )
{ fParticleGun->SetParticleMomentumDirection(directionCmd->
GetNew3VectorValue(newValues)); }
else if( command==energyCmd )
{ fParticleGun->SetParticleEnergy(energyCmd->
GetNewDoubleValue(newValues)); }
else if( command==positionCmd )
{ fParticleGun->SetParticlePosition(
directionCmd->GetNew3VectorValue(newValues)); }
else if( command==timeCmd )
{ fParticleGun->SetParticleTime(timeCmd->
GetNewDoubleValue(newValues)); }
}
if( command==directionCmd )
{ cv = directionCmd->ConvertToString(
fParticleGun->GetParticleMomentumDirection()); }
else if( command==energyCmd )
{ cv = energyCmd->ConvertToString(
fParticleGun->GetParticleEnergy(),"GeV"); }
else if( command==positionCmd )
{ cv = positionCmd->ConvertToString(
fParticleGun->GetParticlePosition(),"cm"); }
else if( command==timeCmd )
{ cv = timeCmd->ConvertToString(
fParticleGun->GetParticleTime(),"ns"); }
else if( command==particleCmd )
{ // update candidate list
G4String candidateList;
G4int nPtcl = particleTable->entries();
for(G4int i=0;i<nPtcl;i++)
{
candidateList += particleTable->GetParticleName(i);
candidateList += " ";
}
particleCmd->SetCandidates(candidateList);
}
return cv;
}
Instead of std::cout and std::cerr, GEANT4 uses G4cout and G4cerr. Output streams from G4cout/G4cerr are
handled by G4UImanager which allows the application programmer to control the flow of the stream. Output strings
may therefore be displayed on another window or stored in a file. This is accomplished as follows:
1. Derive a class from G4UIsession and implement the two methods:
G4int ReceiveG4cout(const G4String& coutString);
G4int ReceiveG4cerr(const G4String& cerrString);
These methods receive the string stream of G4cout and G4cerr, respectively. The string can be handled to
meet specific requirements. The following sample code shows how to make a log file of the output stream:
ostream logFile;
logFile.open("MyLogFile");
G4int MySession::ReceiveG4cout(const G4String& coutString)
{
logFile << coutString << flush;
return 0;
}
delete LoggedSession;
return 0;
}
Note: G4cout/G4cerr should not be used in the constructor of a class if the instance of the class is intended to be
used as static. This restriction comes from the language specification of C++. See the documents below for details:
• M.A.Ellis, B.Stroustrup, “Annotated C++ Reference Manual”, Section 3.4 [Ellis1990]
• P.J.Plauger, “The Draft Standard C++ Library” [Plauger1995]
EIGHT
VISUALIZATION
The GEANT4 visualization system was developed in response to a diverse set of requirements:
1. Quick response to study geometries, trajectories and hits
2. High-quality output for publications
3. Flexible camera control to debug complex geometries
4. Tools to show volume overlap errors in detector geometries
5. Interactive picking to get more information on visualized objects
No one graphics system is ideal for all of these requirements, and many of the large software frameworks into which
GEANT4 has been incorporated already have their own visualization systems, so GEANT4 visualization was designed
around an abstract interface that supports a diverse family of graphics systems. Some of these graphics systems use
a graphics library compiled with GEANT4, such as OpenGL, Qt, while others involve a separate application, such as
HepRApp or DAWN.
Most examples include a vis.mac to perform typical visualization for that example. The macro includes optional code
which you can uncomment to activate additional visualization features.
The many graphics systems that GEANT4 supports are complementary to each other.
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• OpenGL
– View directly from GEANT4
– Requires addition of GL libraries that are freely available for all operating systems (and pre-installed on
many)
– Rendered, photorealistic image with some interactive features
– zoom, rotate, translate
– Fast response (can usually exploit full potential of graphics hardware)
– Print to EPS (vector and pixel graphics)
• Qt
– View directly from GEANT4
– Requires addition of Qt and GL libraries that are freely available on most operating systems
– Rendered, photorealistic image
– Many interactive features
– zoom, rotate, translate
– Fast response (can usually exploit full potential of graphics hardware)
– Expanded printing ability (vector and pixel graphics)
– Easy interface to make movies
• OpenInventor
– View directly from GEANT4
– Requires addition of OpenInventor libraries (freely available for most Linux systems).
– Rendered, photorealistic image
– Many interactive features
– zoom, rotate, translate
– click to “see inside” opaque volumes
– Fast response (can usually exploit full potential of graphics hardware)
– Expanded printing ability (vector and pixel graphics)
• HepRep
– Create a file to view in a HepRep browser such as HepRApp, FRED or WIRED4
– Requires a HepRep browser (above options work on any operating system)
– Wireframe or simple area fills (not photorealistic)
– Many interactive features
– zoom, rotate, translate
– click to show attributes (momentum, etc.)
– special projections (FishEye, etc.)
– control visibility from hierarchical (tree) view of data
– Hierarchical view of the geometry
– Export to many vector graphic formats (PostScript, PDF, etc.)
• DAWN
– Create a file to view in the DAWN Renderer
– Requires DAWN, available for all Linux and Windows systems.
– Rendered, photorealistic image
– No interactive features
– Highest quality technical rendering - output to vector PostScript
• VRML
– Create a file to view in any VRML browser (some as web browser plug-ins).
– Requires VRML browser (many different choices for different operating systems).
– Rendered, photorealistic image with some interactive features
– zoom, rotate, translate
– Limited printing ability (pixel graphics, not vector graphics)
• RayTracer
– Create a jpeg file
– Forms image by using GEANT4’s own tracking to follow photons through the detector
– Can show geometry but not trajectories
– Can render any geometry that GEANT4 can handle (such as Boolean solids)
• If you want very responsive photorealistic graphics (and have the OpenGL libraries installed)
– OpenGL is a good solution (if you have the Motif extensions, this also gives GUI control)
• If you want to have the User Interface and all Visualization windows in the same window
– Only Qt can do that
• If you want very responsive photorealistic graphics plus more interactivity (and have the OpenInventor or Qt
libraries installed)
– OpenInventor or Qt are good solutions
• If you want GUI control, very responsive photorealistic graphics plus more interactivity (and have the Qt li-
braries installed).
– Qt is a good solution
• If you want GUI control, want to be able to pick on items to inquire about them (identity, momentum, etc.),
perhaps want to render to vector formats, and a wireframe look will do
– HepRep will meet your needs
• If you want to render highest quality photorealistic images for use in a poster or a technical design report, and
you can live without quick rotate and zoom
– DAWN is the way to go
• If you want to render to a 3D format that others can view in a variety of commodity browsers (including some
web browser plug-ins)
– VRML is the way to go
• If you want to visualize a geometry that the other visualization drivers can’t handle, or you need transparency
or mirrors, and you don’t need to visualize trajectories
– RayTracer will do it
• If you want to visualization volume data, such as radiation therapy dose distributions
– gMocren will meet your needs
• If you just want to quickly check the geometry hierarchy, or if you want to calculate the volume or mass of any
geometry hierarchy
– ASCIITree will meet your needs
• If you to interact with your application with a Web Browser
– Wt will do it.
Your GEANT4 code stays basically the same no matter which driver you use.
Visualization is performed either with commands or from C++ code.
• Some visualization drivers work directly from GEANT4
– OpenGL
– Qt
– OpenInventor
– RayTracer
– ASCIITree
– Wt (WARNING: this driver is experimental and should be used with caution)
• For other visualization drivers, you first have GEANT4 produce a file, and then you have that file rendered by
another application (which may have GUI control)
– HepRep
– DAWN
– VRML
– gMocren
The following sections of this guide cover the details of GEANT4 visualization:
• Adding Visualization to Your Executable
• The Visualization Drivers
• Controlling Visualization from Commands
• Controlling Visualization from Compiled Code
• Visualization Attributes
• Enhanced Trajectory Drawing
• Polylines, Markers and Text
• Making a Movie
Other useful references for GEANT4 visualization outside of this user guide:
• Introduction to GEANT4 Visualization ( pdf, ppt)
• GEANT4 Visualization Commands ( pdf, ppt)
• GEANT4 Advanced Visualization ( pdf, ppt)
• How to Make a Movie ( pdf, ppt)
• GEANT4 Visualization Tutorial using the HepRApp HepRep Browser
• GEANT4 Visualization Tutorial using the OpenGL Event Display
• GEANT4 Visualization Tutorial using the DAWN Event Display
• Macro files distributed in GEANT4 source in basic examples, vis.mac and examples/basic/B4/
macros/visTutor/.
This section explains how to incorporate your selected visualization drivers into the main() function and create an
executable for it. In order to perform visualization with your GEANT4 executable, you must compile it with support
for the required visualization driver(s). You may be dazzled by the number of choices of visualization driver, but you
need not use all of them at one time.
Depending on what has been installed on your system, several kinds of visualization driver are available. One or many
drivers may be chosen for realization in compilation, depending on your visualization requirements. Features and
notes on each driver are briefly described in The Visualization Drivers, along with links to detailed web pages for the
various drivers.
Note that not all drivers can be installed on all systems; Table 8.1 in The Visualization Drivers lists all the available
drivers and the platforms on which they can be installed. For any of the visualization drivers to work, the corresponding
graphics system must be installed beforehand.
Visualization drivers that do not depend on external libraries are by default incorporated into GEANT4 libraries during
their installation. Here “installation of GEANT4 libraries” means the generation of GEANT4 libraries by compila-
tion. The automatically incorporated visualization drivers are: DAWNFILE, HepRepFile, HepRepXML, RayTracer,
VRML1FILE, VRML2FILE and ATree and GAGTree.
The OpenGL, Qt, OpenInventor and RayTracerX drivers are not incorporated by default. Nor are the DAWN-Network
and VRML-Network drivers, because they require the network setting of the installed machine. These drivers must be
selected when you build the GEANT4 Toolkit itself. This procedure is described in detail in the Installation Guide, to
which you should refer.
You can realize and use any of the visualization driver(s) you want in your GEANT4 executable, provided they are
among the set installed beforehand into the GEANT4 libraries. A warning will appear if this is not the case.
In order to realize visualization drivers, you must instantiate and initialize a subclass of G4VisManager that im-
plements the pure virtual function RegisterGraphicsSystems(). This subclass must be compiled in the
user’s domain to force the loading of appropriate libraries in the right order. The easiest way to do this is to
use G4VisExecutive, a provided class with included implementation. G4VisExecutive is sensitive to the
G4VIS_USE... variables mentioned below.
If you do wish to write your own subclass, you may do so. You will see how to do this by looking at
G4VisExecutive.icc. A typical extract is:
...
RegisterGraphicsSystem (new G4DAWNFILE);
...
#ifdef G4VIS_USE_OPENGLX
RegisterGraphicsSystem (new G4OpenGLImmediateX);
RegisterGraphicsSystem (new G4OpenGLStoredX);
#endif
...
If you wish to use G4VisExecutive but register an additional graphics system, XXX say, you may do so either
before or after initializing:
visManager->RegisterGraphicsSytem(new XXX);
visManager->Initialize();
By default, you get the DAWNFILE, HepRepFile, RayTracer, VRML1FILE, VRML2FILE, ATree and GAGTree
drivers. Additionally, you may choose from the OpenGL-Xlib, OpenGL-Motif, Qt, OpenInventor, RayTracerX,
DAWN-Network and VRML-Network drivers, each of which can be set at “Cmake” or “GNUMakefile step”,
see CMake Build System: Geant4Config.cmake. (Of course, this has to be chosen from the set incorporated into the
GEANT4 libraries during their compilation.)
For more details, see The Visualization Drivers and pages linked from there.
Visualization procedures are controlled by the “Visualization Manager”, a class which must inherit from
G4VisManager defined in the visualization category. Most users will find that they can just use the default visual-
ization manager, G4VisExecutive. The Visualization Manager accepts users’ requests for visualization, processes
them, and passes the processed requirements to the abstract interface, i.e., to the currently selected visualization driver.
In order for your GEANT4 executable to perform visualization, you must instantiate and initialize “your” Visual-
ization Manager in the main() function. The core of the Visualization Manager is the class G4VisManager,
defined in the visualization category. This class requires that one pure virtual function be implemented, namely, void
RegisterGraphicsSystems(). The easiest way to do this is to use G4VisExecutive, as described above
(but you may write your own class - see above).
Listing 8.1 shows the form of the main() function.
.....
// Your Visualization Manager
#include "G4VisExecutive.hh"
.....
.....
#ifdef G4VIS_USE
delete visManager;
#endif
Alternatively, you can implement an empty RegisterGraphicsSystems() function, and register visualization
drivers you want directly in your main() function. See Listing 8.2.
.....
G4VisManager* visManager = new G4VisExecutive;
(continues on next page)
Do not forget to delete the instantiated Visualization Manager by yourself. Note that a graphics system for GEANT4
Visualization may run as a different process. In that case, the destructor of G4VisManager might have to terminate
the graphics system and/or close the connection.
We recommend that the instantiation, initialization, and deletion of the Visualization Manager be protected by C-pre-
processor commands, as in the basic examples. To see the behaviour of C-pre-processor macro G4VIS_USE and
G4UI_USE, see CMake Build System: Geant4Config.cmake.
Listing 8.3 shows an example of the main() function available for GEANT4 Visualization.
// Detector components
runManager->set_userInitialization(new MyDetectorConstruction);
runManager->set_userInitialization(new MyPhysicsList);
// UserAction classes.
runManager->set_userAction(new MyRunAction);
runManager->set_userAction(new MyPrimaryGeneratorAction);
runManager->set_userAction(new MyEventAction);
runManager->set_userAction(new MySteppingAction);
#ifdef G4VIS_USE
G4VisManager* visManager = new G4VisExecutive;
visManager->Initialize(argc, argv);
#endif
// Define (G)UI
#ifdef G4UI_USE
G4UIExecutive * ui = new G4UIExecutive;
ui->SessionStart();
delete ui;
#endif
delete runManager;
#ifdef G4VIS_USE
delete visManager;
#endif
return 0;
}
Useful information on incorporated visualization drivers can be displayed in initializing the Visualization Manager.
As explained in the Introduction to Visualization, GEANT4 provides many different choices of visualization systems.
Features and notes on each driver are briefly described here along with links to detailed web pages for the various
drivers.
Details are given below for:
• OpenGL
• Qt
• OpenInventor
• OpenInventor Extended Viewer
• HepRepFile
• HepRepXML
• DAWN
• VRML
• RayTracer
• gMocren
• ASCIITree
• GAG Tree
• XML Tree
• Wt
Table 8.1 lists required graphics systems and supported platforms for the various visualization drivers
Table 8.1: Required graphics systems and supported platforms for the
various visualization drivers.
Driver Required Graphics System Platform
OpenGL-Xlib OpenGL Linux, UNIX, Mac with Xlib
OpenGL-Motif OpenGL Linux, UNIX, Mac with Motif
OpenGL-Win32 OpenGL Windows
Qt Qt, OpenGL Linux, UNIX, Mac, Windows
Wt Wt for server side/Web browser for clients. Linux, UNIX, Mac, Windows
OpenInventor-X OpenInventor (Coin3D), OpenGL Linux, UNIX, Mac with Xlib and
Motif
OpenInventor-X- OpenInventor (Coin3D), OpenGL Linux, UNIX, Mac with Xlib and
Extended Motif
OpenInventor-Win32 OpenInventor, OpenGL Windows
HepRep HepRApp, FRED or WIRED4 HepRep Linux, UNIX, Mac, Windows
Browser
DAWNFILE Fukui Renderer DAWN Linux, UNIX, Mac, Windows
DAWN-Network Fukui Renderer DAWN Linux, UNIX
VRMLFILE any VRML viewer Linux, UNIX, Mac, Windows
VRML-Network any network-enabled VRML viewer Linux, UNIX
RayTracer any JPEG viewer Linux, UNIX, Mac, Windows
ASCIITree none Linux, UNIX, Mac, Windows
GAGTree GAG Linux, UNIX, Mac, Windows
XMLTree any XML viewer Linux, UNIX, Mac, Windows
8.3.2 OpenGL
These drivers have been developed by John Allison and Andrew Walkden (University of Manchester). It is an interface
to the de facto standard 3D graphics library, OpenGL. It is well suited for real-time fast visualization and demonstra-
tion. Fast visualization is realized with hardware acceleration, reuse of shapes stored in a display list, etc. NURBS
visualization is also supported.
Several versions of the OpenGL drivers are prepared. Versions for Xlib, Motif, Qt and Win32 platforms are available
by default. For each version, there are two modes: immediate mode and stored mode. The former has no limitation on
data size, and the latter is fast for visualizing large data repetitively, and so is suitable for animation.
Images can be exported using /vis/ogl/export.
More information can be found here: How to save a view to an image file
If you want to open a OGL viewer, the generic way is:
/vis/open OGL
According to your G4VIS_USE. . . variables it will open the correct viewer. By default, it will be open in stored mode.
You can specify to open an “OGLS” or “OGLI” viewer, or even “OGLSXm”,”OGLIXm”,. . . If you don’t have Motif
or Qt, all control is done from GEANT4 commands:
/vis/open OGLIX
/vis/viewer/set/viewpointThetaPhi 70 20
/vis/viewer/zoom 2
etc.
But if you have Motif libraries or Qt install, you can control GEANT4 from Motif widgets or mouse with Qt:
/vis/open OGLSQt
The OpenGL driver added Smooth shading and Transparency since GEANT4 release 8.0.
Further information (OpenGL and Mesa):
• https://www.opengl.org/
• https://www.mesa3d.org
• http://geant4.slac.stanford.edu/Presentations/vis/G4OpenGLTutorial/G4OpenGLTutorial.html using the
OpenGL Graphics System
8.3.3 Qt
This driver has been developed by Laurent Garnier (IN2P3, LAL Orsay). It is an interface to the powerful application
framework, Qt, now free on most platforms. This driver also requires the OpenGL library.
The Qt driver is well suited for real-time fast visualization and demonstration. Fast visualization is realized with
hardware acceleration, reuse of shapes stored in a display list, etc. NURBS visualization is also supported. All
OpenGL features are implemented in the Qt driver, but one also gets mouse control of rotation/translation/zoom, the
ability to save your scene in many formats (both vector and pixel graphics) and an easy interface for making movies.
Two display modes are available: Immediate mode and Stored mode. The former has no limitation on data size, and
the latter is fast for visualizing large data repetitively, and so is suitable for animation.
This driver has the feature to open a vis window into the UI window as a new tab. You can have as many tabs you
want and mix them from Stored or Immediate mode. To see the visualization window in the UI:
/vis/open OGL (Generic way. For Stored mode if you have define your G4VIS_USE_QT variable)
or
/vis/open OGLI (for Immediate mode)
or
/vis/open OGLS (for Stored mode)
or
/vis/open OGLIQt (for Immediate mode)
or
/vis/open OGLSQt (for Stored mode)
8.3.4 OpenInventor
These drivers were developed by Jeff Kallenbach (FNAL) and Guy Barrand (IN2P3) based on the Hepvis class library
originated by Joe Boudreau (Pittsburgh University). The OpenInventor drivers and the Hepvis class library are based
on the well-established OpenInventor technology for scientific visualization. They have high extendibility. They
support high interactivity, e.g., attribute editing of picked objects. Some OpenInventor viewers support “stereoscopic”
effects.
It is also possible to save a visualized 3D scene as an OpenInventor-formatted file, and re-visualize the scene after-
wards.
Because it is connected directly to the GEANT4 kernel, using same language as that kernel (C++), OpenInventor
systems can have direct access to GEANT4 data (geometry, trajectories, etc.).
Because OpenInventor uses OpenGL for rendering, it supports lighting and transparency.
OpenInventor provides thumbwheel control to rotate and zoom.
OpenInventor supports picking to ask about data. [Control Clicking] on a volume turns on rendering of that volume’s
daughters. [Shift Clicking] a daughter turns that rendering off: If modeling opaque solid, effect is like opening a box
to look inside.
Further information (HEPVis and OpenScientist):
• GEANT4 Inventor Visualization with OpenScientist
• Overall OpenScientist Home
• HEPVis
Further information (OpenInventor):
• http://oss.sgi.com/projects/inventor
• Josie Wernecke, “The Inventor Mentor”, Addison Wesley (ISBN 0-201-62495-8)
• Josie Wernecke, “The Inventor Toolmaker”, Addison Wesley (ISBN 0-201-62493-1)
• “The Open Inventor C++ Reference Manual”, Addison Wesley (ISBN 0-201-62491-5)
This driver was developed by Rastislav Ondrasek, Pierre-Luc Gagnon and Frederick Jones (TRIUMF). It extends the
functionality of the OpenInventor driver, described in the previous section, by adding a number of new features to the
viewer.
At present this driver is supported only on Linux/Unix/MacOS platforms and is not available for Windows. It requires
the Coin3D implementation of OpenInventor.
All of the viewer functions and behavior of the basic OpenInventor driver are included and remain unchanged. The
added viewer functions are implemented via dropdown menu items, buttons, a new navigation panel, and keyboard
and mouse inputs.
Reference path navigation
Most of the added features are concerned with navigation along a “reference path” which is a piecewise linear path
through the geometry. The reference path can be any particle trajectory, which may be chosen in the application by
an attaching a visualization attribute to it, or at run time by selecting a trajectory with the mouse. Via Load and Save
menu items, a reference path can be read from a file and the current reference path can be written to a file.
Once a reference path is established, the viewer pops up a Navigation Panel showing a list of all elements in the
geometry, ordered by their “distance” along the reference path (based on the perpendicular from the element center to
the path).
Navigation controls
[L,R,U,D refer to the arrow keys on the keyboard]
• Select an element from the list: navigate along the path to the element’s “location” (distance along the reference
path).
• Shift-L and Shift-R: navigate to the previous or next element on the path (with wraparound).
• L and R: rotate 90 degrees around the vertical axis
• U and D: rotate 90 degrees around the path
• Ctrl-L and Ctrl-R: rotate 90 degrees around the horizontal axis
All these keys have a “repeat” function for continuous motion.
The rotation keys put the camera in a definite orientation, whereas The Shift-L and Shift-R keys can be used to “fly”
along the path in whatever camera orientation is in effect. NOTE: if this appears to be “stuck”, try switching from
orthonormal camera to perspective camera (“cube” viewer button).
Menu Items:
• Tools / Go to start of reference path: useful if you get lost
• Tools / Invert reference path: flips the direction of travel and the distance readout
Reference path animation
This is a special mode which flies the camera steadily along the path, without wraparound. The controls are:
• Tools Menu - Animate Ref Particle: start animation mode
• Page-Up: increase speed
• Page-Down: decrease speed
• U (arrow key): raise camera
• D (arrow key): lower camera
• ESC: exit animation mode
For suitable geometries the U and D keys can be used to get “Star Wars” style fly-over and fly-under effects.
Bookmarks
At any time, the viewpoint and other camera parameters can be saved in a file as a labelled “bookmark”. The view can
then be restored later in the current run or in another run.
The default name for the bookmark file is “.bookmarkFile” The first time a viewpoint is saved, this file will be created
if it does not already exist. When the viewer is first opened, it will automatically read this file if present and load the
viewpoints into the left-hand panel of the viewer’s auxiliary window.
Controls:
• Select viewpoint from list: restore this view
• Right-arrow VIEWER button: go to next viewpoint Left-arrow VIEWER button: go to next viewpoint
• “Floppy Disk” button: save current view. The user can type in a label for the view, or use the default label
provided.
• File Menu - Open Viewpoint File: loads an existing bookmark file
• File Menu - New Viewpoint File: creates a new bookmark file for saving subsequent views
Special picking modes
Controls:
• “Console” VIEWER button: enable brief trajectory picking and mouse-over element readout For trajectories,
the list of all trajectory points is replaced by the first and last point only, allowing easier identification of the
particle without scrolling back. Passing the mouse over an element will give a readout of the volume name,
material, and position on the reference path.
• “Star” VIEWER button: select new reference path The cursor will change to a small cross (+) after which a
trajectory can be selected to become the new reference path.
Convenience feature
It is now possible to escape from the Open Inventor viewer without using the mouse.
In addition to the File - Escape menu item, pressing the “e” key on the keyboard will exit from the viewer’s X event
loop. The viewer will become inactive and control will return to the GEANT4 UI prompt.
8.3.6 HepRepFile
The HepRepFile driver creates a HepRep XML file in the HepRep1 format suitable for viewing with the HepRApp
HepRep Browser.
The HepRep graphics format is further described at http://www.slac.stanford.edu/~perl/heprep .
To write just the detector geometry to this file, use the command:
/vis/viewer/flush
Or, to also include trajectories and hits (after the appropriate /vis/viewer/add/trajectories or /vis/viewer/add/hits com-
mands), just issue:
/run/beamOn 1
HepRepFile will write a file called G4Data0.heprep to the current directory. Each subsequent file will have a file name
like G4Data1.heprep, G4Data2.heprep, etc.
View the file using the HepRApp HepRep Browser, available from:
http://www.slac.stanford.edu/~perl/HepRApp/ .
HepRApp allows you to pick on volumes, trajectories and hits to find out their associated HepRep Attributes, such as
volume name, particle ID, momentum, etc. These same attributes can be displayed as labels on the relevant objects,
and you can make visibility cuts based on these attributes (“show me only the photons”, or “omit any volumes made
of iron”).
HepRApp can read heprep files in zipped format as well as unzipped, so you can save space by applying gzip to the
heprep file. This will reduce the file to about five percent of its original size.
Several commands are available to override some of HepRepFile’s defaults
• You can specify a different directory for the heprep output files by using the setFileDir command, as in:
/vis/heprep/setFileDir <someOtherDir/someOtherSubDir>
• You can specify a different file name (the part before the number) by using the setFileName command, as in:
/vis/heprep/setFileName <my_file_name>
This may be useful in some automated applications where you always want to see the latest output file in the
same location.
• GEANT4 visualization supports a concept called “culling”, by which certain parts of the detector can be made
invisible. Since you may want to control visibility from the HepRep browser, turning on visibility of detector
parts that had defaulted to be invisible, the HepRepFile driver does not omit these invisible detector parts from
the HepRep file. But for very large files, if you know that you will never want to make these parts visible, you
can choose to have them left entirely out of the file. Use the /vis/heprep/setCullInvisibles command, as in:
/vis/heprep/setCullInvisibles true
Further information:
• HepRApp Users Home Page: http://www.slac.stanford.edu/~perl/HepRApp/
• HepRep graphics format: http://www.slac.stanford.edu/~perl/heprep
• GEANT4 Visualization Tutorial using the HepRApp HepRep Browser: http://geant4.slac.stanford.edu/
Presentations/vis/G4HepRAppTutorial/G4HepRAppTutorial.html
8.3.7 HepRepXML
The HepRepXML driver creates a HepRep file in the HepRep2 format suitable for viewing with the WIRED4 Plugin
to the JAS3 Analysis System or the FRED event display.
This driver can write both Binary HepRep (.bheprep) and XML HepRep (.heprep) files. Binary HepRep files are a
one-to-one translation of XML HepRep files, but they are considerably shorter and faster to parse by a HepRepViewer
such as WIRED 4.
Both Binary HepRep and XML HepRep can be compressed using the standard zlib library if linked into GEANT4
using G4LIB_USE_ZLIB. If a standard zlib is not available (WIN32-VC for instance) you should also set
G4LIB_BUILD_ZLIB to build G4zlib included with GEANT4.
HepRep files (Binary and XML) can contain multiple HepRep events/geometries. If the file contains more than one
HepRep it is not strictly XML anymore. Files can be written in .heprep.zip, .heprep.gz or .heprep format and their
binary versions .bheprep.zip, .bheprep.gz or .bheprep.
The .heprep.zip is the default for file output, the .heprep is the default for stdout and stderr.
(Optional) To set the filename with a particular extension such as: .heprep.zip, .heprep.gz, .heprep, .bheprep.zip,
.bheprep.gz or .bheprep use for instance:
/vis/scene/create filename.bheprep.zip
(Optional) To create separate files for each event, you can set a suffix such as “-0001” to start writing files from
filename-0001.bheprep.zip to filename-9999.bheprep.zip (or up), while “-55-sub” will start write files filename-55-
sub.bheprep.zip to filename-99-sub.bheprep.zip (or up).
/vis/heprep/setEventNumberSuffix -0001
Be aware that this may increase the size of the output dramatically.
(Optional) You may use the commands:
/vis/viewer/zoom to set an initial zoom factor
(Optional) You may decide to write .zip files with events and geometry separated (but linked). This results in a smaller
zip file, as the geometry is only written once. Use the command:
/vis/heprep/appendGeometry false
Limitations: Only one SceneHandler can exist at any time, connected to a single Viewer. Since the HepRep format is
a model rather than a view this is not a real limitation. In WIRED 4 you can create as many views (SceneHandlers) as
you like.
Further information:
• WIRED4 Plugin to the JAS3 Analysis System
• FRED event display
• HepRep graphics format
8.3.8 DAWN
The DAWN drivers are interfaces to Fukui Renderer DAWN, which has been developed by Satoshi Tanaka, Minato
Kawaguti et al (Fukui University). It is a vectorized 3D PostScript processor, and so well suited to prepare technical
high quality outputs for presentation and/or documentation. It is also useful for precise debugging of detector geom-
etry. Remote visualization, off-line re-visualization, cut view, and many other useful functions of detector simulation
are supported. A DAWN process is automatically invoked as a co-process of GEANT4 when visualization is performed,
and 3D data are passed with inter-process communication, via a file, or the TCP/IP socket.
When GEANT4 Visualization is performed with the DAWN driver, the visualized view is automatically saved to a file
named g4.eps in the current directory, which describes a vectorized (Encapsulated) PostScript data of the view.
There are two kinds of DAWN drivers, the DAWNFILE driver and the DAWN-Network driver. The DAWNFILE
driver is usually recommended, since it is faster and safer in the sense that it is not affected by network conditions.
The DAWNFILE driver sends 3D data to DAWN via an intermediate file, named g4.prim in the current directory.
The file g4.prim can be re-visualized later without the help of GEANT4. This is done by invoking DAWN by hand:
% dawn g4.prim
Visualization in GEANT4 is considered to be “remote” when it is performed on a machine other than the GEANT4 host.
Some of the visualization drivers support this feature.
Usually, the visualization host is your local host, while the GEANT4 host is a remote host where you log in, for
example, with the telnet command. This enables distributed processing of GEANT4 visualization, avoiding the
transfer of large amounts of visualization data to your terminal display via the network. This section describes how to
perform remote GEANT4 visualization with the DAWN-Network driver. In order to do it, you must install the Fukui
Renderer DAWN on your local host beforehand.
The following steps realize remote GEANT4 visualization viewed by DAWN.
1. Invoke DAWN with “-G” option on your local host:
Local_Host> dawn -G
For example, if you are working in the local host named “arkoop.kek.jp”, set this environment variable as
follows:
Remote_Host> setenv G4DAWN_HOST_NAME arkoop.kek.jp
This tells a GEANT4 process running on the remote host where GEANT4 Visualization should be performed, i.e.,
where the visualized views should be displayed.
4. Invoke a GEANT4 process and perform visualization with the DAWN-Network driver. For example:
Idle> /vis/open DAWN
Idle> /vis/drawVolume
Idle> /vis/viewer/flush
In step 4, 3D scene data are sent from the remote host to the local host as DAWN-formatted data, and the local DAWN
will visualize the data. The transferred data are saved as a file named g4.prim in the current directory of the local
host.
Further information:
• Fukui Renderer DAWN: http://geant4.kek.jp/GEANT4/vis/DAWN/About_DAWN.html
• The DAWNFILE driver: http://geant4.kek.jp/GEANT4/vis/GEANT4/DAWNFILE_driver.html
• The DAWN-Network driver: http://geant4.kek.jp/GEANT4/vis/GEANT4/DAWNNET_driver.html
• Environmental variables to customize DAWN and DAWN drivers: http://geant4.kek.jp/GEANT4/vis/DAWN/
DAWN_ENV.html , http://geant4.kek.jp/GEANT4/vis/GEANT4/g4vis_on_linux.html
• DAWN format (g4.prim format) manual: http://geant4.kek.jp/GEANT4/vis/DAWN/G4PRIM_FORMAT_24/
• GEANT4 Fukui University Group Home Page: http://geant4.kek.jp/GEANT4/vis/
• DAWNCUT: http://geant4.kek.jp/GEANT4/vis/DAWN/About_DAWNCUT.html
• DAVID: http://geant4.kek.jp/GEANT4/vis/DAWN/About_DAVID.html
• GEANT4 Visualization Tutorial using the DAWN Renderer: http://geant4.slac.stanford.edu/Presentations/vis/
G4DAWNTutorial/G4DAWNTutorial.html
8.3.10 VRML
These drivers were developed by Satoshi Tanaka and Yasuhide Sawada (Fukui University). They generate VRML files,
which describe 3D scenes to be visualized with a proper VRML viewer, at either a local or a remote host. It realizes
virtual-reality visualization with your WWW browser. There are many excellent VRML viewers, which enable one
to perform interactive spinning of detectors, walking and/or flying inside detectors or particle showers, interactive
investigation of detailed detector geometry etc.
There are two kinds of VRML drivers: the VRMLFILE driver, and the VRML-Network driver. The VRMLFILE
driver is usually recommended, since it is faster and safer in the sense that it is not affected by network conditions.
The VRMLFILE driver sends 3D data to your VRML viewer, which is running on the same host machine as GEANT4,
via an intermediate file named g4.wrl created in the current directory. This file can be re-visualization after-
wards. In visualization, the name of the VRML viewer should be specified by setting the environment variable
G4VRML_VIEWER beforehand. For example,
% setenv G4VRML_VIEWER "netscape"
Its default value is NONE, which means that no viewer is invoked and only the file g4.wrl is generated.
Remote Visualization with the VRML-Network Driver
Visualization in GEANT4 is considered to be “remote” when it is performed on a machine other than the GEANT4 host.
Some of the visualization drivers support this feature.
Usually, the visualization host is your local host, while the GEANT4 host is a remote host where you log in, for
example, with the telnet command. This enables distributed processing of GEANT4 visualization, avoiding the
transfer of large amounts of visualization data to your terminal display via the network.
In order to perform remote visualization with the VRML-Network driver, the following must be installed on your local
host beforehand:
1. a VRML viewer
2. the Java application g4vrmlview.
The Java application g4vrmlview is included as part of the GEANT4 package and is located at:
source/visualization/VRML/g4vrmlview/
Installation instructions for g4vrmlview can be found in the README file there, or on the WWW page below.
The following steps realize remote GEANT4 visualization displayed with your local VRML browser:
1. Invoke the g4vrmlview on your local host, giving a VRML viewer name as its argument:
Local_Host> java g4vrmlview VRML_viewer_name
For example, if you want to use the Netscape browser as your VRML viewer, execute g4vrmlview as follows:
Local_Host> java g4vrmlview netscape
Of course, the command path to the VRML viewer should be properly set.
2. Log in to the remote host where a GEANT4 executable is placed.
3. Set an environment variable on the remote host as follows:
Remote_Host> setenv G4VRML_HOST_NAME local_host_name
For example, if you are working on the local host named “arkoop.kek.jp”, set this environment variable as
follows:
Remote_Host> setenv G4VRML_HOST_NAME arkoop.kek.jp
This tells a GEANT4 process running on the remote host where GEANT4 Visualization should be performed, i.e.,
where the visualized views should be displayed.
4. Invoke a GEANT4 process and perform visualization with the VRML-Network driver. For example:
Idle> /vis/open VRML2
Idle> /vis/drawVolume
Idle> /vis/viewer/update
In step 4, 3D scene data are sent from the remote host to the local host as VRML-formatted data, and the VRML viewer
specified in step 3 is invoked by the g4vrmlview process to visualize the VRML data. The transferred VRML data
are saved as a file named g4.wrl in the current directory of the local host.
Further information:
• http://geant4.kek.jp/GEANT4/vis/GEANT4/VRML_net_driver.html
Further information (VRML drivers):
• http://geant4.kek.jp/GEANT4/vis/GEANT4/VRML_file_driver.html
• http://geant4.kek.jp/GEANT4/vis/GEANT4/VRML_net_driver.html
Sample VRML files:
• http://geant4.kek.jp/GEANT4/vis/GEANT4/VRML2_FIG/
Further information (VRML language and browsers):
• http://www.vrmlsite.com/
8.3.11 RayTracer
This driver was developed by Makoto Asai and Minamimoto (Hirosihma Instutute of Technology). It performs ray-
tracing visualization using the tracking routines of GEANT4. It is, therefore, available for every kinds of shapes/solids
which GEANT4 can handle. It is also utilized for debugging the user’s geometry for the tracking routines of GEANT4. It
is well suited for photo-realistic high quality output for presentation, and for intuitive debugging of detector geometry.
It produces a JPEG file. This driver is by default listed in the available visualization drivers of user’s application.
Some pieces of geometries may fail to show up in other visualization drivers (due to algorithms those drivers use to
compute visualizable shapes and polygons), but RayTracer can handle any geometry that the GEANT4 navigator can
handle.
Because RayTracer in essence takes over GEANT4’s tracking routines for its own use, RayTracer cannot be used to
visualize Trajectories or hits.
An X-Window version, called RayTracerX, can be selected by setting GEANT4_USE_RAYTRACER_X11 (for
CMake) at GEANT4 library build time and application (user code) build time (assuming you use the standard vi-
sualization manager, G4VisExecutive, or an equally smart vis manager). RayTracerX builds the same jpeg file as
RayTracer, but simultaneously renders to screen so you can watch as rendering grows progressively smoother.
RayTracer has its own built-in commands - /vis/rayTracer/. . . . Alternatively, you can treat it as a normal vis
system and use /vis/viewer/. . . commands, e.g:
/vis/open RayTracerX
/vis/drawVolume
/vis/viewer/set/viewpointThetaPhi 30 30
/vis/viewer/refresh
The view parameters are translated into the necessary RayTracer parameters.
RayTracer is compute intensive. If you are unsure of a good viewing angle or zoom factor, you might be advised
to choose them with a faster renderer, such as OpenGL, and transfer the view parameters with /vis/viewer/
copyViewFrom:
/vis/open OGL
/vis/drawVolume
/vis/viewer/zoom # plus any /vis/viewer/commands that get you the view you want.
/vis/open RayTracerX
/vis/viewer/copyViewFrom viewer-0
/vis/viewer/refresh
8.3.12 gMocren
The gMocrenFile driver creates a gdd file suitable for viewing with the gMocren volume visualizer. gMocren, a
sophisticated tool for rendering volume data, can show volume data such as GEANT4 dose distributions overlaid with
scoring grids, trajectories and detector geometry. gMocren provides additional advanced functionality such as transfer
functions, colormap editing, image rotation, image scaling, and image clipping.
gMocren is further described at http://geant4.kek.jp/gMocren/. At this link you will find the gMocren download, the
user manual, a tutorial and some example gdd data files.
Please note that the gMocren file driver is currently considered a Beta release. Users are encouraged to try this driver,
and feedback is welcome, but users should be aware that features of this driver may change in upcoming releases.
To send volume data from GEANT4 scoring to a gMocren file, the user needs to tell the gMocren driver the name of
the specific scoring volume that is to be displayed. For scoring done in C++, this is the name of the sensitive volume.
For command-based scoring, this is the name of the scoring mesh.
/vis/gMocren/setVolumeName <volume_name>
The following is an example of the minimum command sequence to send command-based scoring data to the a
gMocren file:
# an example of a command-based scoring definition
/score/create/boxMesh scoringMesh # name of the scoring mesh
/score/mesh/boxSize 10. 10. 10. cm # dimension of the scoring mesh
/score/mesh/nBin 10 10 10 # number of divisions of the scoring mesh
/score/quantity/energyDeposit eDep # quantity to be scored
/score/close
# configuration of the gMocren-file driver
/vis/scene/create
/vis/open gMocrenFile
/vis/gMocren/setVolumeName scoringMesh
gMocrenFile will write a file named G4_00.gd to the current directory. Subsequent draws will create files named
g4_01.gdd, g4_02.gdd, etc. An alternate output directory can be specified with an environment variable:
export G4GMocrenFile_DEST_DIR=<someOtherDir/someOtherSubDir/>
View the resulting gMocren files with the gMocren viewer, available from: http://geant4.kek.jp/gMocren/.
8.3.13 Wt
This driver has been developed by Laurent Garnier (IN2P3, LAL Orsay). It provide an interface to a GEANT4 appli-
cation inside a Web browser. This driver also requires the Wt library and a Web browser with WebGL enable. See if
your Web browser support WebGL on Wikipedia#WebGL#Support
The Wt driver is well suited for real-time fast visualization and demonstration. Available as experimental in
GEANT4 version 10.0, all OpenGL features are not implemented but basics interactions as mouse control of rota-
tion/translation/zoom are present.
Wt driver rely on WebGL, it aims to render the same way as Qt, but inside a Web browser. The use of WebGL (instead
of OpenGL for Qt), allow it to be available wherever a Web browser with WebGL is activate.
Sources files:
See CMake configuration in order to compile GEANT4 with Wt support.
As a GEANT4 with Wt driver application will be available inside a Web browser, your need at first to launch a web
server in order to be able to see the web page. Hopefully, Wt came with its own web server included. This web server
will be multi-user, that means that you could have many users using your application from everywhere. As the support
for Wt driver is experimental, the multi-user aspect is not well manage. In GEANT4 version 10, many users will have
access at the same Run manager at the same time and even to the files and data, this could cause some troubles.
As a GEANT4 application using Wt driver is a client/server application, the way to build the main function is a bit
different.
Listing 8.4: The typical main() routine available for visualization with
Wt driver.
//----- C++ source codes: main() function for visualization
#ifdef G4VIS_USE
#include "G4VisExecutive.hh"
#endif
// Wt includes
#if defined(G4UI_USE_WT)
#include <Wt/WApplication>
#include <Wt/WEnvironment>
#include <Wt/WServer>
// Main Wt driver function. It will be call once by user launching the application
// Inside this function, you have to put all your Geant4 initialisation
// (as in main() function on other graphic drivers)
Wt::WApplication *createApplication(const Wt::WEnvironment& env)
{
return myApp;
}
#endif
.....
.....
server.addEntryPoint(Wt::Application, createApplication);
// Run it !
if (server.start()) {
int sig = Wt::WServer::waitForShutdown();
server.stop();
}
} catch (Wt::WServer::Exception& e) {
std::cerr << e.what() << "\n";
return 1;
} catch (std::exception& e) {
std::cerr << "exception: " << e.what() << "\n";
return 1;
}
// Job termination
#ifdef G4VIS_USE
delete visManager;
#endif
.....
#endif
return 0;
}
This driver will display the UI and vis window inside a Web browser page. As with Qt driver, you can have as many
tabs with viewer you want. To see the visualization window:
/vis/open OGL
other parameters as OGLI, OGLS, OGLIWt, OGLSWt will have all the same effect
Execution of the server: As your application will contain a web server, you will have to launch the web server first
and set some specific arguments for internet :
• docroot: document root for static files as css, images. . .
• http-address: The address where this application will be deploy. (eg:0.0.0.0)
• http-port: HTTP port (e.g. 80)
More information on Wt web site The command line for launching your application will be the following:
myExample --docroot "where your resources are" --http-address 0.0.0.0 --http-port 8080
Execution of a client: All clients can reach your application server at the following address:
http://0.0.0.0:8080 (for users on the same computer as the server)
http://Your.Server.Ip:8080 (for external users)
If this address is unreachable, check if the specify port is not already in use and is fully open.
ASCIITREE is a visualization driver that is not actually graphical but that dumps the volume hierarchy as a simple
text tree.
Each call to /vis/viewer/flush or /vis/drawTree will dump the tree.
ASCIITree has command to control its verbosity, /vis/ASCIITree/verbose. The verbosity value controls the
amount of information available, e.g., physical volume name alone, or also logical volume and solid names. If the
volume is “sensitive” and/or has a “readout geometry”, this may also be indicated. Also, the mass of the physical
volume tree(s) can be printed (but beware - higher verbosity levels can be computationally intensive).
At verbosity level 4, ASCIITree calculates the mass of the complete geometry tree taking into account daughters up to
the depth specified for each physical volume. The calculation involves subtracting the mass of that part of the mother
that is occupied by each daughter and then adding the mass of the daughter, and so on down the hierarchy.
/vis/ASCIITree/Verbose 4
/vis/viewer/flush
"HadCalorimeterPhysical":0 / "HadCalorimeterLogical" / "HadCalorimeterBox"(G4Box),
1.8 m3 , 11.35 g/cm3
"HadCalColumnPhysical":-1 (10 replicas) / "HadCalColumnLogical" / "HadCalColumnBox"(G4Box),
180000 cm3, 11.35 g/cm3
"HadCalCellPhysical":-1 (2 replicas) / "HadCalCellLogical" / "HadCalCellBox"(G4Box),
90000 cm3, 11.35 g/cm3
"HadCalLayerPhysical":-1 (20 replicas) / "HadCalLayerLogical" / "HadCalLayerBox"(G4Box),
4500 cm3, 11.35 g/cm3
"HadCalScintiPhysical":0 / "HadCalScintiLogical" / "HadCalScintiBox"(G4Box),
900 cm3, 1.032 g/cm3
Calculating mass(es)...
Overall volume of "worldPhysical":0, is 2400 m3
Mass of tree to unlimited depth is 22260.5 kg
For the complete list of commands and options, see the Control. . . UICommands section of this user guide.
The GAGTree driver provides a listing of the detector geometry tree within GAG, the Geant Adaptive GUI, from the
environments/MOMO/MOMO.jar file present under the GEANT4 source distribution. GAG allows “folding/un-
folding” a part of the geometry tree, using the Tree Widget in Java:
The XML description of the geometry tree can be created in GEANT4 by the XML Tree driver. The XML source can
also be edited on the fly. The created XML files are visualizable with any XML browser (in Windows, a good XML
viewer is XML Notepad).
• Folding and un-folding (Fig. 8.2):
This section describes just a few of the more commonly used visualization commands. For the complete list of
commands and options, see the Control. . . UICommands section of this user guide.
These commands can by typed on the session command line when in Idle state:
Idle> /vis/drawVolume
Most examples have a vis.mac file, where you may look for inspiration.
For simplicity, this section assumes that the GEANT4 executable was compiled incorporating the DAWNFILE and
the OpenGL-Xlib drivers. For details on creating an executable for visualization see Adding Visualization to Your
Executable.
Warning: This section is not a complete description of all visualisation commands; they are too numerous and
continually evolving. Please refer to the command guidance, Control. . . UICommands or simply type “ls vis” or
“help”. Some viewers, notably Qt, offer interactivie guidance under the “Help” menu.
In using the visualization commands, it is useful to know the concept of “scene”, “scene handler”, and “viewer”. A
“scene” is a set of visualizable raw 3D data. A “scene handler” is a graphics-data modeler, which processes raw data in
a scene for later visualization. And a “viewer” generates images based on data processed by a scene handler. Roughly
speaking, a set of a scene handler and a viewer corresponds to a visualization driver.
The steps of performing GEANT4 visualization are explained below, though some of these steps may be done for you
so that in practice you may use as few as just two commands (such as /vis/open OGLIX plus /vis/drawVolume). The
seven steps of visualization are:
and one viewer, many steps are handled implicitly for you.
Command “/vis/open” creates a scene handler and a viewer, which corresponds to Step 1.
Command: /vis/open <driver_tag_name>
• Argument
A name of (a mode of) an available visualization driver.
• Action
Create a visualization driver, i.e. a set of a scene handler and a viewer.
• Example: Create an OpenGL driver (it chooses the best available for a given type of session):
/vis/open OGL
which produces:
parameter value (xx) is not listed in the candidate List.
Candidates are: ATree DAWNFILE HepRepFile HepRepXML OGL OGLI OGLIQt OGLS OGLSQt RayTracer
˓→VRML1FILE VRML2FILE gMocrenFile
For additional options, see the Control. . . UICommands section of this user guide.
/vis/drawVolume is a “compound” command that creates a new scene (/vis/scene/create), adds a vol-
ume (/vis/scene/add/volume) and attaches it (/vis/sceneHandler/attach) to the current viewer (/
control/verbose 2 to see all the invoked commands). It takes care of steps 2, 3, 4 and 6. Command /vis/
viewer/flush may be required in order to do the final Step 7.
Commands:
/vis/drawVolume [physical-volume-name]
• Argument
If physical-volume-name is “world” (the default), the top of the main geometry tree (material world) is added.
If “worlds”, the tops of all worlds - material world and parallel worlds, if any - are added. Otherwise a search of
all worlds is made.
In the last case the names of all volumes in all worlds are matched against physical-volume-name. If this is of
the form “/regexp/”, where regexp is a regular expression (see C++ regex), the match uses the usual rules of
regular expression matching. Otherwise an exact match is required.
For example, “/Shap/” matches “Shape1” and “Shape2”.
• Action
Creates a scene consisting of the given physical volume(s) and asks the current viewer to draw it. The scene
becomes current. Command “/vis/viewer/flush” should follow this command in order to declare end of
visualization.
• Example: Visualization of the whole world with coordinate axes
/vis/drawVolume
/vis/scene/add/axes 0 0 0 500 mm
/vis/viewer/flush
For more information, use the help facility or refer to Control. . . UICommands.
The command adds trajectories to the current scene. Trajectories are drawn at end of event when the scene in
which they are added is current.
• Example: Visualization of trajectories
/vis/scene/add/trajectories
/run/beamOn 10
• Additional note 1
See the section Controlling from Commands for details on how trajectories are color-coded.
• Additional note 2
Events may be kept and reviewed at end of run with:
/vis/reviewKeptEvents
(see End of Event Action and End of Run Action: /vis/scene/endOfEventAction and /vis/scene/endOfRunAction
commands)
or keep some chosen subset by some selection in your user code, for example your user event action:
if ( some criterion ) {
G4EventManager::GetEventManager()->KeepTheCurrentEvent();
}
or:
if ( some criterion ) {
UImanager->ApplyCommand("/event/keepCurrentEvent");
}
• Additional note 3
Visualising events as they are being generated inevitably slows the simulation. Visualisation can be suspended
with /vis/disable as suggested above. You may also switch off trajectory production with /tracking/
storeTrajectory 0. When using OpenGL, the following can help:
/vis/ogl/flushAt
<[endOfEvent|endOfRun|eachPrimitive|NthPrimitive|NthEvent|never]> <N>
Command “/vis/scene/add/hits” adds hits to the current scene, assuming that you have a hit class and that
the hits have visualization information. The visualization is performed with the command “/run/beamOn” unless
you have non-default values for /vis/scene/endOfEventAction or /vis/scene/endOfRunAction (described above).
or:
/vis/set/volumeForField
Consult the guidance for the /vis/scene/add/...Field commands for further hints and suggestions.
Scored data can be visualized using the commands “/score/drawProjection” and “/score/drawColumn”.
For details, see examples/extended/runAndEvent/RE03.
The HepRep file formats, HepRepFile and HepRepXML, understand various additional attributes such that you
can view these attributes, label trajectories by these attributes or make visibility cuts based on these attributes.
Examples of adding HepRep attributes to hit classes can be found in examples /extended/analysis/A01 and /ex-
tended/runAndEvent/RE01.
For example, in example RE01’s class RE01CalorimeterHit.cc, available attributes will be:
• Hit Type
• Track ID
• Z Cell ID
• Phi Cell ID
• Energy Deposited
• Energy Deposited by Track
• Position
• Logical Volume
You can add additional attributes of your choosing by modifying the relevant part of the hit class (look for the methods
GetAttDefs and CreateAttValues).
Commands in the command directory “/vis/viewer/” set camera parameters and drawing style of the current
viewer, which corresponds to Step 5. Note that the camera parameters and the drawing style should be set separately
for each viewer. They can be initialized to the default values with command “/vis/viewer/reset”. Some visu-
alization systems, such as the VRML and HepRep browsers also allow camera control from the standalone graphics
application.
Just a few of the camera commands are described here. For more commands, see the Control. . . UICommands section
of this user guide.
The view is defined by a target point (initially at the centre of the extent of all objects in the scene), an up-vector and
a viewpoint direction - see Fig. 8.4. By default, the up-Vector is parallel to the y-axis and the viewpoint direction is
parallel to the z-axis, so the the view shows the x-axis to the right and the y-axis upwards - a projection on to the
canonical x-y plane - see Fig. 8.5 figure.
The target point can be changed with a /vis/viewer/set command or with the /vis/viewer/pan commands.
The up-vector and the viewpoint direction can also be changed with /vis/viewer/set commands. Care must be
taken to avoid having the two vectors parallel, for in that case the view is undefined.
The commands:
/vis/viewer/centreOn <volume-name> [<copy-number>]
/vis/viewer/centreAndZoomInOn <volume-name> [<copy-number>]
• Additional notes
Camera parameters should be set for each viewer. They are initialized with command “/vis/viewer/
reset”. Alternatively, they can be copied from another viewer with the command “/vis/viewer/
copyViewFrom viewer-0”, for example.
• Additional notes
A similar pair of commands, scale and scaleTo allow non-uniform scaling (i.e., zoom differently along different
axes). For details of this and lots of other commands, see the Control. . . UICommands section of this user guide.
Some viewers have limits to how large the zoom factor can be. This problem can be circumnavigated to some
degree by using zoom and scale together. If
/vis/viewer/zoomTo 1e10
Of course, with such high zoom factors, you might want to know whither you are zooming. Use “/vis/
viewer/set/targetPoint”
Camera parameters should be set for each viewer. They are initialized with command “/vis/viewer/
reset”. Alternatively, they can be copied from another viewer with the command “/vis/viewer/
copyViewFrom viewer-0”, for example.
Command: /vis/viewer/set/style [style_name]
• Arguments
Candidate values of the argument are “wireframe” and “surface”. (“w” and “s” also work.)
• Action
Set a drawing style to wireframe or surface.
• Example: Set the drawing style to “surface”
/vis/viewer/set/style surface
• Additional notes
The style of some geometry components may have been forced one way or the other through calls in compiled
code. The set/style command will NOT override such force styles.
Drawing style should be set for each viewer. The drawing style is initialized with command “/vis/viewer/
reset”. Alternatively, it can be copied from another viewer with the command “/vis/viewer/set/all
viewer-0”, for example.
Command: /vis/viewer/flush
• Action
Declare the end of visualization for flushing.
• Additional notes
Command “/vis/viewer/flush” should follow “/vis/drawVolume”, “/vis/specify”, etc in or-
der to complete visualization. It corresponds to Step 7.
The flush is done automatically after every /run/beamOn command unless you have non-default values for
/vis/scene/endOfEventAction or /vis/scene/endOfRunAction (described above).
By default, a separate picture is created for each event. You can change this behaviour to accumulate multiple events,
or even multiple runs, in a single picture.
Command: /vis/scene/endOfEventAction [refresh|accumulate]
• Action
Control how often the picture should be cleared. refresh means each event will be written to a new picture.
accumulate means events will be accumulated into a single picture. Picture will be flushed at end of run,
unless you have also set /vis/scene/endOfRunAction accumulate
• Additional note
You may instead choose to use update commands from your BeginOfRunAction or EndOfEventAction, as in
early examples, but now the vis manager is able to do most of what most users require through the above
commands.
Command: /vis/scene/endOfRunAction [refresh|accumulate]
• Action
Control how often the picture should be cleared. refresh means each run will be written to a new picture.
accumulate means runs will be accumulated into a single picture. To start a new picture, you must explicitly
issue /vis/viewer/refresh, /vis/viewer/update or /vis/viewer/flush
The HepRep file formats, HepRepFile and HepRepXML, attach various attributes to trajectories such that you can
view these attributes, label trajectories by these attributes or make visibility cuts based on these attributes. If you use
the default GEANT4 trajectory class from /tracking/src/G4Trajectory.cc (this is what you get with the plain /vis/
scene/add/trajectories command), available attributes will be:
• Track ID
• Parent ID
• Particle Name
• Charge
• PDG Encoding
• Momentum 3-Vector
• Momentum magnitude
• Number of points
Using /vis/scene/add/trajectories rich will get you additional attributes. You may also add additional
attributes of your choosing by modifying the relevant part of G4Trajectory (look for the methods GetAttDefs and
CreateAttValues). If you are using your own trajectory class, you may want to consider copying these methods from
G4Trajectory.
/vis/viewer/save
If you save several views you may “fly through” them with
/vis/viewer/interpolate
Most of the visualization drivers offer ways to save visualized views to PostScript (PS) or Encapsulated PostScript
(EPS). Some, in addition, offer Portable Document Format (PDF). OpenGL offers a big range of formats - see below.
• DAWNFILE
The DAWNFILE driver, which co-works with Fukui Renderer DAWN, generates “vectorized” PostScript data
with “analytical hidden-line/surface removal”, and so it is well suited for technical high-quality outputs for
presentation, documentation, and debugging geometry. In the default setting of the DAWNFILE drivers, EPS
files named “g4_00.eps, g4_01.eps, g4_02.eps,. . . ” are automatically generated in the current di-
rectory each time when visualization is performed, and then a PostScript viewer “gv”is automatically invoked
to visualize the generated EPS files.
For large data sets, it may take time to generate the vectorized PostScript data. In such a case, visualize the 3D
scene with a faster visualization driver beforehand for previewing, and then use the DAWNFILE drivers. For
example, the following visualizes the whole detector with the OpenGL-Xlib driver (immediate mode) first, and
then with the DAWNFILE driver to generate an EPS file g4_XX.eps to save the visualized view:
# Camera setting
/vis/viewer/set/viewpointThetaPhi 20 20
# Camera setting
/vis/drawVolume
/vis/viewer/flush
# Camera setting
/vis/viewer/set/viewpointThetaPhi 20 20
# Camera setting
/vis/drawVolume
/vis/viewer/flush
This is a good example to show that the visualization drivers are complementary to each other.
• OpenInventor
In the OpenInventor drivers, you can simply click the “Print” button on their GUI to generate a PostScript file
as a hard copy of a visualized view.
• OpenGL
The OpenGL drivers can also generate image files, either from a pull-down menu (Motif and Qt drivers) or
with /vis/ogl/export. Available formats are: eps ps pdf svg bmp cur dds icns ico jp2 jpeg jpg pbm pgm
png ppm tif tiff wbmp webp xbm xpm. The default is pdf. It can generate either vector or bitmap PostScript
data with /vis/ogl/set/printMode (“vectored” or “pixmap”). You can change the filename by /vis/
ogl/set/printFilename And the print size by /vis/ogl/set/printSize In generating vectorized
PostScript data, hidden-surface removal is performed based on the painter’s algorithm after dividing facets of
shapes into small sub-triangles.
Note that a fundamental limitation of the gl2ps library used for this printing causes the /vis/viewer/set/
hiddenMarker command to be ignored. Trajectories will always be fully drawn in the printEPS output even
when the hiddenMarker hidden line removal option has been set to hide these trajectories in the corresponding
OpenGL view.
The /vis/ogl/set/printSize command can be used to print EPS files even larger than the current screen
resolution. This can allow creation of very large images, suitable for creation of posters, etc. The only size
limitation is the graphics card’s viewport dimension: GL_MAX_VIEWPORT_DIMS
# Invoke the OpenGL visualization driver in its stored mode
/vis/open OGLSX
# Camera setting
/vis/viewer/set/viewpointThetaPhi 20 20
# Camera setting
/vis/drawVolume
/vis/viewer/flush
# print
/vis/ogl/export
• HepRep
The HepRApp HepRep Browser and WIRED4 JAS Plug-In can generate a wide variety of bitmap and vector
output formats including PostScript and PDF.
8.4.17 Culling
“Culling” means to skip visualizing parts of a 3D scene. Culling is useful for avoiding complexity of visualized views,
keeping transparent features of the 3D scene, and for quick visualization.
GEANT4 Visualization supports the following 3 kinds of culling:
• Culling of invisible physical volumes
• Culling of low density physical volumes.
• Culling of covered physical volumes by others
In order that one or all types of the above culling are on, i.e., activated, the global culling flag should also be on.
Table 8.3 summarizes the default culling policies.
# invisible
/vis/viewer/set/culling invisible flag
# low density
# "value" is a proper value of a threshold density
# "unit" is either g/cm3, mg/cm3 or kg/m3
/vis/viewer/set/culling density flag value unit
# covered daughter
/vis/viewer/set/culling coveredDaughters flag density
The HepRepFile graphic system will, by default, include culled objects in the file so that they can still be made visible
later from controls in the HepRep browser. If this behavior would cause files to be too large, you can instead choose to
have culled objects be omitted from the HepRep file. See details in the HepRepFile Driver section of this user guide.
Sectioning
“Sectioning” means to make a thin slice of a 3D scene around a given plane. At present, this function is supported
by the OpenGL drivers. The sectioning is realized by setting a sectioning plane before performing visualization. The
sectioning plane can be set by the command,
/vis/viewer/set/sectionPlane on x y z units nx ny nz
where the vector (x,y,z) defines a point on the sectioning plane, and the vector (nx,ny,nz) defines the normal vector of
the sectioning plane. For example, the following sets a sectioning plane to a yz plane at x = 2 cm:
Cutting away
“Cutting away” means to remove a half space, defined with a plane, from a 3D scene.
• Cutting away is supported by the DAWNFILE driver “off-line”. Do the following:
– Perform visualization with the DAWNFILE driver to generate a file g4.prim, describing the whole 3D
scene.
– Make the application “DAWNCUT” read the generated file to make a view of cutting away.
See the following WWW page for details: http://geant4.kek.jp/GEANT4/vis/DAWN/About_DAWNCUT.html
• Alternatively, add up to three cutaway planes:
/vis/viewer/addCutawayPlane 0 0 0 m 1 0 0
/vis/viewer/addCutawayPlane 0 0 0 m 0 1 0
...
and, for more that one plane, you can change the mode to
– “add” or, equivalently, “union” (default) or
– “multiply” or, equivalently, “intersection”:
/vis/viewer/set/cutawayMode multiply
To de-activate:
/vis/viewer/clearCutawayPlanes
Visualising events inevitably slows things down. With multithreading this effect is all the greater. See Visualization
of trajectories: /vis/scene/add/trajectories command, Additional Note 3, for some advice. If you wish to continue
visualising, multithreading mode offers the following fine tuning.
Since GEANT4 version 10.2, in multithreading mode, events generated by worker threads are put in a queue and
extracted by a special visualisation thread. If the queue gets full, workers are suspended until the visualisation thread
catches up. To mitigate or avoid this try using
/vis/multithreading/maxEventQueueSize <N>
/vis/multithreading/actionOnEventQueueFull <wait|discard>
While a GEANT4 simulation is running, visualization can be performed without user intervention. This
is accomplished by calling methods of the Visualization Manager from methods of the user action classes
(G4UserRunAction and G4UserEventAction, for example). In this section methods of the class
G4VVisManager, which is part of the graphics_reps category, are described and examples of their use are
given.
8.5.1 G4VVisManager
The Visualization Manager is implemented by classes G4VisManager and G4VisExecutive. See Adding Vi-
sualization to Your Executable. In order that your GEANT4 be compilable either with or without the visualization
category, you should not use these classes directly in your C++ source code, other than in the main() function.
Instead, you should use their abstract base class G4VVisManager, defined in the intercoms category.
The pointer to the concrete instance of the real Visualization Manager can be obtained as follows:
//----- Getting a pointer to the concrete Visualization Manager instance
G4VVisManager* pVVisManager = G4VVisManager::GetConcreteInstance();
The method G4VVisManager::GetConcreteInstance() returns NULL if GEANT4 is not ready for visual-
ization. Thus your C++ source code should be protected as follows:
//----- How to protect your C++ source codes in visualization
if (pVVisManager) {
....
pVVisManager ->Draw (...);
....
}
Note: It pays to encapsulate your Draw messages in Visualization User Actions. The vis manager then has control
over the drawing and may call your action as required, for example, to refresh the screen or write to file.
If you have already constructed detector components with logical volumes to which visualization attributes are prop-
erly assigned, you are almost ready for visualizing detector components. Normally you would do this through UI
commands - see Controlling Visualization from Commands.
However, if you really wish to program visualisation we recommend you invoke vis commands using the
ApplyCommand() method.
For example, the following is sample C++ source codes to visualize the detector components:
//----- C++ source code: How to visualize detector components (2)
// ... using visualization commands in source codes
if(pVVisManager)
{
... (camera setting etc) ...
G4UImanager::GetUIpointer()->ApplyCommand("/vis/drawVolume");
G4UImanager::GetUIpointer()->ApplyCommand("/vis/viewer/flush");
}
In the above, you should also describe /vis/open command somewhere in your C++ codes or execute the command
from (G)UI at the executing stage.
In order to visualize trajectories, you can use the method void G4Trajectory::DrawTrajectory() defined
in the tracking category. In the implementation of this method, the following drawing method of G4VVisManager
is used:
//----- A drawing method of G4Polyline
virtual void G4VVisManager::Draw (const G4Polyline&, ...) ;
It is possible to use the enhanced trajectory drawing functionality in compiled code as well as from commands.
Multiple trajectory models can be instantiated, configured and registered with G4VisManager. For details, see the
section on Controlling from Compiled Code.
The HepRep file formats, HepRepFile and HepRepXML, attach various attributes to trajectories such that you can
view these attributes, label trajectories by these attributes or make visibility cuts based on these attributes. If you use
the default GEANT4 trajectory class, from /tracking/src/G4Trajectory.cc, available attributes will be:
• Track ID
• Parent ID
• Particle Name
• Charge
• PDG Encoding
• Momentum 3-Vector
• Momentum magnitude
• Number of points
You can add additional attributes of your choosing by modifying the relevant part of G4Trajectory (look for the
methods GetAttDefs and CreateAttValues). If you are using your own trajectory class, you may want to consider
copying these methods from G4Trajectory.
Hits are visualized with classes G4Square or G4Circle, or other user-defined classes inheriting the ab-
stract base class G4VMarker (Polylines, Markers and Text). Drawing methods for hits are not supported
by default. Instead, ways of their implementation are guided by virtual methods, G4VHit::Draw() and
The real implementations of these Draw() methods are described in class G4VisManager.
The overloaded implementation of G4VHits::Draw() will be held by, for example, class MyTrackerHits inheriting
G4VHit as follows:
//----- An example of giving concrete implementation of
// G4VHit::Draw(), using class MyTrackerHit : public G4VHit {...}
//
void MyTrackerHit::Draw()
{
G4VVisManager* pVVisManager = G4VVisManager::GetConcreteInstance();
if(pVVisManager)
{
// define a circle in a 3D space
G4Circle circle(pos);
circle.SetScreenSize(0.3);
circle.SetFillStyle(G4Circle::filled);
The overloaded implementation of G4VHitsCollection::DrawAllHits() will be held by, for example, class
MyTrackerHitsCollection inheriting class G4VHitsCollection as follows:
//----- An example of giving concrete implementation of
// G4VHitsCollection::Draw(),
// using class MyTrackerHit : public G4VHitsCollection{...}
//
void MyTrackerHitsCollection::DrawAllHits()
{
G4int n_hit = theCollection.entries();
for(G4int i=0;i < n_hit;i++)
{
theCollection[i].Draw();
}
}
Thus, you can visualize hits as well as trajectories, for example, at the end of each event by implementing the method
MyEventAction::EndOfEventAction() as follows:
void MyEventAction::EndOfEventAction()
{
const G4Event* evt = fpEventManager->GetConstCurrentEvent();
if(pVVisManager) {
// Draw trajectories
for(G4int i=0; i < n_trajectories; i++) {
(*(evt->GetTrajectoryContainer()))[i]->DrawTrajectory();
}
You can re-visualize a physical volume, where a hit is detected, with a highlight color, in addition to the whole set of
detector components. It is done by calling a drawing method of a physical volume directly. The method is:
//----- Drawing methods of a physical volume
virtual void Draw (const G4VPhysicalVolume&, ...) ;
This method is, for example, called in a method MyXXXHit::Draw(), describing the visualization of hits with
markers. The following is an example for this:
//----- An example of visualizing hits with
void MyCalorimeterHit::Draw()
{
G4VVisManager* pVVisManager = G4VVisManager::GetConcreteInstance();
if(pVVisManager)
{
G4Transform3D trans(rot,pos);
G4VisAttributes attribs;
G4LogicalVolume* logVol = pPhys->GetLogicalVolume();
const G4VisAttributes* pVA = logVol->GetVisAttributes();
if(pVA) attribs = *pVA;
G4Colour colour(1.,0.,0.);
attribs.SetColour(colour);
attribs.SetForceSolid(true);
The HepRep file formats, HepRepFile and HepRepXML, attach various attributes to hits such that you can view these
attributes, label trajectories by these attributes or make visibility cuts based on these attributes. Examples of adding
HepRep attributes to hit classes can be found in examples /extended/analysis/A01 and /extended/runAndEvent/RE01.
For example, in example RE01’s class RE01CalorimeterHit.cc, available attributes will be:
• Hit Type
• Track ID
• Z Cell ID
• Phi Cell ID
• Energy Deposited
• Energy Deposited by Track
• Position
• Logical Volume
You can add additional attributes of your choosing by modifying the relevant part of the hit class (look for the methods
GetAttDefs and CreateAttValues).
In GEANT4 Visualization, a text, i.e., a character string, is described by class G4Text inheriting G4VMarker as
well as G4Square and G4Circle. Therefore, the way to visualize text is the same as for hits. The corresponding
drawing method of G4VVisManager is:
//----- Drawing methods of G4Text
virtual void G4VVisManager::Draw (const G4Text&, ...);
Polylines, i.e., sets of successive line segments, are described by class G4Polyline. For G4Polyline, the follow-
ing drawing method of class G4VVisManager is prepared:
//----- A drawing method of G4Polyline
virtual void G4VVisManager::Draw (const G4Polyline&, ...) ;
if (pVVisManager) {
G4Polyline polyline ;
Tracking steps are able to be visualized based on the above visualization of G4Polyline. You can visualize
tracking steps at each step automatically by writing a proper implementation of class MySteppingAction inheriting
G4UserSteppingAction, and also with the help of the Run Manager.
if (pVVisManager) {
//----- Get the Stepping Manager
const G4SteppingManager* pSM = GetSteppingManager();
Next, in order that the above C++ source code works, you have to pass the information of the MySteppingAction to the
Run Manager in the main() function:
//----- Passing what to do at each step to the Run Manager
int main()
{
...
// Run Manager
G4RunManager * runManager = new G4RunManager;
Thus you can visualize tracking steps with various visualization attributes, e.g., color, at each step, automatically.
As well as tracking steps, you can visualize any kind 3D object made of line segments, using class G4Polyline and
its drawing method, defined in class G4VVisManager. See, for example, the implementation of the /vis/scene/
add/axes command.
You can implement the Draw method of G4VUserVisAction, e.g., the class definition could be:
class MyVisAction: public G4VUserVisAction {
void Draw();
};
void MyVisAction::Draw() {
G4VVisManager* pVisManager = G4VVisManager::GetConcreteInstance();
if (pVisManager) {
// Simple box...
pVisManager->Draw(G4Box("box",2*m,2*m,2*m),
G4VisAttributes(G4Colour(1,1,0)));
// Etc...
}
}
If efficiency is an issue, create the objects in the constructor, delete them in the destructor and draw them in your Draw
method.
Anyway, an instance of your class needs to be registered with the vis manager, e.g.:
...
G4VisManager* visManager = new G4VisExecutive;
visManager->RegisterRunDurationUserVisAction
("My drawings",
new MyVisAction,
G4VisExtent(-10*m,10*m,-10*m,10*m,-10*m,10*m)); // This 3rd argument is optional.
visManager->Initialize ();
...
Any number of actions may be registered either as “run duration” (i.e., permanent, or at least as permanent as detector
geometry) or “end of event” or “end of run” through the methods RegisterRunDurationUserVisAction,
RegisterEndOfEventUserVisAction or RegisterEndOfRunUserVisAction. The vis manager will
invoke your Draw method as appropriate to give your drawing a sort of permanence, for example, that can be drawn
from several different angles.
Vis action drawing must be activated by adding to a scene, e.g:
/control/verbose 2
/vis/verbose parameters
/vis/open OGL
/vis/scene/create
/vis/scene/add/userAction
/vis/scene/add/axes
/vis/scene/add/scale
/vis/sceneHandler/attach
/vis/viewer/flush
The “extent” can be added on registration or on the command line or neither (if the extent of the scene is set by other
components). Your Draw method will be called whenever needed to refresh the screen or rebuild a graphics database,
for any chosen viewer. The scene can be attached to any scene handler and your drawing will be shown.
The above raises the possibility of using GEANT4 as a “standalone” graphics package without invoking the run man-
ager. The following main program (from examples/extended/visualization/standalone), together
with a user vis action and a macro file–see above–will allow you to view your drawing interactively on any of the
supported graphics systems:
#include "globals.hh"
#include "G4VisExecutive.hh"
#include "G4VisExtent.hh"
#include "G4UImanager.hh"
#include "G4UIExecutive.hh"
(continues on next page)
#include "StandaloneVisAction.hh"
delete ui;
delete visManager;
}
SolidCloudVisAction.hh:
#ifndef SOLIDCLOUDVISACTION_HH
#define SOLIDCLOUDVISACTION_HH
#include "G4VUserVisAction.hh"
#include "G4Polymarker.hh"
class G4VSolid;
class SolidCloudVisAction: public G4VUserVisAction {
public:
SolidCloudVisAction(G4VSolid*,G4int nPoints);
virtual void Draw();
private:
G4Polymarker fPolymarker;
};
#endif
SolidCloudVisAction.cc:
#include "SolidCloudVisAction.hh"
#include "G4VVisManager.hh"
#include "G4VSolid.hh"
SolidCloudVisAction::SolidCloudVisAction(G4VSolid* solid, G4int nPoints).
{
fPolymarker.SetMarkerType(G4Polymarker::dots);
fPolymarker.SetSize(G4VMarker::screen,1.);
for (G4int i = 0; i < nPoints; ++i) {
G4ThreeVector p = solid->GetPointOnSurface();
G4cout << solid->GetName() << " " << p << G4endl;
fPolymarker.push_back(p);
}
}
void SolidCloudVisAction::Draw() {
G4VVisManager* pVisManager = G4VVisManager::GetConcreteInstance();
if (pVisManager) pVisManager->Draw(fPolymarker);
}
Visualization attributes are extra pieces of information associated with the visualizable objects. This information is
necessary only for visualization, and is not included in geometrical information such as shapes, position, and orien-
tation. Typical examples of visualization attributes are Color, Visible/Invisible, Wireframe/Solid. For example, in
visualizing a box, the Visualization Manager must know its colour. If an object to be visualized has not been assigned
a set of visualization attributes, then an appropriate default set is used automatically.
A set of visualization attributes is held by an instance of class G4VisAttributes defined in the graphics_reps
category. In the following, we explain the main fields of the G4VisAttributes one by one.
8.6.1 Visibility
Visibility is a Boolean flag to control the visibility of objects that are passed to the Visualization Manager for visual-
ization. Visibility is set with the following access function:
void G4VisAttributes::SetVisibility (G4bool visibility);
If you give false to the argument, and if culling is activated (see below), visualization is skipped for objects for
which this set of visualization attributes is assigned. The default value of visibility is true.
Note that whether an object is visible or not is also affected by the current culling policy, which can be tuned with
visualization commands.
By default the following public static function is defined:
static const G4VisAttributes& GetInvisible();
which returns a reference to a const object in which visibility is set to false. It can be used as follows:
experimentalHall_logical -> SetVisAttributes (G4VisAttributes::GetInvisible());
Direct access to the public static const data member G4VisAttributes::Invisible is also possible but depre-
cated on account of initialisation issues with dynamic libraries.
8.6.2 Colour
Construction
Class G4Colour (an equivalent class name, G4Color, is also available) has 4 fields, which represent the RGBA
(red, green, blue, and alpha) components of colour. Each component takes a value between 0 and 1. If an irrelevant
value, i.e., a value less than 0 or greater than 1, is given as an argument of the constructor, such a value is automatically
clipped to 0 or 1. Alpha is opacity. Its default value 1 means “opaque”.
A G4Colour object is instantiated by giving red, green, and blue components to its constructor, i.e.,
G4Colour::G4Colour ( G4double r = 1.0,
G4double g = 1.0,
G4double b = 1.0,
G4double a = 1.0);
// 0<=red, green, blue <= 1.0
The default value of each component is 1.0. That is to say, the default colour is “white” (opaque).
For example, colours which are often used can be instantiated as follows:
G4Colour white () ; // white
G4Colour white (1.0, 1.0, 1.0) ; // white
G4Colour gray (0.5, 0.5, 0.5) ; // gray
G4Colour black (0.0, 0.0, 0.0) ; // black
G4Colour red (1.0, 0.0, 0.0) ; // red
G4Colour green (0.0, 1.0, 0.0) ; // green
G4Colour blue (0.0, 0.0, 1.0) ; // blue
G4Colour cyan (0.0, 1.0, 1.0) ; // cyan
G4Colour magenta (1.0, 0.0, 1.0) ; // magenta
G4Colour yellow (1.0, 1.0, 0.0) ; // yellow
It is also possible to instantiate common colours through static public data member functions:
static const G4Colour& White ();
static const G4Colour& Gray ();
static const G4Colour& Grey ();
static const G4Colour& Black ();
static const G4Colour& Red ();
static const G4Colour& Green ();
static const G4Colour& Blue ();
static const G4Colour& Cyan ();
static const G4Colour& Magenta ();
static const G4Colour& Yellow ();
G4Colour myRed(G4Colour::Red());
After instantiation of a G4Colour object, you can access to its components with the following access functions:
G4double G4Colour::GetRed () const ; // Get the red component.
G4double G4Colour::GetGreen () const ; // Get the green component.
G4double G4Colour::GetBlue () const ; // Get the blue component.
Colour Map
G4Colour also provides a static colour map, giving access to predefined G4Colour’s through a G4String key.
The default mapping is:
G4String G4Colour
---------------------------------------
white G4Colour::White ()
gray G4Colour::Gray ()
grey G4Colour::Grey ()
black G4Colour::Black ()
red G4Colour::Red ()
green G4Colour::Green ()
blue G4Colour::Blue ()
cyan G4Colour::Cyan ()
magenta G4Colour::Magenta ()
yellow G4Colour::Yellow ()
For example:
G4Colour myColour(G4Colour::Black());
if (G4Colour::GetColour("red", myColour)) {
// Successfully retrieved colour "red". myColour is now red
}
else {
// Colour did not exist in map. myColour is still black
}
To see a list of available named colours, /vis/list. These names may also be used to specify colours in many
/vis commands.
If the key is not registered in the colour map, a warning message is printed and the input colour is not changed. The
colour map is case insensitive.
It is also possible to load user defined G4Colour’s into the map through the public AddToMap method. For example:
G4Colour myColour(0.2, 0.2, 0.2, 1);
G4Colour::AddToMap("custom", myColour);
This loads a user defined G4Colour with key “custom” into the colour map.
It is also possible to use the colours in g4tools:
#include "tools/colors"
...
G4Colour niceColour = tools::get_color_aquamarine<G4Colour>();
Class G4VisAttributes holds its colour entry as an object of class G4Colour. A G4Colour object is passed
to a G4VisAttributes object with the following access functions:
//----- Set functions of G4VisAttributes.
void G4VisAttributes::SetColour (const G4Colour& colour);
void G4VisAttributes::SetColor (const G4Color& color );
Note that colour assigned to a G4VisAttributes object is not always the colour that ultimately appears in the
visualization. The ultimate appearance may be affected by shading and lighting models applied in the selected visual-
ization driver or stand-alone graphics system.
As you will see later, you can select a “drawing style” from various options. For example, you can select your detector
components to be visualized in “wireframe” or with “surfaces”. In the former, only the edges of your detector are
drawn and so the detector looks transparent. In the latter, your detector looks opaque with shading effects.
The forced wireframe and forced solid styles make it possible to mix the wireframe and surface visualization (if your
selected graphics system supports such visualization). For example, you can make only the outer wall of your detector
“wired” (transparent) and can see inside in detail.
Forced wireframe style is set with the following access function:
void G4VisAttributes::SetForceWireframe (G4bool force);
If you give true as the argument, objects for which this set of visualization attributes is assigned are always visualized
in wireframe even if in general, the surface drawing style has been requested. The default value of the forced wireframe
style is false.
Similarly, forced solid style, i.e., to force that objects are always visualized with surfaces, is set with:
void G4VisAttributes::SetForceSolid (G4bool force);
Auxiliary edges are not genuine edges of the volume. They may be in a curved surface made out of polygons, for
example, or in plane surface of complicated shape that has to be broken down into simpler polygons. HepPolyhedron
breaks all surfaces into triangles or quadrilaterals. There will be auxiliary edges for any volumes with a curved
surface, such as a tube or a sphere, or a volume resulting from a Boolean operation. Normally, they are not shown, but
sometimes it is useful to see them. In particular, a sphere, because it has no edges, will not be seen in wireframe mode
in some graphics systems unless requested by the view parameters or forced, as described here.
To force auxiliary edges to be visible, use:
void G4VisAttributes::SetForceAuxEdgeVisible (G4bool force);
The default value of the force auxiliary edges visible flag is false.
For volumes with edges that are parts of a circle, such as a tube (G4Tubs), etc., it is possible to force the precision of
polyhedral representation for visualisation. This is recommended for volumes containing only a small angle of circle,
for example, a thin tube segment.
For visualisation, a circle is represented by an N-sided polygon. The default is 24 sides or segments. The user may
change this for all volumes in a particular viewer at run time with /vis/viewer/set/lineSegmentsPerCircle; alternatively
it can be forced for a particular volume with:
void G4VisAttributes::SetForceLineSegmentsPerCircle (G4int nSegments);
In constructing your detector components, you may assign a set of visualization attributes to each “logical volume” in
order to visualize them later (if you do not do this, the graphics system will use a default set). You cannot make a solid
such as G4Box hold a set of visualization attributes; this is because a solid should hold only geometrical information.
At present, you cannot make a physical volume hold one, but there are plans to design a memory-efficient way to do it;
however, you can visualize a transient piece of solid or physical volume with a temporary assigned set of visualization
attributes.
Class G4LogicalVolume holds a pointer of G4VisAttributes. This field is set and referenced with the fol-
lowing access functions:
//----- Set functions of G4VisAttributes
void G4VisAttributes::SetVisAttributes (const G4VisAttributes* pVA);
void G4VisAttributes::SetVisAttributes (const G4VisAttributes& VA);
The following is sample C++ source codes for assigning a set of visualization attributes with cyan colour and forced
wireframe style to a logical volume:
//----- C++ source codes: Assigning G4VisAttributes to a logical volume
...
// Instantiation of a logical volume
myTargetLog = new G4LogicalVolume( myTargetTube,BGO, "TLog", 0, 0, 0);
...
// Instantiation of a set of visualization attributes with cyan colour
G4VisAttributes * calTubeVisAtt = new G4VisAttributes(G4Colour(0.,1.,1.));
// Set the forced wireframe style
calTubeVisAtt->SetForceWireframe(true);
// Assignment of the visualization attributes to the logical volume
myTargetLog->SetVisAttributes(calTubeVisAtt);
Note that the life of the visualization attributes must be at least as long as the objects to which they are assigned; it
is the users’ responsibility to ensure this, and to delete the visualization attributes when they are no longer needed (or
just leave them to die at the end of the job).
GEANT4 Trajectories and Hits can be assigned additional arbitrary attributes that will be displayed when you click on
the relevant object in the WIRED or FRED HepRep browsers. WIRED then lets you label objects by any of these
attributes or cut visibility based on these attributes.
Define the attributes with lines such as:
std::map<G4String,G4AttDef>* store = G4AttDefStore::GetInstance("G4Trajectory",isNew);
G4String PN("PN");
(*store)[PN] = G4AttDef(PN,"Particle Name","Physics","","G4String");
G4String IMom("IMom");
(*store)[IMom] = G4AttDef(IMom, "Momentum of track at start of trajectory", "Physics", "",
"G4ThreeVector");
Trajectory drawing styles are specified through trajectory drawing models. Each drawing model has a default config-
uration provided through a G4VisTrajContext object. The default context settings are shown below.
* Depending on size type. If size type == screen, pixels are assumed and no unit need be supplied. If size type ==
world, a unit must be supplied, e.g., 10 cm.
Note: Different visualisation drivers handle trajectory configuration in different ways, so trajectories may not neces-
sarily get displayed as you have configured them.
A trajectory drawing model can override the default context according to the properties of a given trajectory. The
following models are supplied with the GEANT4 distribution:
• G4TrajectoryGenericDrawer (generic)
• G4TrajectoryDrawByCharge (drawByCharge)
• G4TrajectoryDrawByParticleID (drawByParticleID)
• G4TrajectoryDrawByOriginVolume (drawByOriginVolume)
• G4TrajectoryDrawByTouchedVolume (drawByTouchedVolume)
• G4TrajectoryDrawByAttribute (drawByAttribute)
Both the context and model properties can be configured by the user. The models are described briefly below, followed
by some example configuration commands.
G4TrajectoryGenericDrawer
This model simply draws all trajectories in the same style, with the properties provided by the context.
G4TrajectoryDrawByCharge
This is the default model - if no model is specified by the user, this model will be constructed automatically. The
trajectory lines are coloured according to charge, with all other configuration parameters provided by the default
context. The default colouring scheme is shown below.
Charge Colour
1 blue
-1 red
0 green
G4TrajectoryDrawByParticleID
This model colours trajectory lines according to particle type. All other configuration parameters are provided by the
default context. Chosen particle types can be highlighted with specified colours. By default, trajectories are coloured
according to the scheme below and any other particle in the default colour (grey). (All may be overridden by the set
command.)
Particle Colour
gamma green
e- red
e+ blue
pi+ magenta
pi- magenta
proton cyan
neutron yellow
G4TrajectoryDrawByOriginVolume
This model colours trajectory lines according to the trajectory’s originating volume name. The volume can be either a
logical or physical volume. Physical volume takes precedence over logical volume. All trajectories are coloured grey
by default.
G4TrajectoryDrawByTouchedVolume
This model colours trajectory lines if it touches one or more volumes according to the physical volume name(s).
It requires rich trajectories, G4RichTrajectory (/vis/scene/add/trajectories rich). All trajectories are
coloured grey by default.
G4TrajectoryDrawByAttribute
This model draws trajectories based on the HepRep style attributes associated with trajectories. Each attribute drawer
can be configured with interval and/or single value data. A new context object is created for each interval/single value.
This makes it possible to have different step point markers etc, as well as line colour for trajectory attributes falling
into different intervals, or matching single values. The single value data should override the interval data, allowing
specific values to be highlighted. Units should be specified on the command line if the attribute unit is specified either
as a G4BestUnit or if the unit is part of the value string.
Multiple trajectory models can be created and configured using commands in the “/vis/modeling/
trajectories/” directory. It is then possible to list available models and select one to be current.
Model configuration commands are generated dynamically when a model is instantiated. These commands apply
directly to that instance. This makes it possible to have multiple instances of the drawByCharge model for example,
each independently configurable through it’s own set of commands.
See the interactive help for more information on the available commands.
Example commands
• Create a drawByCharge model named drawCharge-0 by default (Subsequent models will be named
drawByCharge-1, drawByCharge-2, etc.)
/vis/modeling/trajectories/create/drawByCharge
/vis/modeling/trajectories/drawByAttribute-0/brem_key/setLineColour red
/vis/modeling/trajectories/drawByAttribute-0/annihil_key/setLineColour green
/vis/modeling/trajectories/drawByAttribute-0/decay_key/setLineColour cyan
/vis/modeling/trajectories/drawByAttribute-0/eIon_key/setLineColour yellow
/vis/modeling/trajectories/drawByAttribute-0/muIon_key/setLineColour magenta
/vis/modeling/trajectories/drawByAttribute-1/setAttribute IMag
It is possible to use the enhanced trajectory drawing functionality in compiled code as well as from commands.
Multiple trajectory models can be instantiated, configured and registered with G4VisManager. Once registered, the
models are owned by G4VisManager, and must not be deleted by the user.
Only one model may be current. For example:
G4VisManager* visManager = new G4VisExecutive;
visManager->Initialize();
model->SetDefault("cyan");
model->Set("gamma", "green");
model->Set("e+", "magenta");
model->Set("e-", G4Colour(0.3, 0.3, 0.3));
visManager->RegisterModel(model);
visManager->RegisterModel(model2);
visManager->SelectTrajectoryModel(model->Name());
or
/vis/scene/add/trajectories rich smooth
When you run, you need to create a trajectory model and set the time slice interval (remembering that particles are
often relativistic and travel 30 cm/ns):
/vis/modeling/trajectories/create/drawByCharge
/vis/modeling/trajectories/drawByCharge-0/default/setDrawStepPts true
/vis/modeling/trajectories/drawByCharge-0/default/setStepPtsSize 5
/vis/modeling/trajectories/drawByCharge-0/default/setDrawAuxPts true
/vis/modeling/trajectories/drawByCharge-0/default/setAuxPtsSize 5
/vis/modeling/trajectories/drawByCharge-0/default/setTimeSliceInterval 0.1 ns
/vis/modeling/trajectories/list
A good way to see the particles moving through the detector is:
/vis/ogl/set/fade 1
/vis/ogl/set/displayHeadTime true
/control/alias timeRange 1
/control/loop movie.loop startTime -{timeRange} 40 0.1
where fade gives a vapour-trail effect, displayHeadTime displays the time of the leading edge as 2D text, and
movie.loop is a macro file:
/vis/ogl/set/startTime {startTime} ns {timeRange} ns
Trajectory filtering allows you to visualise a subset of available trajectories. This can be useful if you only want to
view interesting trajectories and discard uninteresting ones. Trajectory filtering can be run in two modes:
• Soft filtering: In this mode, uninteresting trajectories are marked invisible. Hence, they are still written, but
(depending on the driver) will not be displayed. Some drivers, for example the HepRepFile driver, will allow
you to selectively view these soft filtered trajectories
• Hard filtering: In this mode, uninteresting trajectories are not drawn at all. This mode is especially useful if
the job produces huge graphics files, dominated by data from uninteresting trajectories.
Trajectory filter models are used to apply filtering according to specific criteria. The following models are currently
supplied with the GEANT4 distribution:
• G4TrajectoryChargeFilter (chargeFilter)
• G4TrajectoryParticleFilter (particleFilter)
• G4TrajectoryOriginVolumeFilter (originVolumeFilter)
• G4TrajectoryTouchedVolumeFilter (touchedVolumeFilter)
• G4TrajectoryAttributeFilter (attributeFilter)
Multiple filters are automatically chained together, and can configured either interactively or in commands or in com-
piled code. The filters can be inverted, set to be inactive or set in a verbose mode. The above models are described
briefly below, followed by some example configuration commands.
G4TrajectoryChargeFilter
This model filters trajectories according to charge. In standard running mode, only trajectories with charges matching
those registered with the model will pass the filter.
G4TrajectoryParticleFilter
This model filters trajectories according to particle type. In standard running mode, only trajectories with particle
types matching those registered with the model will pass the filter.
G4TrajectoryOriginVolumeFilter
This model filters trajectories according to originating volume name. In standard running mode, only trajectories with
originating volumes matching those registered with the model will pass the filter.
G4TrajectoryTouchedVolumeFilter
This model filters trajectories that touch one or more volumes according to the physical volume name(s). It requires
rich trajectories, G4RichTrajectory (/vis/scene/add/trajectories rich). In standard running mode, only
trajectories that touch volumes matching those registered with the model will pass the filter.
G4TrajectoryAttributeFilter
This model filters trajectories based on the HepRep style attributes associated with trajectories. Each attribute drawer
can be configured with interval and/or single value data. Single value data should override the interval data. Units
should be specified on the command line if the attribute unit is specified either as a G4BestUnit or if the unit is part of
the value string.
Multiple trajectory filter models can be created and configured using commands in the “/vis/filtering/
trajectories/” directory. All generated filter models are chained together automatically.
Model configuration commands are generated dynamically when a filter model is instantiated. These commands apply
directly to that instance.
See the interactive help for more information on the available commands.
/vis/filtering/trajectories/create/particleFilter
/vis/filtering/trajectories/particleFilter-0/add gamma
/vis/filtering/trajectories/particleFilter-0/invert true
/vis/filtering/trajectories/particleFilter-0/verbose true
/vis/filtering/trajectories/particleFilter-0/active false
/vis/filtering/trajectories/create/chargeFilter
/vis/filtering/trajectories/chargeFilter-0/add 0
/vis/filtering/trajectories/chargeFilter-0/verbose true
/vis/filtering/trajectories/chargeFilter-0/reset true
/vis/filtering/trajectories/chargeFilter-0/add -1
# List filters
/vis/filtering/trajectories/list
The attribute based filtering can be used on hits and digitisations as well as trajectories. To active the interactive
attribute based hit filtering, a filter call should be added to the “Draw” method of the hit (or digi) class:
void MyHit::Draw()
{
...
if (! pVVisManager->FilterHit(*this)) return;
...
}
Interactive filtering can then be done through the commands in /vis/filtering/hits or digi.
Polylines, markers and text are defined in the graphics_reps category, and are used only for visualization (Con-
trolling Visualization from Compiled Code). Users may create any of these objects with local scope; once drawn, they
may safely be deleted or allowed to go out of scope.
8.9.1 Polylines
A polyline is a set of successive line segments. It is defined with a class G4Polyline defined in the
graphics_reps category. A polyline is used to visualize tracking steps, particle trajectories, coordinate axes,
and any other user-defined objects made of line segments.
G4Polyline is defined as a list of G4Point3D objects, i.e., vertex positions. The vertex positions are set to a
G4Polyline object with the push_back() method.
For example, an x-axis with length 5 cm and with red color is defined in shown in the Listing 8.5.
Listing 8.5: Defining an x-axis with length 5 cm and with colour red.
//----- An example of defining a line segment
// Instantiate an empty polyline object
G4Polyline x_axis;
8.9.2 Markers
These classes are inherited from class G4VMarker. They have constructors as follows:
//----- Constructors of G4Circle and G4Square
G4Circle::G4Circle (const G4Point3D& pos );
G4Square::G4Square (const G4Point3D& pos);
Listing 8.6: The access functions inherited from the base class
G4VMarker.
//----- Set functions of G4VMarker
void G4VMarker::SetPosition( const G4Point3D& );
void G4VMarker::SetWorldSize( G4double );
void G4VMarker::SetWorldDiameter( G4double );
void G4VMarker::SetWorldRadius( G4double );
void G4VMarker::SetScreenSize( G4double );
void G4VMarker::SetScreenDiameter( G4double );
void G4VMarker::SetScreenRadius( G4double );
void G4VMarker::SetFillStyle( FillStyle );
// Note: enum G4VMarker::FillStyle {noFill, hashed, filled};
Listing 8.7 shows sample C++ source code to define a very small red circle, i.e., a dot with diameter 1.0 pixel. Such a
dot is often used to visualize a hit.
Listing 8.7: Sample C++ source code to define a very small red circle.
//----- An example of defining a red small maker
G4Circle circle(position); // Instantiate a circle with its 3D
// position. The argument "position"
// is defined as G4Point3D instance
circle.SetScreenDiameter (1.0); // Should be circle.SetScreenDiameter
// (1.0 * pixels) - to be implemented
circle.SetFillStyle (G4Circle::filled); // Make it a filled circle
G4Colour colour(1.,0.,0.); // Define red color
G4VisAttributes attribs(colour); // Define a red visualization attribute
circle.SetVisAttributes(attribs); // Assign the red attribute to the circle
8.9.3 Text
Text, i.e., a character string, is used to visualize various kinds of description, particle name, energy, coordinate names
etc. Text is described by the class G4Text . The following constructors are supported:
//----- Constructors of G4Text
G4Text (const G4String& text);
G4Text (const G4String& text, const G4Point3D& pos);
where the argument text is the text (string) to be visualized, and pos is the 3D position at which the text is visualized.
Text is currently drawn only by the OpenGL drivers, such as OGLIX, OGLIXm and OpenInventor. It is not yet
supported on other drivers, including the Windows OpenGL drivers, HepRep, etc.
Note that class G4Text also inherits G4VMarker. Size of text is recognized as “font size”, i.e., height of the text. All
the access functions defined for class G4VMarker mentioned above are available. In addition, the following access
functions are available, too:
//----- Set functions of G4Text
void G4Text::SetText ( const G4String& text ) ;
void G4Text::SetOffset ( double dx, double dy ) ;
Method SetText() defines text to be visualized, and GetText() returns the defined text. Method SetOffset()
defines x (horizontal) and y (vertical) offsets in the screen coordinates. By default, both offsets are zero, and the text
starts from the 3D position given to the constructor or to the method G4VMarker:SetPosition(). Offsets should
be given with the same units as the one adopted for the size, i.e., world-size or screen-size units.
Listing 8.8 shows sample C++ source code to define text with the following properties:
• Text: “Welcome to Geant4 Visualization”
//----- Instantiation
G4Text text ;
text.SetText ( "Welcome to Geant4 Visualization");
text.SetPosition ( G4Point3D(0.,0.,0.) );
// These three lines are equivalent to:
// G4Text text ( "Welcome to Geant4 Visualization",
// G4Point3D(0.,0.,0.) );
//----- Offsets
G4double x_offset = 10.; // Should be 10. * pixels - to be implemented.
G4double y_offset = -20.; // Should be -20. * pixels - to be implemented.
text.SetOffset( x_offset, y_offset );
//----- Color (Blue is the default setting, and so the codes below are omittable)
G4Colour blue( 0., 0., 1. );
G4VisAttributes att ( blue );
text.SetVisAttributes ( att );
These instructions are suggestive only. The following procedures have not been tested on all platforms. There are
clearly some instructions that apply only to Unix-like systems with an X-Windows based windowing system. However,
it should not be difficult to take the ideas presented here and extend them to other platforms and systems.
The procedures described here need graphics drivers that can produce picture files that can be converted to a form
suitable for an MPEG encoder. There may be other ways of capturing the screen images and we would be happy to
hear about them. Graphics drivers currently capable of producing picture files are: More information about MPEG
encoder
So far, only DAWNFILE, OGLX, OGLQt and RayTracer have been “road tested”. Once in a standard format, such
as eps, the convert program from ImageMagick can convert to ppm files suitable for ppmtompeg available here:
http://netpbm.sourceforge.net/
By saving views with /vis/viewer/save (see How to save a view.) one may “fly through” them with /vis/
viewer/interpolate. One of the options in /vis/viewer/interpolate is to export image files (OpenGL
and Qt only) see OGLX below) that may then be used to make a movie.
(Use the GEANT4 “help” command to see details.)
For example, with iMovie (Apple Mac) one may import the created files (PDF recommended) and by reducing the
cliplength to 0.1 s (that seems to be the minimum) one may make a reasonable movie.
8.10.2 OGLX
Then
mpeg2encode mpeg2encode.par G4OpenGL.mpg
open G4OpenGL.mpg
8.10.3 Qt
The Qt driver provides one of the easiest ways to make a movie. Of course, you first need to add the Qt libraries and
link with Qt, but once you have that, Qt provides a ready-made function to store all updates of the OpenGL frame into
the movie format. You then use loops (as defined in OGLX section above) or even move/rotate/zoom you scene by
mouse actions to form your movie.
The Qt driver automatically handles all of the movie-making steps described in the OGLX section of this document
- storing the files, converting them and assembling the finished movie. You just have to take care of installing an
mpeg_encoder.
To make a movie :
• Right click to display a context menu, “Action”-<”Movie parameters”.
• Select MPEG encoder path if it was not found.
• Select the name of the output movie.
• Let go! Hit SPACE to Start/Pause recording, RETURN to STOP
Then, open your movie (on Mac, for example):
open G4OpenGL.mpg
8.10.4 DAWNFILE
You need to invoke dawn in “direct” mode, which picks up parameters from .DAWN_1.history, and suppress the GUI:
alias dawn='dawn -d'
export DAWN_BATCH=1
Change OGL to DAWNFILE in the above set of GEANT4 commands and run. Then convert to ppm files as above:
for i in g4_*.eps;
do j=`basename $i .eps`; command="convert $i $j.ppm"; echo $command; $command; done
8.10.5 RayTracerX
/control/verbose 2
/vis/open RayTracerX 600x600-0+0
# (Raytracer doesn't need a scene; smoother not to /vis/drawVolume.)
/vis/viewer/reset
/vis/viewer/set/style surface
/vis/viewer/set/projection perspective 50 deg
/control/alias phi 30
/control/loop movie.loop theta 0 360 1
where movie.loop is as above. This produces lots of jpeg files (but takes 3 days!!!). Then. . .
make_mpeg2encode_parfile.sh g4RayTracer*jpeg
One command in particular - /vis/drawLogicalVolume (see below) - is designed to highlight geometry over-
laps. But you can explore and check your geometry with simple vis commands. Most examples have a vis.mac file that
contains these and several other useful commands — examples/basic/B1/vis.mac is a good place to look.
/vis/drawVolume
will draw the whole detector and your can rotate and zoom. If you want to see just part of the detector:
draws all volumes with matching name. You may use a regular expression of the form /regexp/, e.g.:
/vis/drawVolume /Shape/
You can also limit the depth of descent of the geometry hierarchy:
/vis/drawVolume ! ! 2
All vis commands have extensive guidance. Use “help” on the command line or, in Qt, the “Help” tab, or “Built-in
Commands” in the Application Developers Guide.
/vis/drawLogicalVolume can highlight overlaps. But first you may need to identify the offending volumes.
Detecting Overlapping Volumes describes how to do this.
/geometry/test/run
Pick the offending volume name from the error message above:
/vis/touchable/findPath Shape1
Then take the mother logical volume name from the above message:
/vis/drawLogicalVolume Envelope
/vis/viewer/set/style wireframe
Fig. 8.7: Example B1 with overlapping volumes. (To generate the above one placement in
B1DetectorConstruction::Construct() was moved in order to make an overlap.)
Now we see the offending volumes highlighted in pink, and the sampling points in pale blue.
It may help to see all the points with:
/vis/viewer/set/hiddenMarker false
If by chance the offending volumes are “invisible”, make them visible with:
/vis/viewer/set/culling global false
/vis/viewer/rebuild
NINE
ANALYSIS
9.1 Introduction
The new analysis category based on g4tools was added in the GEANT4 9.5 release with the aim to provide the users a
“light” analysis tool available directly with GEANT4 installation without a need to link their GEANT4 application with
an external analysis package. It consists of the analysis manager classes and it includes also the g4tools package.
g4tools provides code to write and read histograms and ntuples in several formats: ROOT, XML AIDA format and
CSV (comma-separated values format). It is a part of inlib and exlib libraries, that include also other facilities like
fitting and plotting.
Since GEANT4 10.4, the output in HDF5 format is also supported, but requires the HDF5 libraries installation as well
as GEANT4 libraries built with the -DGEANT4_USE_HDF5=ON CMake option.
The analysis classes provide a uniform, user-friendly interface to g4tools and hide the differences according to a
selected output technology from the user. They take care of a higher-level management of the g4tools objects (files,
histograms and ntuples), handle allocation and removal of the objects in memory and provide the access methods to
them via indexes. They are fully integrated in the GEANT4 framework: they follow GEANT4 coding style and also
implement the built-in GEANT4 user interface commands that can be used by users to define or configure their analysis
objects.
An example of use of analysis manager classes is provided in basic example B4, in the B4RunAction and
B4EventAction classes.
The analysis manager classes provide uniform interfaces to the g4tools package and hide the differences between use
of g4tools classes for the supported output formats (ROOT, HDF5, AIDA XML and CSV).
An analysis manager class is available for each supported output format:
• G4CsvAnalysisManager
• G4Hdf5AnalysisManager
• G4RootAnalysisManager
• G4XmlAnalysisManager
For a simplicity of use, each analysis manager provides the complete access to all interfaced functions though it is
implemented via a more complex design.
The managers are implemented as singletons. User code will access a pointer to a single instance of the desired
manager. The manager has to be created and deleted from the user code. All objects created via analysis manager are
deleted automatically with the manager. The concrete types of the analysis manager as well as the handled g4tools
349
Book For Application Developers, Release 10.5
objects, are hidden behind a namespace which is selected by including a dedicated include file. This allows the user
to use all output technologies in an identical way via these generic types:
• G4AnalysisManager: the public analysis interface
• G4AnaH1[2,3]: one[two,three]-dimensional histogram
• G4AnaP1[2]: one[two]-dimensional profile
• G4Ntuple: ntuple
In addition to the G4AnalysisManager functions, a set of GEANT4 UI commands for creating histograms and
setting their properties is implemented in associated messenger classes.
To use GEANT4 analysis, an instance of the analysis manager must be created. The analysis manager object is created
with the first call to G4AnalysisManager::Instance(), the next calls to this function will just provide the
pointer to this analysis manager object. The client code is responsible for deleting the created object what is in our
example done in the run action destructor.
The example of the code for creating the analysis manager extracted from the basic B4 example is given below:
#include "B4Analysis.hh"
B4RunAction::B4RunAction()
: G4UserRunAction()
{
// Create analysis manager
auto analysisManager = G4AnalysisManager::Instance();
analysisManager->SetVerboseLevel(1);
analysisManager->SetFirstHistoId(1);
}
B4RunAction::~B4RunAction()
{
delete G4AnalysisManager::Instance();
}
It is recommended, but not necessary, to create the analysis manager in the user run action constructor and delete it
in its destructor. This guarantees correct behavior in multi-threading mode. The code specific to the output format is
hidden in B4Analysis.hh where the selection of the output format takes place.
#ifndef B4Analysis_h
#define B4Analysis_h 1
#include "g4root.hh"
//#include "g4xml.hh"
//#include "g4csv.hh"
//#include "g4hdf5.hh"
#endif
The level of informative printings can be set by SetVerboseLevel(G4int). Currently the levels from 0 (default)
up to 4 are supported.
The verbose level can be also set via the UI command:
/analysis/verbose level
The analysis manager can handle only one base file at a time. Below we give an example of opening and closing a file
extracted from the basic example B4:
#include "B4Analysis.hh"
The file name can be defined either directly with OpenFile(const G4String&) call or separately via
SetFileName(const G4String&) function before calling OpenFile(). It is not possible to change the
file name when a file is open and not yet closed. If a file extension is not specified in fileName, it is automatically
completed according to a selected output format.
The call to CloseFile() triggers automatic resetting histograms and ntuples data. Since Geant4 10.5, it is possible
to close a file without resetting the histogram data. (This feature is used in MPI extended examples to write the
histograms collected on the master rank first and then write the merged histograms in another file.)
The file can be optionally structured in sub-directories. Currently only one directory for histograms and/or one di-
rectory for ntuples are supported. The directories are created automatically if their names are set to non-empty string
values via SetHistoDirectoryName(const G4String&) and/or SetNtupleDirectoryName(const
G4String&). This setting is ignored with the output formats which do not support this feature (XML, CSV).
The following commands for handling files and directories are available
/analysis/setFileName name # Set name for the output file
/analysis/setHistoDirName name # Set name for the histograms directory
/analysis/setNtupleDirName name # Set name for the histograms directory
Depending on the selected output format more files can be generated when more than one ntuple is defined in a user
application. This is the case of XML and CSV, which do not allow writing more than one ntuple in a file. The ntuple
file name is then generated automatically from the base file name and the ntuple name.
The analysis manager can handle only one base file at a time, but several base files can be generated successively from
GEANT4 session, typically one file is saved per run. A new file can be open only after a previous file was closed.
An example of generated more files per session is provided in basic/B5 example and its run2.mac macro. Appending
existing files is not supported. When an existing file is open again, its content is overwritten.
9.2.3 Histograms
The code for handling histograms given in the following example is extracted the B4 example classes. In this example,
the histograms are created in the run action constructor and they are filled in the end of event.
#include "B4Analysis.hh"
B4RunAction::B4RunAction()
: G4UserRunAction()
{
// Create analysis manager
// ...
// Creating histograms
analysisManager->CreateH1("1","Edep in absorber", 100, 0., 800*MeV);
analysisManager->CreateH1("2","Edep in gap", 100, 0., 100*MeV);
}
Creating Histograms
A one-dimensional (1D) histogram can be created with one of these two G4AnalysisManager functions:
G4int CreateH1(const G4String& name, const G4String& title,
G4int nbins, G4double xmin, G4double xmax,
const G4String& unitName = "none",
const G4String& fcnName = "none",
const G4String& binSchemeName = "linear");
where name and title parameters are self-descriptive. The histogram edges can be defined either via the nbins,
xmin and xmax parameters (first function) representing the number of bins, the minimum and maximum histogram
values, or via the const std::vector<G4double>& edges parameter (second function) representing the
edges defined explicitly. The other parameters in both functions are optional and their meaning is explained in His-
tograms Properties.
Two-dimensional (2D) and three-dimensional (3D) histograms can be created with one of these two functions analo-
gous to those for 1D histograms:
G4int CreateH2(const G4String& name, const G4String& title,
G4int nxbins, G4double xmin, G4double xmax,
G4int nybins, G4double ymin, G4double ymax,
const G4String& xunitName = "none",
const G4String& yunitName = "none",
const G4String& xfcnName = "none",
const G4String& yfcnName = "none",
const G4String& xbinScheme = "linear",
const G4String& ybinScheme = "linear");
The meaning of parameters is the same as in the functions for 1D histograms, they are just applied in x, y and z
dimensions.
The histograms created with G4AnalysisManager get automatically attributed an integer identifier which value
is returned from the “Create” function. The default start value is 0 and it is incremented by 1 for each next created
histogram. The numbering of 2D and 3D histograms is independent from 1D histograms and so the first created 2D
(or 3D) histogram identifier is equal to the start value even when several 1D histograms have been already created.
The start histogram identifier value can be changed either with the SetFirstHistoId(G4int) method, which
applies the new value to all histogram types, or with the SetFirstHNId(G4int), where N = 1, 2, 3 methods,
which apply the new value only to the relevant histogram type. The first method is demonstrated in the example.
The histogram names “1”, “2” in the demonstrated example are defined to correspond the histograms identifiers in a
similar way as in extended/analysis/AnaEx01 example. This choice is however fully in hands of the user
who can prefer longer and more meaningful names.
All histograms created by G4AnalysisManager are automatically deleted with deleting the
G4AnalysisManager object.
Histograms can be also created via UI commands. The commands to create 1D histogram:
/analysis/h1/create # Create 1D histogram
name title [nbin min max] [unit] [fcn] [binScheme]
Configuring Histograms
The properties of already created histograms can be changed with use of one of these two functions sets. For 1D
histograms:
G4bool SetH1(G4int id,
G4int nbins, G4double xmin, G4double xmax,
const G4String& unitName = "none",
const G4String& fcnName = "none",
const G4String& binSchemeName = "linear");
for 2D histograms:
G4bool SetH2(G4int id,
G4int nxbins, G4double xmin, G4double xmax,
G4int nybins, G4double ymin, G4double ymax,
const G4String& xunitName = "none",
const G4String& yunitName = "none",
const G4String& xfcnName = "none",
const G4String& yfcnName = "none",
const G4String& xbinSchemeName = "linear",
const G4String& ybinSchemeName = "linear");
The histogram is accessed via its integer identifier. The meaning of the other parameters is the same as in “Create”
functions.
Histogram properties can be also defined via UI commands. The commands to define 1D histogram
/analysis/h1/set id nbin min max [unit] [fcn] [binScheme] # Set parameters
A limited set of parameters for histograms plotting, the histogram and the histogram axis titles, can be also defined via
functions
G4bool SetH1Title(G4int id, const G4String& title);
G4bool SetH1XAxisTitle(G4int id, const G4String& title);
G4bool SetH1YAxisTitle(G4int id, const G4String& title);
//
G4bool SetH2Title(G4int id, const G4String& title);
G4bool SetH2XAxisTitle(G4int id, const G4String& title);
G4bool SetH2YAxisTitle(G4int id, const G4String& title);
G4bool SetH2ZAxisTitle(G4int id, const G4String& title);
//
G4bool SetH3Title(G4int id, const G4String& title);
G4bool SetH3XAxisTitle(G4int id, const G4String& title);
G4bool SetH3YAxisTitle(G4int id, const G4String& title);
G4bool SetH3ZAxisTitle(G4int id, const G4String& title);
The same set of commands is available for the other histogram types and profiles, under the appropriate directory.
Filling Histograms
Accessing Histograms
Besides the fast access to histograms via their integer identifiers, the histograms can be also accessed by their names
using the G4AnalysisManager function providing the conversion from a name in a histogram identifier:
G4int GetH1Id(const G4String& name, G4bool warn = true) const;
G4int GetH2Id(const G4String& name, G4bool warn = true) const;
G4int GetH3Id(const G4String& name, G4bool warn = true) const;
If a histogram with a given name is not found, a warning is issued unless it is explicitly disabled by the user. This way
is however less efficient and it is not recommended for frequently called functions as e.g. Fill().
The analysis manager provides also the direct access to the g4tools histogram objects. The concrete histogram type is
hidden behind a selected namespace. In example B4, the g4tools histogram functions mean() and rms() are called:
auto analysisManager = G4AnalysisManager::Instance();
if ( analysisManager->GetH1(1) ) {
G4cout << "\n ----> print histograms statistic \n" << G4endl;
G4cout << " EAbs : mean = " << analysisManager->GetH1(1)->mean()
<< " rms = " << analysisManager->GetH1(1)->rms(),
<< G4endl;
// ...
}
Activation of Histograms
The activation option allows the user to activate only selected histograms. When this option is activated, only
the histograms marked as activated are returned, filled or saved in a file. This feature is intensively used in ex-
tended/electromagnetic examples where all histograms are first created inactivated:
auto analysisManager = G4AnalysisManager::Instance();
analysisManager->SetActivation(true);
// define histogram parameters name, title, nbins, vmin, vmax
G4int id = analysisManager->CreateH1(name, title, nbins, vmin, vmax);
analysisManager->SetH1Activation(id, false);
and then selected histograms are activated in macros, using the analysis “set” command
/analysis/h1/set 1 100 0 50 cm #track length of primary
/analysis/h1/set 2 100 0 300 none #nb steps of primary
The activation option is not switched on by default. It has to be activated either via analysisManager
SetActivation(true) call as above or via the UI command:
/analysis/setActivation true|false # Set activation option
When no parameters need to be changed a histogram can be activated using “setActivation” command:
/analysis/h1/setActivation id true|false # Set activation to histogram #id
/analysis/h1/setActivationToAll true|false # Set activation to all 1D histograms.
Histograms Properties
The following properties, additional to those defined in g4tools, can be added to histograms via
G4AnalysisManager:
• Unit: if a histogram is defined with a unit, all filled values are automatically converted to this defined unit and
the unit is added to the histogram axis title.
• Function: if a histogram is defined with a function, the function is automatically executed on the filled values
and its name is added to the histogram axis title. When a histogram is defined with both unit and function the
unit is applied first. The available functions: log, log10, exp.
• Binning scheme: user can select logarithmic binning scheme besides the linear one (default). The available
binning schemes: linear, log.
• Activation: see previous section.
• ASCII option: if activated the histogram is also printed in an ASCII file when Write() function is called.
• Plotting option: if activated the histogram is plotted in a file of Postscript format when Write() function is called.
See more details in Plotting.
9.2.4 Profiles
Profile histograms (profiles) are used to display the mean value of Y and its error for each bin in X. The displayed
error is by default the standard error on the mean (i.e. the standard deviation divided by the sqrt(n).) An example of
use of 1D profiles can be found in extended/electromagnetic/TestEm2. Though the functions for creating
and manipulating profiles are very similar to those for histograms, they are described in this section.
Creating Profiles
A one-dimensional (1D) profile can be created with one of these two G4AnalysisManager functions
G4int CreateP1(const G4String& name, const G4String& title,
G4int nbins, G4double xmin, G4double xmax,
G4double ymin = 0, G4double ymax = 0,
const G4String& xunitName = "none",
const G4String& yunitName = "none",
const G4String& xfcnName = "none",
const G4String& yfcnName = "none",
const G4String& xbinSchemeName = "linear");
where name and title parameters are self-descriptive. The profile edges can be defined either via the nbins, xmin
and xmax parameters (first function) representing the number of bins, the minimum and maximum profile values, or
via the const std::vector<G4double>& edges parameter (second function) representing the edges defined
explicitly. If ymin and ymax parameters are provides, only values between these limits will be considered at filling
time. The other parameters in both functions are optional and their meaning is explained in Profiles Properties.
A two-dimensional (2D) profile can be created with one of these two functions analogous to those for 1D profiles:
G4int CreateP2(const G4String& name, const G4String& title,
G4int nxbins, G4double xmin, G4double xmax,
G4int nybins, G4double ymin, G4double ymax,
G4double zmin = 0, G4double zmax = 0,
(continues on next page)
The meaning of parameters is the same as in the functions for 1D profiles, they are just applied in x, y and z dimensions.
The profiles created with G4AnalysisManager get automatically attributed an integer identifier which value is
returned from the “Create” function. The default start value is 0 and it is incremented by 1 for each next created
profile. The numbering of 2D profiles is independent from 1D profiles and so the first created 2D profile identifier is
equal to the start value even when several 1D profiles have been already created.
The start profile identifier value can be changed either with the SetFirstProfileId(G4int) method, which
applies the new value to both 1D and 2D profile types, or with the SetFirstPNId(G4int), where N = 1, 2
methods, which apply the new value only to the relevant profile type.
All profiles created by G4AnalysisManager are automatically deleted with deleting the G4AnalysisManager
object.
Profiles can be also created via UI commands. The commands to create 1D profile
/analysis/p1/create # Create 1D profile
name title [nxbin xmin xmax xunit xfcn xbinScheme ymin ymax yunit yfcn]
Configuring Profiles
The properties of already created profiles can be changed with use of one of these two functions sets. For 1D profiles
G4bool SetP1(G4int id,
G4int nbins, G4double xmin, G4double xmax,
G4double ymin = 0, G4double ymax = 0,
const G4String& xunitName = "none",
const G4String& yunitName = "none",
const G4String& xfcnName = "none",
const G4String& yfcnName = "none",
const G4String& xbinSchemeName = "linear");
The profile is accessed via its integer identifier. The meaning of the other parameters is the same as in “Create”
functions.
Profiles properties can be also defined via UI commands. The commands to define 1D profile
/analysis/p1/set # Set parameters for the 1D histogram of #id
id nxbin xmin xmax xunit xfcn xbinScheme ymin ymax yunit yfcn
A limited set of parameters for profiles plotting, the profile and the profile axis titles, can be also defined via functions
G4bool SetP1Title(G4int id, const G4String& title);
G4bool SetP1XAxisTitle(G4int id, const G4String& title);
G4bool SetP1YAxisTitle(G4int id, const G4String& title);
//
G4bool SetP2Title(G4int id, const G4String& title);
G4bool SetP2XAxisTitle(G4int id, const G4String& title);
G4bool SetP2YAxisTitle(G4int id, const G4String& title);
G4bool SetP2ZAxisTitle(G4int id, const G4String& title);
The parameters can be also set via the same set of UI commands as the histogram parameters available under the
appropriate directory.
Filling Profiles
Profiles Properties
All histogram features described in sections “Accessing Histograms”, “Activation of Histograms” and “Histograms
Properties” (Accessing Histograms, Activation of Histograms and Histograms Properties) are also available for pro-
files.
9.2.5 Plotting
Since GEANT4 10.2 version it is possible to produce a graphics output file in the Postscript format containing selected
histograms and profiles. Histograms and profiles plotting can be activated using G4AnalysisManager functions:
auto analysisManager = G4AnalysisManager::Instance();
analysisManager->SetH1Plotting(id, true);
// etc for H2, H3, P1, P2
If GEANT4 libraries are built with support for Freetype font rendering, user can choose from three plotting styles:
• ROOT_default: ROOT style with high resolution fonts (default)
• hippodraw: hippodraw style with high resolution fonts
• inlib_default: PAW style with low resolution fonts”)
otherwise only the inlib_default style with low resolution fonts is available.
The page size of the graphics output is fixed to A4 format. Users can choose the page layout which is defined by the
number columns and the number of rows in a page. Depending on the selected plotting style, the maximum number
of plots is limited to 3 columns x 5 rows for the styles with high resolution fonts and to 2 columns x 3 rows for the
inlib_default style.
Finally, users can also customize the plot dimensions, which represent the plotter window size (width and height) in
pixels.
The customization of the plotting can be done via the UI commands in /analysis/plot directory:
/analysis/plot/setStyle styleName
/analysis/plot/setLayout columns rows
/analysis/plot/setDimensions width height
Opening more configuration parameters for users customisation can be considered in future according to the users
feedback.
9.2.6 Ntuples
In the following example the code for handling ntuples extracted from basic example B4, from the B4RunAction
and B4EventAction classes, is presented.
#include "B4Analysis.hh"
B4RunAction::B4RunAction()
: G4UserRunAction()
{
// Create analysis manager
// ...
// Create ntuple
man->CreateNtuple("B4", "Edep and TrackL");
man->CreateNtupleDColumn("Eabs");
man->CreateNtupleDColumn("Egap");
man->FinishNtuple();
}
Since 10.0 release, there is no limitation for the number of ntuples that can be handled by G4AnalysisManager.
Handling of two ntuples is demonstrated in extended analysis/AnaEx01 example.
Creating Ntuples
The first set is demonstrated in the example. The columns can take the values of G4int, G4float, G4double or
G4String type which is also reflected in the CreateNtupleXColumn() function names. where X can be I,
F, D or S.
It is also possible to define ntuple columns of std::vector of G4int, G4float or G4double values using the
functions:
// Create columns of vector in the last created ntuple
G4int CreateNtupleXColumn(
const G4String& name, std::vector<Xtype>& vector);
where [X, Xtype] can be [I, G4int], [F, G4float] or [D, G4double].
When all ntuple columns are created, the ntuple has to be closed using FinishNtuple() function.
The ntuples created with G4AnalysisManager get automatically attributed an integer identifier which value is
returned from the “Create” function. The default start value is 0 and it is incremented by 1 for each next created
ntuple. The start ntuple identifier value can be changed with the SetFirstNtupleId(G4int) function.
The integer identifiers are also attributed to the ntuple columns. The numbering of ntuple columns is independent for
each ntuple, the identifier default start value is 0 and it is incremented by 1 for each next created column regardless
its type (I, F, D or S). (If the third ntuple column of a different type than double (int or float) is created in
the demonstrated example, its identifier will have the value equal 2.) The start ntuple column identifier value can be
changed with the SetFirstNtupleColumnId(G4int) function.
When calls to CreateNtuple-Column() and FinishNtuple() succeed the call to CreateNtuple(), the
ntupleId argument need not to be specified even when creating several ntuples. However this order is not enforced
and the second set of functions with ntupleId argument is provided to allow the user to create the ntuples and their
columns in whatever order.
All ntuples and ntuple columns created by G4AnalysisManager are automatically deleted with deleting the
G4AnalysisManager object.
Filling Ntuples
// Methods for ntuple with id > FirstNtupleId (when more ntuples exist)
G4bool FillNtupleIColumn(G4int ntupleId, G4int columnId, G4int value);
G4bool FillNtupleFColumn(G4int ntupleId, G4int columnId, G4float value);
G4bool FillNtupleDColumn(G4int ntupleId, G4int columnId, G4double value);
G4bool FillNtupleSColumn(G4int ntupleId, G4int id, const G4String& value);
G4bool AddNtupleRow(G4int ntupleId);
If only one ntuple is defined in the user application, the ntuple identifier, ntupleId, need not to be specified and the
first set can be used. The second set of functions has to be used otherwise. When all ntuple columns are filled, the
ntuple fill has to be closed by calling AddNtupleRow().
Accessing Ntuples
The ntuples g4tools objects can be accessed by their identifier. The concrete ntuple type is hidden behind a selected
namespace:
auto analysisManager = G4AnalysisManager::Instance();
// If only one ntuple is defined
G4Ntuple* ntuple = analysisManager->GetNtuple();
// If more ntuples
G4int ntuple id = ...;
G4Ntuple* ntuple = analysisManager->GetNtuple(ntupleId);
As well as all other GEANT4 categories, the analysis code has been adapted for multi-threading. In multi-threading
mode, the analysis manager instances are internally created on the master and thread workers and data accounting is
processed in parallel on workers threads.
Histograms produced on thread workers are automatically merged on Write() call and the result is written in a
master file. Merging is protected by a mutex locking, using G4AutoLock utility.
Ntuples produced on thread workers are, by default, written on separate files, which names are generated automatically
from a base file name, a thread identifier and eventually also an ntuple name. Since GEANT4 version 10.3 it is possible
to activate merging of ntuples with ROOT output type:
auto analysisManager = G4AnalysisManager::Instance();
analysisManager->SetNtupleMerging(true);
The ntuples produced on workers will be then progressively being merged to the main ntuples on the master.
In order to preserve an “event point of view” (the ntuple rows) after merging, a row-wise merging mode was introduced
in 10.4 and became a default in 10.5. In this mode, columns are defined as leaves of a single TBranch attached to each
ntuple per worker. This approach has an inconvenience that as column-wise is used in sequential mode and row-wise
is used in parallel, the user will have different data schema (different organizations of TBranches and TLeaves) in
files, which may complicate his life when reading back his data. While this does not affect a simple analysis using
TTree::Draw("branchName"), different methods need to be used to access the data per branch. The example
macros with a simple analysis are provided in basic examples (for example B4/macros/plotNtuple.C) and a complete
access to data is demonstrated in several extended examples (for example medical/dna/dnaphysics/plot.C).
Since Geant4 10.5 users can override the defaults and (in)activate the row-wsie ntuple mode with a new function:
auto analysisManager = G4AnalysisManager::Instance();
void SetNtupleRowWise(G4bool rowWise);
By default, the ntuples are written at the same file as the final histograms. Users can also select merging in a given
number of files or change the default basket size value (32000):
auto analysisManager = G4AnalysisManager::Instance();
G4int nofReducedNtupleFiles = 2;
G4bool rowWise = true;
G4int basketSize = 64000;
analysisManager->SetNtupleMerging(true, nofReducedNtupleFiles, rowWise, basketSize);
No merging of ntuples is provided with HDF5, CSV and AIDA XML formats.
No changes are required in the user client analysis code for migration to multi-threading. It is however recommended
to instantiate and delete the analysis manager in the user run action constructor and destructor respectively. The master
instance is necessary when histograms are used in the user application or if merging ntuples is selected (available only
with ROOT output); in case only ntuples are in use and merging is not activated, the master instance need not to be
created.
To simplify the scaling of a GEANT4 application across nodes on a cluster GEANT4 provides the support of MPI. In
particular it is possible to run a hybrid MPI/MT application that uses MPI to scale across nodes and MT to scale across
cores. This is demonstrated in the extended example parallel/MPI/exMPI03 which includes usage of GEANT4
analysis for histograms.
A new example parallel/MPI/exMPI04, the same as exMPI03 with added ntuple, shows how to merge, using
g4tools, ntuples via MPI in sequential mode, so that the entire statistics is accumulated in a single output file. If MT
is enabled, the ntuples are merged from threads to files per ranks. Combined MT + MPI merging is not yet supported.
The specific manager classes are singletons and so it is not possible to create more than one instance of an analysis
manager of one type, e.g. G4RootAnalysisManager. However two analysis manager objects of different types
can coexist. Then instead of the generic G4AnalysisManager typedef the concrete type of each manager has to
be given explicitly.
#include "G4CsvAnalysisManager.hh"
#include "G4XmlAnalysisManager.hh"
Or:
#include "g4csv_defs.hh"
#include "g4xml_defs.hh"
The analysis category based on g4tools is provided with certain limitations that can be reduced according to the
feedback from GEANT4 users and developers.
Below is a summary of currently supported features in Root, Hdf5, Csv and Xml manager classes:
• Histogram types: 1D, 2D, 3D of double
• Profile types: 1D, 2D of double
• Ntuple column types: int, float, double, G4String, std::vector<int>,
std::vector<float>, std::vector<double>
• Optional directory structure limited to one directory for histograms and/or one for ntuples
The analysis reader classes allow to read in g4analysis objects from the files generated by the analysis manager(s)
during processing GEANT4 application.
An analysis reader class is available for each supported output format:
• G4CsvAnalysisReader
• G4Hdf5AnalysisReader
• G4RootAnalysisReader
• G4XmlAnalysisReader
For a simplicity of use, each analysis manager provides the complete access to all interfaced functions though it is
implemented via a more complex design.
The readers are implemented as singletons. User code will access a pointer to a single instance of the desired reader
object. The reader has to be created and deleted from the user code. All objects created via analysis reader are deleted
automatically with the manager. The concrete types of the analysis reader as well as the handled g4tools objects, are
hidden behind a namespace which is selected by including a dedicated include file. This allows the user to use all
output technologies in an identical way via these generic types:
• G4AnalysisReader: the public reader interface
• G4AnaH1[2,3]: one[two,three]-dimensional histogram
• G4AnaP1[2]: one[two]-dimensional profile
• G4RNtuple: read ntuple
While the histograms and profiles objects handled by the analysis reader are of the same type as those handled by the
analysis manager, the reader’s ntuple type is different.
All objects read with G4AnalysisReader (histograms, profiles and ntuples) get automatically attributed an integer
identifier which value is returned from the “Read” or “GetNtuple” function. The default start value is 0 and it is
incremented by 1 for each next created object. The numbering each object type is independent from other objects
types and also from the numbering of the same object type in analysis manager. The start identifier value can be
changed in the same way as with the analysis manager (see Creating Histograms).
The read objects can be accessed in the analysis reader via their integer identifiers or by their names in the same way
as in the analysis manager (see Accessing Histograms). Note that the type of read ntuple is different from the ntuple
type in the analysis manager.
The specific manager classes are singletons and so it is not possible to create more than one instance of an analysis
reader of one type, e.g. G4RootAnalysisReader. However two analysis reader objects of different types can
coexist. Then instead of the generic G4AnalysisReader typedef the concrete type of each manager has to be
given explicitly in a similar way as for the analysis managers (see Coexistence of Several Managers).
As well as all other GEANT4 categories, the analysis code has been adapted for multi-threading. In multi-threading
mode, the analysis reader instances are internally created on the master or thread workers, depending on the client
code call, and data reading can be processed in parallel on workers threads.
For reading in the output files created with G4AnalysisManager, an instance of the analysis reader must be
created. The analysis reader object is created with the first call to G4AnalysisReader::Instance(), the next
calls to this function will just provide the pointer to this analysis manager object. The client code is responsible for
deleting the created object.
The example of the code for creating the analysis reader is given below:
#include "g4root.hh"
//#include "g4csv.hh"
//#include "g4xml.hh"
//#include "g4hdf5.hh"
The level of informative printings can be set by SetVerboseLevel(G4int). Currently the levels from 0 (default)
up to 4 are supported.
The name of file to be read can be specified either via G4AnalysisReader::SetFileName() function, or
directly when reading an object. It is possible to change the base file name at any time. The analysis reader can handle
more than one file at same time.
G4AnalysisReader* analysisReader = G4AnalysisReader::Instance();
// Define a base file name
analysisReader->SetFileName("MyFileName");
A file is open only when any “Read” function is called. When more objects are read from the same file (Xml, Root),
the file is open only once. When reading an object without specifying the file name explicitly in “Read” call, the object
is searched in all open files in the order of their creation time.
The histograms and profiles can be read with these G4AnalysisReader functions:
G4int ReadH1(const G4String& h1Name, const G4String& fileName = "");
G4int ReadH2(const G4String& h2Name, const G4String& fileName = "");
G4int ReadH3(const G4String& h3Name, const G4String& fileName = "");
G4int ReadP1(const G4String& h1Name, const G4String& fileName = "");
G4int ReadP2(const G4String& h2Name, const G4String& fileName = "");
where hNname is the name of the object to be read from a file. The file name can be defined explicitly for each reading
object.
All histograms and profiles created by G4AnalysisReader are automatically deleted with deleting the
G4AnalysisReader object.
9.3.4 Ntuples
// Read ntuple
G4int ntupleId = analysisReader->GetNtuple("TrackL");;
if ( ntupleId >= 0 ) {
G4double trackL;
analysisReader->SetNtupleDColumn("Labs", trackL);
G4cout << "Ntuple TrackL, reading selected column Labs" << G4endl;
(continues on next page)
When the ntuple columns are associated with the variables of the appropriate type, the ntuple they can be read in a
loop with GetNtupleRow() function. The function returns true until all data are read in.
An overview of all available functions for ntuple reading is given below:
// Methods to read ntuple from a file
G4int GetNtuple(const G4String& ntupleName, const G4String& fileName = "");
where [X, Xtype] in SetNtupleXColumn() can be [I, G4int], [F, G4float], [D, G4double] or
[S, G4String]. The columns of std::vector type are not supported for G4String.
All ntuples and ntuple columns created by G4AnalysisReader are automatically deleted with deleting the
G4AnalysisReader object.
9.4 Accumulables
The classes for users accumulables management were added in 10.2 release for the purpose of simplification of users
application code. The accumulables objects are named variables registered to the accumulable manager, which pro-
vides the access to them by name and performs their merging in multi-threading mode according to their defined merge
mode. Their usage is demonstrated in the basic examples B1 and B3a.
To better reflect the meaning of these objects, the classes base name “Parameter” used in 10.2 was changed in “Accu-
mulable” in 10.3. Further integration in the GEANT4 framework is foreseen in the next GEANT4 versions.
9.4.1 G4Accumulable<T>
G4Accumulable<T> templated class can be used instead of built-in types in order to facilitate merging of the
values accumulated on workers to the master thread. The G4Accumulable<T> object has, besides its value of the
templated type T, also a name, the initial value, which the value is set to in Reset() function and a merge mode,
specifying the operation which is performed in Merge() function.
The accumulable object can be either instantiated using its constructor and reg-
istered in G4AccumulablesManager explicitly, or it can be created using
G4AccumulablesManager::CreateAccumulable() function, their registering is then automatic. The first
way is used in the basic examples B1 and B3a:
// B1RunAction.hh
class B1RunAction : public G4UserRunAction
{
// ...
private:
G4Accumulable<G4double> fEdep;
G4Accumulable<G4double> fEdep2;
};
// B1RunAction.cc
B1RunAction::B1RunAction()
: G4UserRunAction(),
fEdep("Edep", 0.),
fEdep2("Edep2", 0.) // the accumulable is initialized with a name and a value = initValue
// (the name can be omitted)
{
// ..
// Register accumulable to the accumulable manager
G4AccumulableManager* accumulableManager = G4AccumulableManager::Instance();
accumulableManager->RegisterAccumulable(fEdep);
accumulableManager->RegisterAccumulable(fEdep2);
}
The merging mode can be specified using the third (or the second one, if the name is omitted) G4Accumulable<T>
constructor argument. The merge modes are defined in G4MergeMode class enumeration:
enum class G4MergeMode {
kAddition, // "Or" if boolean type
kMultiplication, // "And" if boolean type
kMaximum, // "Or" if boolean type
kMinimum // "And" if boolean type
};
// Access accumulables by id
G4VAccumulable* accumulable = accumulableManager->GetAccumulable(id);
Users can define their own accumulable class derived from G4VAccumulable abstract base class. An example of a
ProcessCounterAccumulable class, implementing an accumulable holding a map of the processes occurrences
by the processes names, is given below. Such processes occurrences map is used in several electromagnetic extended
examples, e.g. TestEm1.
ProcCounterAccumulable.hh:
#include "G4VAccumulable.hh"
#include "globals.hh"
#include <map>
class ProcCounterAccumulable : public G4VAccumulable
{
public:
ProcCounterAccumulable(const G4String& name)
: G4VAccumulable(name, 0), fProcCounter() {}
virtual ~ProcCounterAccumulable() {}
private:
std::map<G4String,G4int> fProcCounter;
};
ProcCounterAccumulable.cc:
void ProcCounterAccumulable::Merge(const G4VAccumulable& other)
{
const ProcCounterAccumulable& otherProcCounterAccumulable
= static_cast<const ProcCounterAccumulable&>(other);
std::map<G4String,G4int>::const_iterator it;
for (it = otherProcCounterAccumulable.fProcCounter.begin();
it != otherProcCounterAccumulable.fProcCounter.end(); ++it) {
void ProcCounterAccumulable::Reset()
{
fProcCounter.clear();
}
9.5 g4tools
g4tools is a “namespace protected” part of inlib and exlib which is of some interest for GEANT4, mainly the
histograms, the ntuples and the code to write them at the ROOT, HDF5, AIDA XML and CSV file formats. The idea
of g4tools is to cover, with a very light and easy to install package, what is needed to do analysis in a “GEANT4
batch program”.
As g4tools is distributed through GEANT4 and in order to avoid potential namespace clashes with other codes that
use the inlib/exlib to do GEANT4 visualization (as for the g4view application or some of the exlib examples),
the inlib and exlib namespaces had been automatically changed to tools in the g4tools distribution. Since in principle
GEANT4 users will not have to deal directly with the g4tools classes, but will manipulate histograms and ntuples
through the G4AnalysisManager, we are not going to extensively document the g4tools classes here. Interested
people are encouraged to go at the inlib/exlib web pages for that (see inlib/exlib site).
As explained in inlib/exlib, the code found in g4tools is “pure header”. This comes from the need to have
an easy way to build applications, as the ioda one, from smartphone, passing by tablets and up to various desktops
(UNIX and Windows). For example, if building an application targeted to the Apple AppStore and GooglePlay, the
simplest way is to pass through Xcode and the Android make system (or Eclipse), and having not to build libraries
simplifies a lot the handling of all these IDEs for the same application. A fallback of that is that the installation of
g4tools (if not using the one coming with GEANT4) is straightforward, you simply unzip the file containing the
source code! To build an application using g4tools, as for inlib/exlib, you simply have to declare to your
build system the “-I” toward the unfolded directory and do “Build and Run”.
g4tools test
g4tools comes with test programs of its own that may be useful in case of problems (for example porting on a not
yet covered platform). You can build and run them with:
UNIX> <get g4tools.zip>
UNIX> <unzip g4tools.zip>
UNIX> cd g4tools/test/cpp
UNIX> ./build
UNIX> ./tools_test_histo
UNIX> ./tools_test_wroot
UNIX> etc...
and on Windows:
g4tools in GEANT4
The g4tools header files are distributed in the GEANT4 source in the source/analysis/include/tools
directory and in the GEANT4 installation, they are installed in include/tools directory. The g4tools test
programs, included only in GEANT4 development versions, can be downloaded with the g4tools-[version].
zip file from the inexlib development site).
While the GEANT4 analysis manager provides the methods for booking and filling the g4tools objects, it does not
interface all public functions. Users can access the g4tools objects (see Accessing Histograms) and use the g4tools
API described in the next section to get the needed informations.
We describe here some of the public methods potentially seen by a user doing analysis.
example
#include <tools/histo/h1d>
#include <tools/randd>
...
tools::histo::h1d h("Gauss",100,-5,5);
tools::rgaussd rg(1,2);
for(unsigned int count=0;count<entries;count++) h.fill(rg.shoot(),1.4);
tools::histo::h1d h("Gauss",100,-5,5);
...
std::cout << " mean " << h.mean() << ", rms " << h.rms() << std::endl;
Bin infos
When doing a:
bool fill(double X,double Weight = 1);
the histogram class maintains, for each bin, the number of entries, the sum of weights that we can note “Sw”, the sum
of W by W “Sw2”, the sum of X by Weight “Sxw”, the sum of X by X by W “Sx2w”. Then bin method names reflect
these notations, for example to get the 50 bin sum of X*X*W:
double Sx2w = h.bin_Sx2w(50);
(Take care that the [0] entries in the upper vectors are for the “underflow bin” and the last one is for the “overflow
bin”).
All data
You can get all internal data of an histo through the histo_data class:
const tools::histo::h1d::hd_t& hdata = h.dac(); //dac=data access.
and then, for example, find back the bins infos with:
const std::vector<unsigned int>& _entries = hdata.m_bin_entries;
const std::vector<double>& _bins_sum_w = hdata.m_bin_Sw;
const std::vector<double>& _bins_sum_w2 = hdata.m_bin_Sw2;
const std::vector< std::vector<double> >& _bins_sum_xw = hdata.m_bin_Sxw;
const std::vector< std::vector<double> >& _bins_sum_x2w = hdata.m_bin_Sx2w;
// dump bin 50 :
std::cout << "entries[50] = " << _entries[50] << std::endl;
std::cout << " sum_w[50] = " << _bins_sum_w[50] << std::endl;
std::cout << " sum_w2[50] = " << _bins_sum_w2[50] << std::endl;
std::cout << " sum_xw[50] = " << _bins_sum_xw[50][0] << std::endl; //0 = xaxis
std::cout << "sum_x2w[50] = " << _bins_sum_x2w[50][0] << std::endl; //0 = xaxis
Projections
See test/cpp/histo.cpp for example code. Other slicing and projection methods are:
// h2d -> h1d. (User gets ownership of the returned object).
h1d* slice_x(const h2d&,int y_beg_ibin,int y_end_ibin,const std::string& title);
h1d* projection_x(const h2d&,const std::string& title);
h1d* slice_y(const h2d&,int x_beg_ibin,int x_end_ibin,const std::string& title);
h1d* projection_y(const h2d&,const std::string& title);
// h2d -> p1d. (User gets ownership of the returned object).
p1d* profile_x(const h2d&,int y_beg_ibin,int y_end_ibin,const std::string& title);
p1d* profile_x(const h2d&,const std::string&);
p1d* profile_y(const h2d&,int x_beg_ibin,int x_end_ibin,const std::string& title);
p1d* profile_y(const h2d&,const std::string& title);
// h3d -> h2d. (User gets ownership of the returned object).
h2d* slice_xy(const h3d&,int z_beg_ibin,int z_end_ibin,const std::string& title);
h2d* projection_xy(const h3d&,const std::string& title);
h2d* slice_yz(const h3d&,int x_beg_ibin,int x_end_ibin,const std::string& title);
h2d* projection_yz(const h3d&,const std::string& title);
h2d* slice_xz(const h3d&,int y_beg_ibin,int y_end_ibin,const std::string& title);
h2d* projection_xz(const h3d&,const std::string& title);
TEN
EXAMPLES
10.1 Introduction
The GEANT4 toolkit includes several fully coded examples that demonstrate the implementation of the user classes
required to build a customized simulation.
The new “basic” examples cover the most typical use-cases of a GEANT4 application while keeping simplicity and
ease of use. They are provided as a starting point for new GEANT4 application developers.
A set of “extended” examples range from the simulation of a non-interacting particle and a trivial detector to the
simulation of electromagnetic and hadronic physics processes in a complex detector. Some of these examples require
some libraries in addition to those of GEANT4.
The “advanced” examples cover the use-cases typical of a “toolkit”-oriented kind of development, where real complete
applications for different simulation studies are provided.
All examples can be compiled and run without modification. Most of them can be run both in interactive and batch
mode using the input macro files (*.in) and reference output files (*.out) provided. Most examples are run rou-
tinely as part of the validation, or testing, of official releases of the GEANT4 toolkit.
The previous set of examples oriented to novice users, “novice”, has been refactored in “basic” and “extended” exam-
ples sets in GEANT4 10.0. The information about the original set of these examples can be found at the last section of
this chapter.
Descriptions of the 5 basic examples are provided here along with links to source code documentation automatically
generated with Doxygen.
Example B1 (see also Doxygen page)
• Simple geometry with a few solids
• Geometry with simple placements (G4PVPlacement)
• Scoring total dose in a selected volume in user action classes
• Using G4Accumulable for automatic merging of scored values inmulti-threading mode
• GEANT4 physics list (QBBC)
Example B2 (see also Doxygen page)
• Simplified tracker geometry with uniform magnetic field
• Geometry with simple placements (G4PVPlacement) and parameterisation (G4PVParameterisation)
• Scoring within tracker via G4 sensitive detector and hits
375
Book For Application Developers, Release 10.5
Table 10.1: The “item chart” for basic level examples B1 and B2.
Example B1 Example B2
Description Simple application for accounting Fixed target tracker geometry
dose in a selected volume
Geometry
• solids: box, cons, trd • solids: box, tubs
• simple placements with trans- • simple placements with trans-
lation lation (a)
• parameterised volume (b)
• uniform magnetic field
Stacking
Analysis
Table 10.2: The “item chart” for basic level examples B3 and B4.
Example B3 Example B4
Description Schematic Positron Emitted Tomog- Simplified calorimeter with layers
raphy system of two materials
Geometry
• solids: box, tubs • solids: box
• simple placements with rota- • simple placements with trans-
tion lation
• replica
• uniform magnetic field
Physics Modular physics list with GEANT4 GEANT4 physics list: FTFP_BERT
builders
Primary generator Radioactive source (particle gun Particle gun
with Fluor ions)
Scoring Multi functional (sensitive) detector
• User action classes
& scorers and
• User own object (runData)
• User action classes
• Sensitive detector & hits
• User own run object
• Multi functional (sensitive)
detector & scorers
Table 10.3: The “item chart” for basic level example B5.
Example B5
Description Double-arm spectrometer with several detectors and a
local constant magnetic field
Geometry
• solids: box, tubs
• simple placements with rotation
• replica
• parameterised volume
• local constant magnetic field
• modifying geometry between runs
Stacking
Analysis
• Histograms 1D, ntuple
• Saving file per run
All basic examples can be run either interactively or in a batch mode (see section How to Define the main() Program
and How to Execute a Program) and they are provided with the following set of macros:
• init_vis.mac
• vis.mac
• [gui.mac]
• run1.mac, run2.mac
• exampleBN.in
The selection is done automatically according to the application build configuration.
The init_vis.mac macro is always executed just after the GEANT4 kernel and user application classes instantia-
tion. It sets first some defaults, then performs GEANT4 kernel initialization and finally calls the vis.mac macro with
visualization setting.
The vis.mac macros in each of the examples all have the same structure - except for example B1, see below. There
are only a few lines in each example with a setting different from the other examples and so they can be easily spotted
when looking in the macro. Various commands are proposed in commented blocks of lines with explanations so that
a user can just uncomment lines and observe the effect. Additionally, in example B4, there are some visualization
tutorial macros in macros/visTutor/. See more on visualization in section How to Visualize the Detector and
Events and chapter Visualization.
From Release 9.6 the vis.mac macro in example B1 has additional commands that demonstrate additional function-
ality of the vis system, such as displaying text, axes, scales, date, logo and shows how to change viewpoint and style.
Consider copying these to your favourite example or application. To see even more commands use help or ls or
browse the available UI commands in section Built-in Commands.
The gui.mac macros are provided in examples B2, B4 and B5. This macro is automatically executed if GEANT4 is
built with any GUI session. See more on graphical user interfaces in section How to Set Up an Interactive Session.
When running interactively, the example program stops after processing the init_vis.mac macro and the GEANT4
kernel initialization, invoked from the macro, with the prompt Idle>. At this stage users can type in the commands
from run1.mac line by line (recommended when running the example for the first time) or execute all commands at
once using the "/control/execute run1.mac" command.
The run2.mac macros define conditions for execution a run with a larger number of events and so they are recom-
mended to be executed in a batch. The exampleBN.in macros are also supposed to be run in a batch mode and their
outputs from the GEANT4 system testing are available in the files exampleBN.out.
10.2.3 Multi-threading
Multi-threading mode
All basic examples have been migrated to multi-threading (MT). No special steps are needed to build the examples in
multi-threading mode. They will automatically run in MT when they are built against the GEANT4 libraries built with
MT mode activated, otherwise they will run in sequential mode.
The choice of multi-threading mode is done be creating G4MTRunManager instead of G4RunManager in the
example main():
#ifdef G4MULTITHREADED
G4MTRunManager* runManager = new G4MTRunManager;
#else
G4RunManager* runManager = new G4RunManager;
#endif
The compiler flag -DG4MULTITHREADED is automatically set when building applications using GEANT4’s CMake
(via GEANT4_USE_FILE) and GNUmake systems, and is listed in the flags reported by the –cflags option of the
geant4-config program.
10.2.4 Example B1
See http://geant4.web.cern.ch/geant4/UserDocumentation/Doxygen/examples_doc/html/ExampleB1.html
Basic concept:
This example demonstrates a simple (medical) application within which users will familiarize themselves with simple
placement, use the NIST material database, and can utilize electromagnetic and/or hadronic physics processes. Two
items of information are collected in this example: the energy deposited and the total dose for a selected volume.
This example uses the GEANT4 physics list QBBC, which is instantiated in the main() function. It requires data
files for electromagnetic and hadronic processes. See more on installation of the datasets in |Geant4| Installa-
tion Guide instructions on installing datasets. The following datasets: G4LEDATA, G4LEVELGAMMADATA,
G4NEUTRONXSDATA, G4SAIDXSDATA and G4ENSDFSTATEDATA are mandatory for this example.
Classes:
B1DetectorConstruction The geometry is constructed in the B1DetectorConstruction class. The
setup consists of a box shaped envelope containing two volumes: a circular cone and a trapezoid.
Some common materials from medical applications are used. The envelope is made of water and the two inner
volumes are made from tissue and bone materials. These materials are created using the G4NistManager
class, which allows one to build a material from the NIST database using their names. Available materials and
their compositions can be found in the Appendix Material Database.
The physical volumes are made from Constructive Solid Geometry (CSG) solids and placed without rotation
using the G4PVPlacement class.
B1PrimaryGeneratorAction The default kinematics is a 6 MeV gamma, randomly distributed in front of the
envelope across 80% of the transverse (X,Y) plane. This default setting can be changed via the commands of
the G4ParticleGun class.
B1SteppingAction It is in the UserSteppingAction() function that the energy deposition is collected for
a selected volume.
B1EventAction The statistical event by event accumulation of energy deposition. At the end of event, the accu-
mulated values are passed in B1RunAction and summed over the whole run.
B1RunAction Sums the event energy depositions. In multi-threading mode the energy deposition accumulated in
G4Accumulable objects per worker is merged to the master. Information about the primary particle is printed
in this class along with the computation of the dose. An example of creating and computing new units (e.g.,
dose) is also shown in the class constructor.
G4Accumulable<G4double> type instead of G4double is used for the B1RunAction data members
in order to facilitate merging of the values accumulated on workers to the master. At present the accumu-
lables have to be registered to G4AccumulablesManager and G4ParametersManager::Merge()
has to be called from the users code. This is planned to be further simplified with a closer integration of
G4Accumulable classes in the GEANT4 kernel next year.
10.2.5 Example B2
See http://geant4.web.cern.ch/geant4/UserDocumentation/Doxygen/examples_doc/html/ExampleB2.html
This example simulates a simplified fixed target experiment. To demonstrate alternative ways of constructing the
geometry two variants are provided: B2a (explicit construction) and B2b (parametrized volumes).
The set of available particles and their physics processes are defined in the FTFP_BERT physics list. This GEANT4
physics list is instantiated in the main() function. It requires data files for electromagnetic and hadronic processes.
See more on installation of the datasets in |Geant4| Installation Guide, Chapter 3.3: Note On |Geant4| Datasets.
The following datasets: G4LEDATA, G4LEVELGAMMADATA, G4NEUTRONXSDATA, G4SAIDXSDATA and
G4ENSDFSTATEDATA are mandatory for this example.
This example also illustrates how to introduce tracking constraints like maximum step length via G4StepLimiter,
and minimum kinetic energy, etc., via the G4UserSpecialCuts processes. This is accomplished by adding
G4StepLimiterPhysics to the physics list.
Classes:
B2[a, b]DetectorConstruction The setup consists of a target followed by six chambers of increasing trans-
verse size at defined distances from the target. These chambers are located in a region called the Tracker re-
gion. Their shape are cylinders constructed as simple cylinders (in B2aDetectorConstruction) and as
parametrised volumes (in B2bDetectorConstruction) - see also B2bChamberParameterisation class.
In addition, a global uniform transverse magnetic field can be applied using
G4GlobalMagFieldMessenger, instantiated in ConstructSDandField() with a non zero
field value, or via an interactive command. An instance of the B2TrackerSD class is created and asso-
ciated with each logical chamber volume (in B2a) and with the one G4LogicalVolume associated with
G4PVParameterised (in B2b).
One can change the materials of the target and the chambers interactively via the commands defined in
B2aDetectorMessenger (or B2bDetectorMessenger).
This example also illustrates how to introduce tracking constraints like maximum step length, minimum ki-
netic energy etc. via the G4UserLimits class and associated G4StepLimiter and G4UserSpecialCuts pro-
cesses. The maximum step limit in the tracker region can be set by the interactive command defined in
B2aDetectorMessenger (or B2bDetectorMessenger).
B2PrimaryGeneratorAction The primary generator action class employs the G4ParticleGun. The primary
kinematics consists of a single particle which hits the target perpendicular to the entrance face. The type of the
particle and its energy can be changed via the G4 built-in commands of the G4ParticleGun class.
B2EventAction The event number is written to the log file every requested number of events in
BeginOfEventAction() and EndOfEventAction(). Moreover, for the first 100 events and every
100 events thereafter information about the number of stored trajectories in the event is printed as well as the
number of hits stored in the G4VHitsCollection.
B2RunAction The run number is printed at BeginOfRunAction(), where the G4RunManager is also in-
formed how to SetRandomNumberStore for storing initial random number seeds per run or per event.
B2TrackerHit The tracker hit class is derived from G4VHit. In this example, a tracker hit is a step by step record
of the track identifier, the chamber number, the total energy deposit in this step, and the position of the energy
deposit.
B2TrackerSD The tracker sensitive detector class is derived from G4VSensitiveDetector. In
ProcessHits() - called from the GEANT4 kernel at each step - it creates one hit in the selected volume
so long as energy is deposited in the medium during that step. This hit is inserted in a HitsCollection. The
HitsCollection is printed at the end of each event (via the method B2TrackerSD::EndOfEvent()), under
the control of the “/hits/verbose 2” command.
10.2.6 Example B3
See http://geant4.web.cern.ch/geant4/UserDocumentation/Doxygen/examples_doc/html/ExampleB3.html
This example simulates a Schematic Positron Emission Tomography system. To demonstrate alternative ways of
accumulation event statistics in a run two variants are provided: B3a (using new G4Accumulable class) and B3b
(using G4Run class).
Classes:
B3DetectorConstruction Crystals are circularly arranged to form a ring. A number rings make up the full
detector (gamma camera). This is done by positioning Crystals in Ring with an appropriate rotation matrix.
Several copies of Ring are then placed in the full detector.
The Crystal material, Lu2SiO5, is not included in the G4Nist database. Therefore, it is explicitly built in
DefineMaterials().
Crystals are defined as scorers in DetectorConstruction::CreateScorers(). There are two
G4MultiFunctionalDetector objects: one for the Crystal (EnergyDeposit), and one for the Patient (DoseDe-
posit).
B3PhysicsList The physics list contains standard electromagnetic processes and the radioactiveDecay module
for GenericIon. It is defined in the B3PhysicsList class as a GEANT4 modular physics list with registered
GEANT4 physics builders:
• G4DecayPhysics
• G4RadioactiveDecayPhysics
• G4EmStandardPhysics
B3PrimaryGeneratorAction The default particle beam is an ion (F18), at rest, randomly distributed within a
zone inside a patient and is defined in GeneratePrimaries().
B3aEventAction, B3aRunAction Energy deposited in crystals is summed by G4Scorer. At the end of event,
the values accumulated in B3aEventAction are passed in B3aRunAction and summed over the whole
run. In multi-threading mode the data accumulated in G4Accumulable objects per workers is merged to the
master in B3aRunAction::EndOfRunAction() and the final result is printed on the screen.
G4Accumulable<> type instead of G4double and G4int types is used for the B3aRunAction
data members in order to facilitate merging of the values accumulated on workers to the mas-
ter. At present the accumulables have to be registered to G4AccumulablesManager and
G4AccumulablesManager::Merge() has to be called from the users code. This is planned to be fur-
ther simplified with a closer integration of G4Accumulable classes in the GEANT4 kernel next year.
B3bRun, B3bRunAction Energy deposited in crystals is summed by G4Scorer. B3Run::RecordEvent()
collects information event by event from the hits collections, and accumulates statistics for
B3RunAction::EndOfRunAction(). In multi-threading mode the statistics accumulated per worker is
merged to the master in Run::Merge().
In addition, results for dose are accumulated in a standard floating-point summation and using a new lightweight
statistical class called G4StatAnalysis. The G4StatAnalysis class records four values: (1) the sum,
(2) sum^2, (3) number of entries, and (4) the number of entries less than mean * machine-epsilon (the machine
epsilon is the difference between 1.0 and the next value representable by the floating-point type). From these
4 values, G4StatAnalysis provides the mean, FOM, relative error, standard deviation, variance, coefficient
of variation, efficiency, r2int, and r2eff.
B3StackingAction Beta decay of Fluorine generates a neutrino. One wishes not to track this neutrino; therefore
one kills it immediately, before created particles are put in a stack.
10.2.7 Example B4
See http://geant4.web.cern.ch/geant4/UserDocumentation/Doxygen/examples_doc/html/ExampleB4.html
This example simulates a simple Sampling Calorimeter setup. To demonstrate several possible ways
of data scoring, the example is provided in four variants: B4a, B4b, B4c, B4d. (See also exam-
ples/extended/electromagnetic/TestEm3).
The set of available particles and their physics processes are defined in the FTFP_BERT physics list. This GEANT4
physics list is instantiated in the main() function. It requires data files for electromagnetic and hadronic processes.
See more on installation of the datasets in |Geant4| Installation Guide, Chapter 3.3: Note On |Geant4| Datasets.
The following datasets: G4LEDATA, G4LEVELGAMMADATA, G4NEUTRONXSDATA, G4SAIDXSDATA and
G4ENSDFSTATEDATA are mandatory for this example.
Classes:
B4[c, d]DetectorConstruction The calorimeter is a box made of a given number of layers. A layer consists
of an absorber plate and of a detection gap. The layer is replicated. In addition a transverse uniform magnetic
field can be applied using G4GlobalMagFieldMessenger, instantiated in ConstructSDandField()
with a non zero field value, or via interactive commands.
B4PrimaryGeneratorAction The primary generator action class uses G4ParticleGun. It defines a single
particle which hits the calorimeter perpendicular to the input face. The type of the particle can be changed via
the G4 built-in commands of the G4ParticleGun class.
B4RunAction It accumulates statistics and computes dispersion of the energy deposit and track lengths of charged
particles with the aid of analysis tools. H1D histograms are created in BeginOfRunAction() for the en-
ergy deposit and track length in both Absorber and Gap volumes. The same values are also saved in an ntu-
ple. The histograms and ntuple are saved in the output file in a format according to a selected technology in
B4Analysis.hh. In EndOfRunAction(), the accumulated statistics and computed dispersion are printed.
When running in multi-threading mode, the histograms accumulated on threads are automatically merged in a
single output file, while the ntuple is written in files per thread.
Classes in B4a (scoring via user actions):
B4aSteppingAction In UserSteppingAction() the energy deposit and track lengths of charged particles
in each step in the Absorber and Gap layers are collected and subsequently recorded in B4aEventAction.
B4aEventAction It defines data members to hold the energy deposit and track lengths of charged particles in
the Absorber and Gap layers. In EndOfEventAction(), these quantities are printed and filled in H1D
histograms and ntuple to accumulate statistic and compute dispersion.
Classes in B4b (via user own object):
B4bRunData A data class, derived from G4Run, which defines data members to hold the energy de-
posit and track lengths of charged particles in the Absorber and Gap layers. It is instantiated in
B4bRunAction::GenerateRun. The data are collected step by step in B4bSteppingAction, and
the accumulated values are entered in histograms and an ntuple event by event in B4bEventAction.
B4bSteppingAction In UserSteppingAction() the energy deposit and track lengths of charged particles
in Absorber and Gap layers are collected and subsequently recorded in B4bRunData.
B4bEventAction In EndOfEventAction(), the accumulated quantities of the energy deposit and track
lengths of charged particles in Absorber and Gap layers are printed and then stored in B4bRunData.
Classes in B4c (via |Geant4| sensitive detector and hits):
B4cDetectorConstruction In addition to materials, volumes and uniform magnetic field defini-
tions as in B4DetectorConstruction, in ConstructSDandField() two instances of the
B4cCalorimeterSD class are created and associated with Absorber and Gap volumes.
B4cCalorHit The calorimeter hit class is derived from G4VHit. It defines data members to store the energy
deposit and track lengths of charged particles in a selected volume.
B4cCalorimeterSD The calorimeter sensitive detector class is derived from G4VSensitiveDetector. Two
instances of this class are created in B4cDetectorConstruction and associated with Absorber and Gap
volumes. In Initialize(), it creates one hit for each calorimeter layer and one more hit for accounting the
total quantities in all layers. The values are accounted in hits in the ProcessHits() function, which is called
by the GEANT4 kernel at each step.
B4cEventAction In EndOfEventAction(), the accumulated quantities of the energy deposit and track
lengths of charged particles in Absorber and Gap layers are printed and then stored in the hits collections.
Classes in B4d (via |Geant4| scorers):
B4dDetectorConstruction In addition to materials, volumes and uniform magnetic field defini-
tions as in B4DetectorConstruction, in ConstructSDandField() sensitive detectors of
G4MultiFunctionalDetector type with primitive scorers are created and associated with Absorber and
Gap volumes.
B4dEventAction In EndOfEventAction(), the accumulated quantities of the energy deposit and track
lengths of charged particles in Absorber and Gap layers are printed and then stored in the hits collections.
10.2.8 Example B5
See http://geant4.web.cern.ch/geant4/UserDocumentation/Doxygen/examples_doc/html/ExampleB5.html
This example simulates a a double-arm spectrometer with wire chambers, hodoscopes and calorimeters with a uniform
local magnetic field.
The set of available particles and their physics processes are defined in the FTFP_BERT physics list. This GEANT4
physics list is instantiated in the main() function. It requires data files for electromagnetic and hadronic processes.
See more on installation of the datasets in |Geant4| Installation Guide, Chapter 3.3: Note On |Geant4| Datasets.
The following datasets: G4LEDATA, G4LEVELGAMMADATA, G4NEUTRONXSDATA, G4SAIDXSDATA and
G4ENSDFSTATEDATA are mandatory for this example.
This example also illustrates how to introduce tracking constraints like maximum step length via G4StepLimiter,
and minimum kinetic energy, etc., via the G4UserSpecialCuts processes. This is accomplished by adding
G4StepLimiterPhysics to the physics list.
This example can be built with excluding visualization and/or GEANT4 user interface via G4VIS_USE and
G4UI_USE compiler options (see exampleB5.cc). These options are defined by default with GEANT4 configura-
tion; they can be switched off at compilation time via the CMake options G4VIS_NONE or G4UI_NONE or via the
environment variables of the same name if using GNUmake build.
Classes:
B5DetectorConstruction The spectrometer consists of two detector arms. One arm provides position and
timing information of the incident particle while the other collects position, timing and energy information of
the particle after it has been deflected by a magnetic field centered at the spectrometer pivot point.
First arm: box filled with air, also containing:
• 1 hodoscope (15 vertical strips of plastic scintillator)
• 1 drift chamber (horizontal argon gas layers with a “virtual wire” at the center of each layer)
Second arm: box filled with air, also containing:
• 1 hodoscope (25 vertical strips of plastic scintillator)
• 1 drift chamber (5 horizontal argon gas layers with a “virtual wire” at the center of each layer)
• 1 electromagnetic calorimeter: a box sub-divided along x,y and z axes into cells of CsI (see also
B5CellParameterisation class)
• 1 hadronic calorimeter: a box sub-divided along x,y, and z axes into cells of lead, with a layer of plastic
scintillator placed at the center of each cell
The magnetic field region is represented by an air-filled cylinder which contains the field (see
B5MagneticField.). The maximum step limit in the magnetic field region is also set via the G4UserLimits
class in a similar way as in Example B2.
The rotation angle of the second arm and the magnetic field value can be set via the interactive command defined
using the G4GenericMessenger class.
B5PrimaryGeneratorAction The primary generator action class employs the G4ParticleGun. The primary
kinematics consists of a single particle which is is sent in the direction of the first spectrometer arm.
The type of the particle and its several properties can be changed via the GEANT4 built-in commands of the
G4ParticleGun class or this example command defined using the G4GenericMessenger class.
B5EventAction An event consists of the generation of a single particle which is transported through the first
spectrometer arm. Here, a scintillator hodoscope records the reference time of the particle before it passes
through a drift chamber where the particle position is measured. Momentum analysis is performed as the
particle passes through a magnetic field at the spectrometer pivot and then into the second spectrometer arm.
In the second arm, the particle passes through another hodoscope and drift chamber before interacting in the
electromagnetic calorimeter. Here it is likely that particles will induce electromagnetic showers. The shower
energy is recorded in a three-dimensional array of CsI crystals. Secondary particles from the shower, as well
as primary particles which do not interact in the CsI crystals, pass into the hadronic calorimeter. Here, the
remaining energy is collected in a three-dimensional array of scintillator-lead sandwiches.
In first execution of BeginOfEventAction() the hits collections identifiers are saved in data members of
the class and then used in EndOfEventAction() for accessing the hists collections and filling the accounted
information in defined histograms and ntuples and printing its summary in a log file. The frequency of printing
can be tuned with the built-in command "/run/printProgress frequency".
B5RunAction The run action class handles the histograms and ntuples with the aid of GEANT4 analysis tools in
a similar way as in Example B4. From Release 10.2 the vectors of energy deposits in Electromagnetic and
Hadronic calorimeter cells are also stored in the ntuple.
Hit and Sensitive Detector Classes All the information required to simulate and analyze an event is recorded in hits.
This information is recorded in the following sensitive detectors:
• Hodoscope (B5HodoscopeSD, B5HodoscopeHit)
– particle time
– strip ID, position and rotation
• Drift chamber: (B5DriftChamberSD, B5DriftChamberHit)
– particle time
– particle position
– layer ID
• Electromagnetic calorimeter: (B5EmCalorimeterSD, B5EmCalorimeterHit)
– energy deposited in cell
– cell ID, position and rotation
10.3.1 Analysis
• AnaEx01 - histogram and tuple manipulations using GEANT4 internal g4tools system
• AnaEx02 - histogram and tuple manipulations using ROOT
• AnaEx03 - histogram and tuple manipulations using the AIDA interface
• B1Con - modified basic example B1 showing how to use a Convergence Tester
• B3aScoreWriter - saving the Geant4 scorers hits in form of ntuples in a Root file using Geant4 analysis tools
• B4dScoreWriter - saving the Geant4 scorers hits in form of ntuples in a Root file using Geant4 analysis tools;
the ntuples with scorers hits are saved in addition to the histograms and ntuples created in the run action
• [A01] - this examples has been refactored in Example B5 in the basic set.
10.3.2 Biasing
• Variance Reduction - examples (B01, B02 and B03) on variance reduction techniques and scoring and application
of Reverse Monte Carlo in GEANT4 ReverseMC
• Generic biasing examples illustrate the usage of a biasing scheme implemented since version GEANT4 10.0.
– GB01 This example illustrates how to bias process cross-sections in this scheme.
– GB02 Illustrates a force collision scheme similar to the MCNP one.
– GB03 Illustrates geometry based biasing.
– GB04 Illustrates a bremsstrahlung splitting.
– GB05 Illustrates a “splitting by cross-section” technique: a splitting-based technique using absorption
cross-section to control the neutron population.
– GB06 Illustrates the usage of parallel geometries with generic biasing.
10.3.3 Common
• ReadMe - a set of common classes which can be reused in other examples demonstrating just a particular feature.
This module is going to be enhanced in future.
10.3.4 Electromagnetic
• TestEm0 - how to print cross-sections and stopping power used in input by the standard EM package
• TestEm1 - how to count processes, activate/inactivate them and survey the range of charged particles. How to
define a maximum step size
• TestEm2 - shower development in an homogeneous material : longitudinal and lateral profiles
• TestEm3 - shower development in a sampling calorimeter : collect energy deposited, survey energy flow and
print stopping power
• TestEm4 - 9 MeV point like photon source: plot spectrum of energy deposited in a single media
• TestEm5 - how to study transmission, absorption and reflection of particles through a single, thin or thick, layer.
• TestEm6 - physics list for rare, high energy, electromagnetic processes: gamma conversion and e+ annihilation
into pair of muons
• TestEm7 - how to produce a Bragg curve in water phantom. How to compute dose in tallies
• TestEm8 - test of photo-absorption-ionisation model in thin absorbers, and transition radiation
• TestEm9 - shower development in a crystal calorimeter; cut-per-region
• TestEm10 - XTR transition radiation model, investigation of ionisation in thin absorbers
• TestEm11 - how to plot a depth dose profile in a rectangular box
• TestEm12 - how to plot a depth dose profile in spherical geometry : point like source
• TestEm13 - how to compute cross sections of EM processes from rate of transmission coefficient
• TestEm14 - how to compute cross sections of EM processes from direct evaluation of the mean-free path. How
to plot final state
• TestEm15 - compute and plot final state of Multiple Scattering as an isolated process
• TestEm16 - simulation of synchrotron radiation
• TestEm17 - check the cross sections of high energy muon processes
• TestEm18 - energy lost by a charged particle in a single layer, due to ionization and bremsstrahlung
10.3.8 Fields
• General ReadMe - converting simple geometries in Geant3.21 to their GEANT4 equivalents (example clGeome-
try)
10.3.10 Geometry
• General ReadMe
• transforms - demonstrating various ways of definition of 3D transformations for placing volumes
10.3.11 Hadronic
• Hadr00 - example demonstrating the usage of G4PhysListFactory to build physics lists and usage of
G4HadronicProcessStore to access the cross sections
• Hadr01 - example based on the application IION developed for simulation of proton or ion beam interaction
with a water target. Different aspects of beam target interaction are included
• Hadr02 - example application providing simulation of ion beam interaction with different targets. Hadronic
aspects of beam target interaction are demonstrated including longitudinal profile of energy deposition, spectra
of secondary particles, isotope production spectra.
• Hadr03 - example demonstrating how to compute total cross section from the direct evaluation of the mean free
path, how to identify nuclear reactions and how to plot energy spectrum of secondary particles
• Hadr04 - example focused on neutronHP physics, especially neutron transport, including thermal scattering
• Hadr06 - demonstrates survey of energy deposition and particle’s flux from a hadronic cascade
• Hadr07 - demonstrates survey of energy deposition and particle’s flux from a hadronic cascade. Show how to
plot a depth dose profile in a rectangular box.
• FissionFragment - This example demonstrates the Fission Fragment model as used within the neutron_hp model.
It will demonstrate the capability for fission product containment by the cladding in a water moderated sub-
critical assembly. It could also be further extended to calculate the effective multiplication factor of the subcrit-
ical assembly for various loading schemes.
• NeutronSource - NeutronSource is an example of neutrons production. It illustrates the cooperative work of
nuclear reactions and radioactive decay processes. It surveys energy deposition and particle’s flux. It uses
PhysicsConstructor objects.
• [Hadr05] - this example has been refactored in genericPL in Physics lists.
• DICOM - geometry set-up using the GEANT4 interface to the DICOM image format
• DICOM2 - inheritance from the DICOM example, method for memory savings, scoring into a sequential con-
tainer instead of an associative container, accumulating the scoring with a statistics class instead of a simple
floating point, and generic iteration over the variety of scoring container storage variants
• General ReadMe
• OpNovice - simulation of optical photons generation and transport. (It was moved in extended examples from
novice/N06 with removal of novice examples.)
• OpNovice2 - investigate optical properties and parameters; details of optical photon boundary interactions on a
surface, optical photon generation and transport
• LXe - optical photons in a liquid xenon scintillator
• WLS - application simulating the propagation of photons inside a Wave Length Shifting (WLS) fiber
• General ReadMe
• MPI - interface and examples of applications (exMPI01, exMPI02, exMPI03* and exMPI04) parallelized with
different MPI compliant libraries, such as LAM/MPI, MPICH2, OpenMPI, etc.
• TBB - demonstrate how to interface a simple application with the Intel Threading Building Blocks library
(TBB), and organise MT event-level parallelism as TBB tasks
• ThreadsafeScorers - demonstrates a very simple application where an energy deposit and # of steps is accounted
in thread-local (i.e. one instance per thread) hits maps with underlying types of plain-old data (POD) and global
(i.e. one instance) hits maps with underlying types of atomics.
• TopC - set of examples (ParN02 and ParN04) derived from novice using parallelism at event level with the
TopC application
10.3.15 Parameterisations
• Par01 - Demonstrates the use of parameterisation facilities. (It was moved in extended examples from
novice/N05 with removal of novice examples.)
• Par02 - Shows how to do “track and energy smearing” in GEANT4, in order to have a very fast simulation based
on assumed detector resolutions.
• Gflash - Demonstrates the use of the GFLASH parameterisation library. It uses the GFLASH equations (hep-
ex/0001020, Grindhammer & Peters) to parametrise electromagnetic showers in matter
10.3.16 Persistency
• General ReadMe
• GDML - examples set (G01, G02, G03 and G04) illustrating import and export of a detector geometry with
GDML, and how to extend the GDML schema or use the auxiliary information field for defining additional
persistent properties
• P01 - storing calorimeter hits using reflection mechanism with Root
• P02 - storing detector description using reflection mechanism with Root
• P03 - illustrating import and export of a detector geometry using ASCII text description and syntax
• General ReadMe
• factory - demonstrates the usage of G4PhysListFactory to build the concrete physics list.
• extensibleFactory - demonstrates the usage of extensible g4alt::G4PhysListFactory to build a concrete physics
list. It also demonstrates the setting of an alternative “default” physics list; extending existing lists by
adding/replacing physics constructors; and extending the factory with user supplied physics lists.
• genericPL - demonstrates the usage of G4GenericPhysicsList to build the concrete physics list at the run time.
10.3.18 Polarisation
• Pol01 - interaction of polarized beam (e.g. circularly polarized photons) with polarized target
• RE01 - information between primary particles and hits and usage of user-information classes
• RE02 - simplified fixed target application for demonstration of primitive scorers
• RE03 - use of UI-command based scoring; showing how to create parallel world(s) for defining scoring mesh(es)
• RE04 - demonstrating how to define a layered mass geometry in parallel world
• RE05 - demonstrating interfacing to the PYTHIA primary generator, definition of a ‘readout’ geometry, event
filtering using the stacking mechanism. (It was moved in extended examples from novice/N04 with removal of
novice examples.)
• RE06 - demonstrating how to modify part of the geometry setup at run-time, detector description parameteri-
sation by materials, sharing of a sensitive detector definition for different sub-detectors, different geometrical
regions definition with different production thresholds, customization of the G4Run (It was moved in extended
examples from novice/N07 with removal of novice examples.)
10.3.21 Visualization
• General ReadMe - examples (perspective, standalone and userVisAction) of customisation for visualization
GEANT4 advanced examples illustrate realistic applications of GEANT4 in typical experimental environments. Most
of them also show the usage of analysis tools (such as histograms, ntuples and plotting), various visualization features
and advanced user interface facilities, together with the simulation core.
Note: Maintenance and updates of the code is under the responsibility of the authors. These applications are therefore
not subject to regular system testing and no guarantee can be provided.
of fundamentals quantities of interest: 3D dose distributions, fluences, and average LET for both primary and
secondary particles, etc.. A typical beamline for laser-driven ion beams is also included in this last version.
• human_phantom, implementing an Anthropomorphic Phantom body built importing the description from a
GDML representation.
• iort_therapy, specifically developed to address typical needs related to the IntraOperative Radio-Therapy (IORT)
technique. This technique delivers a single dose of radiation directly to the tumor bed, or to the exposed tumor,
during surgery. The idea of iort_therapy is to provide a useful tool for Users interested to radiation dosimetry,
dose planning and radio-protection studies in IORT. In fact, the application allows to reconstruct dose distri-
bution curves in water or other materials, to plan dose distribution in the tumor treatment region with different
clinical set-up, and to optimize radio-protection of normal patient tissues simulating a composite metallic shield-
ing disc. iort_therapy simulates the collimator beam line system of a typical medical mobile linac, the phantom,
the detector and the composite metallic shielding disc. Via external macro commands it is possible to change
the physic models, the collimator beam line, the phantom, the detector and shielding disc geometries, the vi-
sualization, the beam particle characteristics, and to activate the Graphical Users Interface (QT libraries are
requested)
• lAr_calorimeter, simulating the Forward Liquid Argon Calorimeter (FCAL) of the ATLAS Detector at LHC.
• medical_linac, illustrating a typical medical physics application simulating energy deposit in a Phantom filled
with water for a typical linac used for intensity modulated radiation therapy. The experimental set-up is very
similar to one used in clinical practice.
• microbeam, simulates the cellular irradiation beam line installed on the AIFIRA electrostatic accelerator facility
located at CENBG, Bordeaux-Gradignan, France.
• microelectronics, simulates the track of a 5 MeV proton in silicon using very low energy electromagnetic
GEANT4 MicroElec processes. It illustrates how to combine these discrete processes with usual GEANT4 con-
densed history ones, using different processes for different regions of the geometry and different energy ranges.
• nanobeam, simulates the beam optics of the “nanobeam line” installed on the AIFIRA electrostatic accelerator
facility located at CENBG, Bordeaux-Gradignan, France.
• purging_magnet, illustrating an application that simulates electrons traveling through a 3D magnetic field; used
in a medical environment for simulating a strong purging magnet in a treatment head.
• radioprotection, illustrating the response characterization of a novel diamond microdosimeter for radiation pro-
tection in human space missions and aviation.
• underground_physics, illustrating an underground detector for dark matter searches.
• xray_fluorescence, illustrating the emission of X-ray fluorescence and PIXE.
• xray_telescope, illustrating an application for the study of the radiation background in a typical X-ray telescope.
The old “novice” set of examples is now replaced with a new “basic” set, covering the most typical use-cases of a
GEANT4 application with keeping simplicity and ease of use.
The source code of the last version of the novice examples set (in 9.6.p02 release) can be viewed in the GEANT4 LXR
code browser.
The new location of each example in 10.0 release:
• N01 - removed
• N02 - basic/B2
• N03 - basic/B4
• N04 - extended/runAndEvent/RE05
• N05 - extended/parameterisations/Par01
• N06 - extended/optical/OpNovice
• N07 - extended/runAndEvent/RE06
ELEVEN
APPENDIX
CLHEP is a set of Class Libraries containing many basic classes for use in High Energy Physics.
CLHEP started in 1992 as a library for fundamental classes mostly needed for, and in fact derived from, the MC
event generator MC++ written in C++. Since then various authors added classes to this package, including several
contributions made by developers in the GEANT4 Collaboration.
The GEANT4 project contributed to the development of CLHEP. The random number package, physics units and
constants, and some of the numeric and geometry classes had their origins in GEANT4.
GEANT4 also benefits from the development of CLHEP. In addition to the already mentioned classes for random
numbers and numerics, we use the classes for points, vectors, and planes and their transformations in 3D space, and
Lorentz vectors and their transformations. Although these classes have GEANT4 names like G4ThreeVector, these are
just typedefs to the CLHEP classes.
Since release 9.5 of GEANT4, the relevant classes of the CLHEP libraries are distributed as embedded module within
GEANT4. It is therefore no longer necessary to build and link against an external CLHEP installation (solution which
is still supported as option).
The Geant4Config.cmake file installed by GEANT4 is designed to be used with CMake’s find_package
command. When used, it sets several CMake variables and provides a mechanism for checking and activating optional
features of GEANT4. This allows you to use it in many ways in your CMake project to configure GEANT4 for use by
your application.
The most basic usage of Geant4Config.cmake in a CMakeLists.txt file is just to locate GEANT4 with no require-
ments on its existence, version number or components
find_package(Geant4)
393
Book For Application Developers, Release 10.5
This will cause CMake to fail with an error should an install of GEANT4 not be located. By default, CMake will look
in several platform dependent locations for the Geant4Config.cmake file (see find_package for listings). If these
are not sufficient to locate your install of GEANT4, then the Geant4_DIR or CMAKE_PREFIX_PATH variables may
be used. For example, if we have an install of GEANT4 located in
+- opt/
+- Geant4/
+- lib/
+- libG4global.so
+- ...
+- Geant4-G4VERSION/
+- Geant4Config.cmake
A typical use case for these variables is to automatically set the dataset environment variables for your applica-
tion without the use of setup scripts. This could typically be via a shell script wrapper around your application,
or runtime configuration of the application environment via the relevant C/C++ API for your system.
The typical usage of find_package and these variables to configure a build requiring GEANT4 is thus:
find_package(Geant4 REQUIRED) # Find Geant4
include_directories(${Geant4_INCLUDE_DIRS}) # Add -I type paths
add_definitions(${Geant4_DEFINITIONS}) # Add -D type defs
set(CMAKE_CXX_FLAGS ${Geant4_CXX_FLAGS}) # Optional
would make CMake search for a GEANT4 install whose version number is greater than or equal to 10.0. An exact
version number may also be specified:
find_package(Geant4 10.4.0 EXACT REQUIRED)
In both cases, CMake will fail with an error if a GEANT4 install meeting these version requirements is not located.
GEANT4 can be installed with many optional components, and the presence of these can also be required by passing
extra “component” arguments. For example, to require that GEANT4 is found and that it provides the Qt UI and
visualization drivers, we can do
find_package(Geant4 REQUIRED qt)
In this case, if CMake finds a GEANT4 install that does not support Qt, it will fail with an error. Multiple component
arguments can be supplied, for example
find_package(Geant4 REQUIRED qt gdml)
requires that we find a GEANT4 install that supports both Qt and GDML. If the components are found, any
needed header paths, libraries and compile definitions required to use the component are appended to the vari-
ables Geant_INCLUDE_DIRS, Geant4_LIBRARIES and Geant4_DEFINITIONS respectively. Variables
Geant4_<COMPONENTNAME>_FOUND are set to TRUE if component <COMPONENTNAME> is supported by the
installation.
If you want to activate options only if they exist, you can use the pattern
find_package(Geant4 REQUIRED)
find_package(Geant4 QUIET COMPONENTS qt)
which will require CMake to locate a core install of GEANT4, and then check for and activate Qt support if the install
provides it, continuing without error otherwise. A key thing to note here is that you can call find_package multiple
times to append configuration of components. If you use this pattern and need to check if a component was found, you
can use the Geant4_<COMPONENTNAME>_FOUND variables described earlier to check the support.
The components which can be supplied to find_package for GEANT4 are as follows:
• static
Geant4_static_FOUND is TRUE if the install of GEANT4 provides static libraries.
Use of this component forces the variable Geant4_LIBRARIES to contain static libraries, if they are available.
It can therefore be used to force static linking if your application requires this, but note that this does not
guarantee that static version of third party libraries will be used.
• multithreaded
Geant4_multithreaded_FOUND is TRUE if the install of GEANT4 was built with multithreading support.
Note that this only indicates availability of multithreading support and activates the required compiler definition
to build a multithreaded GEANT4 application. Multithreading in your application requires creation and usage of
the appropriate C++ objects and interfaces as described in the Application Developers Guide.
• usolids
Geant4_usolids_FOUND is TRUE if the install of GEANT4 was built with VecGeom replacing the
GEANT4 solids.
Note that this only indicates that the replacement of GEANT4 solids with VecGeom has taken place.
Further information on the use of VecGeom in applications is provided in the Application Developers
Guide.
• gdml
Geant4_gdml_FOUND is TRUE if the install of GEANT4 was built with GDML support.
• g3tog4
Geant4_g3tog4_FOUND is TRUE if the install of GEANT4 provides the G3ToG4 library. If so, the G3ToG4
library is added to Geant4_LIBRARIES.
• freetype
Geant4_freetype_FOUND is TRUE if the install of GEANT4 was built with Freetype support.
• hdf5
Geant4_hdf5_FOUND is TRUE if the install of GEANT4 was built with HDF5 support.
• ui_tcsh
Geant4_ui_tcsh_FOUND is TRUE if the install of GEANT4 provides the TCsh command line User Interface.
Using this component allows use of the TCsh command line interface in the linked application.
• ui_win32
Geant4_ui_win32_FOUND is TRUE if the install of GEANT4 provides the Win32 command line User Inter-
face. Using this component allows use of the Win32 command line interface in the linked application.
• motif
Geant4_motif_FOUND is TRUE if the install of GEANT4 provides the Motif(Xm) User Interface and Visu-
alization driver. Using this component allows use of the Motif User Interface and Visualization Driver in the
linked application.
• qt
Geant4_qt_FOUND is TRUE if the install of GEANT4 provides the Qt User Interface and Visualization driver.
Using this component allows use of the Qt User Interface and Visualization Driver in the linked application.
• wt
Geant4_wt_FOUND is TRUE if the install of GEANT4 provides the Wt Web User Interface and Visualiza-
tion driver. Using this component allows use of the Wt User Interface and Visualization Driver in the linked
application.
• vis_dawn_network
Geant4_vis_dawn_network_FOUND is TRUE if the install of GEANT4 provides the Client/Server network
interface to DAWN visualization. Using this component allows use of the Client/Server DAWN Visualization
Driver in the linked application.
• vis_vrml_network
Geant4_vis_vrml_network_FOUND is TRUE if the install of GEANT4 provides the Client/Server network
interface to VRML visualization. Using this component allows use of the Client/Server VRML Visualization
Driver in the linked application.
• vis_raytracer_x11
Geant4_vis_raytracer_x11_FOUND is TRUE if the install of GEANT4 provides the X11 interface to the
RayTracer Visualization driver. Using this component allows use of the RayTracer X11 Visualization Driver in
the linked application.
• vis_opengl_x11
Geant4_vis_opengl_x11_FOUND is TRUE if the install of GEANT4 provides the X11 interface to the
OpenGL Visualization driver. Using this component allows use of the X11 OpenGL Visualization Driver in the
linked application.
• vis_opengl_win32
Geant4_vis_opengl_win32_FOUND is TRUE if the install of GEANT4 provides the Win32 interface to
the OpenGL Visualization driver. Using this component allows use of the Win32 OpenGL Visualization Driver
in the linked application.
• vis_openinventor
Geant4_vis_openinventor_FOUND is TRUE if the install of GEANT4 provides the OpenInventor Vi-
sualization driver. Using this component allows use of the OpenInventor Visualization Driver in the linked
application.
• ui_all
Activates all available UI drivers. Does not set any variables, and never causes CMake to fail.
• vis_all
Activates all available Visualization drivers. Does not set any variables, and never causes CMake to fail.
Please note that whilst the above aims to give a complete summary of the functionality of Geant4Config.cmake,
it only gives a sampling of the ways in which you may use it, and other CMake functionality, to configure your
application. We also welcome feedback, suggestions for improvement and bug reports on Geant4Config.cmake.
The preceding sections show the minimal CMake scripting required to configure, build and install an application
linking against the GEANT4 libraries. If your project requires more advanced configuration, CMake provides tools such
as compiler/platform identification and location of additional libraries/executables to link to/use. As this document
is specific to GEANT4, we do not cover more advanced usage of CMake and recommend that you consult the online
manuals and tutorials supplied by Kitware.
In particular, for the common use case of finding and using an external software package, see the documentation of
the find_package command, overview of CMake’s package location functionality, and the list of packages CMake
knows about out of the box. Location and use of a required package works exactly as we have illustrated for GEANT4.
Simply add the required find_package call to your CMake script, and use the supplied variables or targets for
headers paths and library linking, e.g.
find_package(Foo 1.2 REQUIRED) # Find "Foo" of at least version 1.2
find_package(Bar 3.4 EXACT REQUIRED) # Find "Bar" at exactly version 3.4
You should consult the documentation of the packages your project requires to see if they supply suitable CMake
configuration files. If they do not, then CMake provide documentation on writing modules to find packages that do not
supply these files. GEANT4 cannot provide support for any third party package your project uses, and any questions
should be direct to that package’s authors.
A typical use case for GEANT4 developers is to build small testing applications against a fresh build of GEANT4. If
rebuilds are frequent, then the testing application builds are also frequent.
CMake can be used to build these test applications using find_package and Geant4Config.cmake, as a special
version of the latter is created in the GEANT4 build directory. This sets up the variables to point to the headers in the
GEANT4 source directory, and the freshly built libraries in the current build directory.
Applications may therefore be built against a non-installed build of GEANT4 by running CMake for the application
and setting Geant4_DIR to point to the current build directory of GEANT4.
This section describes how the GEANT4 GNUMake infrastructure is implemented in GEANT4 and provides a quick
reference guide for the user about the most important environment variables that can be set to configure its behaviour.
This system is now deprecated, though it is still provided through the SVN repository for developers, and is installed
by CMake to provide temporary backward compatibility for user applications.
As described in How to Define the main() Program of the Installation Guide, the GNUmake process in GEANT4 is
mainly controlled by the following GNUmake script files (*.gmk scripts are placed in $G4INSTALL/config):
• architecture.gmk: defining all the architecture specific settings and paths. System settings are stored in
$G4INSTALL/config/sys in separate files.
• common.gmk: defining all general GNUmake rules for building objects and libraries.
• globlib.gmk: defining all general GNUmake rules for building compound libraries.
• binmake.gmk: defining the general GNUmake rules for building executables.
• GNUmake scripts: placed inside each directory in the G4 distribution and defining directives specific to build a
library (or a set of sub-libraries) or and executable.
To build a single library (or a set of sub-libraries) or an executable, you must explicitly change your current directory
to the one you’re interested in and invoke the “make” command from there (“make global” for building a com-
pound library). Here is a list of the basic commands or GNUmake “targets” one can invoke to build libraries and/or
executables:
• make
starts the compilation process for building a kernel library or a library associated with an example. Kernel
libraries are built with maximum granularity, i.e. if a category is a compound, this command will build all
the related sub-libraries, not the compound one. The top level GNUmakefile in $G4INSTALL/source
will also build in this case a dependency map libname.map of each library to establish the linking order
automatically at the bin step. The map will be placed in $G4LIB/$G4SYSTEM.
• make global
starts the compilation process to build a single compound kernel library per category. If issued after “make”,
both ‘granular’ and ‘compound’ libraries will be available (NOTE: this will consistently increase the disk space
required. Compound libraries will then be selected by default at link time, unless G4LIB_USE_GRANULAR
is specified).
• make bin or make (only for examples/)
starts the compilation process to build an executable. This command will build implicitly the library associated
with the example and link the final application. It assumes all kernel libraries are already generated and placed
in the correct $G4INSTALL path defined for them.
The linking order is controlled automatically in case libraries have been built with maximum granularity, and
the link list is generated on the fly.
• make dll
On Windows systems this will start the compilation process to build single compound kernel library per category
and generate Dynamic Link Libraries (DLLs). Once the libraries are generated, the process will imply also the
deletion of all temporary files generated during the compilation.
The $G4INSTALL environment variable specifies where the installation of the GEANT4 toolkit should take place,
therefore kernel libraries will be placed in $G4INSTALL/lib. The $G4WORKDIR environment variable is set by
the user and specifies the path to the user working directory; temporary files (object-files and data products of the instal-
lation process of GEANT4) will be placed in $G4WORKDIR/tmp, according to the system architecture used. Binaries
will be placed in $G4WORKDIR/bin, according to the system architecture used. The path to $G4WORKDIR/bin/
$G4SYSTEM should be added to $PATH in the user environment.
Here is a list of the most important environment variables defined within the GEANT4 GNUmake infrastructure, with
a short explanation of their use.
Warning: We recommend that those environment variables listed here and marked with (*) NOT be overridden
or set (explicitly or by accident). They are already set and used internally in the default setup !
System configuration
$CLHEP_BASE_DIR Specifies the path where the CLHEP package is installed in your system.
$USOLIDS_BASE_DIR Specifies the path where the USolids package is installed in your system.
$G4SYSTEM Defines the architecture and compiler currently used.
Note: This variable is set automatically if the Configure script is adopted for the installation. This will result in
the proper settings also for configuring the environment with the generated shell scripts env.[c]sh.
Installation paths
$G4INSTALL Defines the path where the GEANT4 toolkit is located. It should be set by the system installer. By
default, it sets to $HOME/geant4, assuming the GEANT4 distribution is placed in $HOME .
$G4BASE (*) Defines the path to the source code. Internally used to define $CPPFLAGS and $LDFLAGS for -I and
-L directives. It has to be set to $G4INSTALL/src.
$G4WORKDIR Defines the path for the user’s workdir for GEANT4. It is set by default to $HOME/geant4, as-
suming the user’s working directory for GEANT4 is placed in $HOME.
$G4INCLUDE Defines the path where source header files may be mirrored at installation by issuing gmake
includes (default is set to $G4INSTALL/include)
$G4BIN, $G4BINDIR (*) Used by the system to specify the place where to store executables. By default they’re
set to $G4WORKDIR/bin and $G4BIN/$G4SYSTEM respectively. The path to $G4WORKDIR/bin/
$G4SYSTEM should be added to $PATH in the user environment. $G4BIN can be overridden.
$G4TMP, $G4TMPDIR (*) Used by the system to specify the place where to store temporary files products of the
compilation/build of a user application or test. By default they’re set to $G4WORKDIR/tmp and $G4TMP/
$G4SYSTEM respectively. $G4TMP can be overridden.
$G4LIB, $G4LIBDIR (*) Used by the system to specify the place where to install libraries. By default they’re set to
$G4INSTALL/lib and $G4LIB/$G4SYSTEM respectively. $G4LIB can be overridden.
Build specific
$G4TARGET Specifies the target (name of the source file defining the main()) of the application/example to be built.
This variable is set automatically for the examples and tests placed in $G4INSTALL/examples .
$G4DEBUG Specifies to compile the code (libraries or examples) including symbolic information in the object code
for debugging. The size of the generated object code can increase considerably. By default, code is compiled in
optimised mode ($G4OPTIMISE set).
$G4OPTDEBUG Only available for the g++ compiler, specifies to compile the code (libraries or examples) in opti-
mised mode, but including symbolic information in the object code for debugging.
$G4USE_STD11 Specifies to compile the code (libraries or examples) with C++11 Standard enabled on compilers
supporting the C++11 Standard.
$G4NO_OPTIMISE Specifies to compile the code (libraries or examples) without compiler optimisation.
$G4PROFILE On Linux systems with the g++ compiler, it allows to build libraries with profiling setup for monitor-
ing with the gprof tool.
$G4_NO_VERBOSE GEANT4 code is compiled by default in high verbosity mode ($G4VERBOSE flag set). For
better performance, verbosity code can be left out by defining $G4_NO_VERBOSE.
$G4LIB_BUILD_SHARED Flag specifying if to build kernel libraries as shared libraries (libraries will be then used
by default). If not set, static archive libraries are built by default.
$G4LIB_BUILD_STATIC Flag specifying if to build kernel libraries as static archive libraries in addition to shared
libraries (in case $G4LIB_BUILD_SHARED is set as well).
$G4LIB_BUILD_DLL (*) Internal flag for specifying to build DLL kernel libraries for Windows systems. The flag
is automatically set when requested to build DLLs.
$G4LIB_USE_DLL For Windows systems only. Flag to specify to build an application using the installed DLL ker-
nel libraries for Windows systems. It is required to have this flag set in the environment in order to successfully
build an application if the DLL libraries have been installed.
$G4LIB_USE_GRANULAR To force usage of “granular” libraries against “compound” libraries at link time in case
both have been installed. The GEANT4 building system chooses “compound” libraries by default, if installed.
UI specific
The most relevant flags for User Interface drivers are just listed here. A more detailed description is given also in
section 2. of this User’s Guide.
G4UI_USE_TERMINAL Specifies to use dumb terminal interface in the application to be built (default).
G4UI_USE_TCSH Specifies to use the tcsh-shell like interface in the application to be built.
G4UI_BUILD_XM_SESSION Specifies to include in kernel library the XM Motif-based user interfaces.
G4UI_USE_XM Specifies to use the XM interfaces in the application to be built.
G4UI_BUILD_WIN32_SESSION Specifies to include in kernel library the WIN32 terminal interface for Windows
systems.
G4UI_USE_WIN32 Specifies to use the WIN32 interfaces in the application to be built on Windows systems.
G4UI_BUILD_QT_SESSION Specifies to include in kernel library the Qt terminal interface. $QTHOME should
specify the path where Qt libraries and headers are installed
G4UI_USE_QT Specifies to use the Qt interfaces in the application to be built.
G4UI_NONE If set, no UI sessions nor any UI libraries are built. This can be useful when running a pure batch job
or in a user framework having its own UI system.
Visualization specific
The most relevant flags for visualization graphics drivers are just listed here. A description of these variables is given
also in section 2. of this User’s Guide.
$G4VIS_BUILD_OPENGLX_DRIVER Specifies to build kernel library for visualization including the OpenGL
driver with X11 extension. It requires $OGLHOME set (path to OpenGL installation).
$G4VIS_USE_OPENGLX Specifies to use OpenGL graphics with X11 extension in the application to be built.
$G4VIS_BUILD_OPENGLXM_DRIVER Specifies to build kernel library for visualization including the OpenGL
driver with XM extension. It requires $OGLHOME set (path to OpenGL installation).
$G4VIS_USE_OPENGLXM Specifies to use OpenGL graphics with XM extension in the application to be built.
G4VIS_BUILD_OPENGLQT_DRIVER Specifies to build kernel library for visualization including the OpenGL
driver with Qt extension. It requires $QTHOME set to specify the path where Qt libraries and headers are
installed.
G4VIS_USE_OPENGLQT Specifies to use OpenGL graphics with Qt extension in the application to be built.
$G4VIS_BUILD_OI_DRIVER Specifies to build kernel library for visualization including the OpenInventor driver.
It requires $OIHOME set (paths to the OpenInventor installation).
$G4VIS_USE_OI Specifies to use OpenInventor graphics in the application to be built.
$G4VIS_BUILD_OIX_DRIVER Specifies to build the driver for the free X11 version of OpenInventor.
$G4VIS_USE_OIX Specifies to use the free X11 version of OpenInventor.
$G4VIS_BUILD_RAYTRACERX_DRIVER Specifies to build kernel library for visualization including the Ray-
Tracer driver with X11 extension. It requires X11 installed in the system.
$G4VIS_USE_RAYTRACERX Specifies to use the X11 version of the Ray-Tracer driver.
$G4VIS_BUILD_OIWIN32_DRIVER Specifies to build the driver for the free X11 version of OpenInventor on
Windows systems.
$G4VIS_USE_OIWIN32 Specifies to use the free X11 version of OpenInventor on Windows systems.
$G4VIS_BUILD_DAWN_DRIVER Specifies to build kernel library for visualization including the driver for
DAWN.
$G4VIS_USE_DAWN Specifies to use DAWN as a possible graphics renderer in the application to be built.
$G4DAWN_HOST_NAME To specify the hostname for use with the DAWN-network driver.
$G4VIS_NONE If specified, no visualization drivers will be built or used.
$G4NEUTRONHP_SKIP_MISSING_ISOTOPES User can force high precision neutron code to use only exact
isotope data files instead of allowing nearby isotope files to be used. If the exact file is not available, the cross
section will be set to zero and a warning message will be printed.
$G4NEUTRONHP_NEGLECT_DOPPLER Sets neglecting Doppler broadening mode for boosting performance.
$G4LIB_BUILD_GDML If set, triggers compilation of a plugin module gdml for allowing import/export of detec-
tor description setups (geometrical volumes, solids, materials, etc.). By default, the flag is not set; if set, the path
to the installation of XercesC package must be specified through the variable $XERCESCROOT.
$G4LIB_USE_GDML Specifies to use the gdml module. The flag is automatically set if $G4LIB_BUILD_GDML
is set in the environment.
$G4LIB_USE_USOLIDS Specifies to adopt the USolids primitives in place of the original GEANT4 solids.
$G4LIB_BUILD_ZLIB If set, triggers compilation of a specific zlib module for the compression of output files
(mainly in use currently for the HepRep graphics driver). By default, the flag is not set and the built-in system
library for compression is adopted instead. Setting this flag will also implicitly set the flag below. On Windows
systems, if OpenGL or OpenInventor visualization drivers are built, this module is automatically built.
$G4LIB_USE_ZLIB Specifies to use the zlib module, either system built-in or GEANT4 specific.
$G4LIB_BUILD_G3TOG4 If set, triggers compilation of the g3tog4 module for conversions of simple legacy
geometries descriptions to GEANT4. By default, the flag is not set and the module’s library is not built. Setting
this flag will also implicitly set the flag below.
$G4LIB_USE_G3TOG4 Specifies to use the g3tog4 module, assuming the related library has been already in-
stalled.
Analysis specific
The GEANT4 GNUmake infrastructure allows to extend the link list of libraries with external (or user defined) packages
which may be required for some user’s applications to generate the final executable.
In the GNUmakefile of your application, before including binmake.gmk, specify the extra library in EXTRALIBS
either using the -L...-l... syntax or by specifying the full pathname, e.g.:
EXTRALIBS := -L<your-path>/lib -l<myExtraLib>
or
EXTRALIBS := <your-path>/lib/lib<myExtraLib>.a
You may also specify EXTRA_LINK_DEPENDENCIES, which is added to the dependency of the target executable,
and you may also specify a rule for making it, e.g.:
EXTRA_LINK_DEPENDENCIES := <your-path>/lib/lib<myExtraLib>.a
<your-path>/lib/lib<myExtraLib>.a:
cd <your-path>/lib; $(MAKE)
Note that you almost certainly need to augment CPPFLAGS for the header files of the external library, e.g.:
CPPFLAGS+=-I<your-path>/include
name := sim
G4TARGET := $(name)
G4EXLIB := true
CPPFLAGS += -I$(HOME)/Xplotter/include
EXTRALIBS += -L$(HOME)/Xplotter/lib -lXplotter
EXTRA_LINK_DEPENDENCIES := $(HOME)/Xplotter/lib/libXplotter.a
.PHONY: all
include $(G4INSTALL)/config/binmake.gmk
$(HOME)/Xplotter/lib/libXplotter.a:
cd $(HOME)/Xplotter; $(MAKE)
In addition to the above, specify, in EXTRALIBSSOURCEDIRS, a list of directories containing source files in its
src/ subdirectory. Thus, your GNUmakefile might contain:
EXTRALIBS += $(G4WORKDIR)/tmp/$(G4SYSTEM)/<myApp>/lib<myApp>.a \
-L<your-path>/lib -l<myExtraLib>
EXTRALIBSSOURCEDIRS += <your-path>/<myApp> <your-path>/<MyExtraModule>
EXTRA_LINK_DEPENDENCIES := $(G4WORKDIR)/tmp/$(G4SYSTEM)/<myApp>/lib<myApp>.a
name := phys
G4TARGET := $(name)
G4EXLIB := true
EXTRALIBS += $(G4WORKDIR)/tmp/$(G4SYSTEM)/$(name)/libphys.a \
-L$(HOME)/reco/lib -lreco
EXTRALIBSSOURCEDIRS += $(HOME)/phys $(HOME)/reco
EXTRA_LINK_DEPENDENCIES := $(G4WORKDIR)/tmp/$(G4SYSTEM)/$(name)/libphys.a
.PHONY: all
all: lib bin
include $(G4INSTALL)/config/binmake.gmk
Although not in the scope of this user manual, in this appendix section we provide a set of references to rather known
and established development tools and environments we think are useful for code development in C++ in general. It’s
a rather limited list, far from being complete of course.
11.4.1 Unix/Linux
11.4.2 Windows
Python is a popular scripting language with an interactive interpreter. Geant4Py, a GEANT4-Python bridge, provides a
bridge for GEANT4 classes. This enables to directly access GEANT4 classes from Python scripting. User applications
can be easily configured with many Python third-party modules, such as PyROOT, on the Python software bus.
Geant4Py is supplied in the directory environments/g4py/ of the GEANT4 source package.
11.5.1 Installation
Software Requirements
Geant4Py requires the Boost-C++ external library, which helps Python binding of C++ codes.
Building system is completely migrated to CMake system. Before building library, GEANT4_INSTALL environment
variable should be set to the path specified by “CMAKE_INSTALL_PREFIX” when building GEANT4.
# export GEANT4_INSTALL="Geant4 install path" (zsh, bash)
# setenv GEANT4_INSTALL "Geant4 install path" (csh)
Then
# mkdir build
# cd build
# cmake ..
# make
# make install
PYTHONPATH environment variable should be set at tun time. PYTHONPATH environment variable in-
dicates Python module search directories, given by a colon-separated list of directories. Practically, the
variable is (your g4py directory)/lib:(your g4py directory)/lib/examples:(your g4py
directory)/lib/tests.
Import GEANT4
To use Geant4Py, you start with importing the module called “Geant4”.
# python
Python 2.7.5 (default, Mar 9 2014, 22:15:05)
[GCC 4.2.1 Compatible Apple LLVM 5.0 (clang-500.0.68)] on darwin
Type "help", "copyright", "credits" or "license" for more information.
>>> from Geant4 import *
(continues on next page)
*************************************************************
Geant4 version Name: geant4-10-01 (5-December-2014)
Copyright : Geant4 Collaboration
Reference : NIM A 506 (2003), 250-303
WWW : http://cern.ch/geant4
*************************************************************
When importing the GEANT4 module, the G4RunManager object will be automatically instantiated. GEANT4 sin-
gleton objects are also automatically instantiated. These singleton objects can be accessed by “gXXXX” variables,
like “gRunManager”.
. gLossTableManager gTerminate
gApplyUICommand gMaterialTable gTrackingManager
gControlExecute gNistManager gTransportationManager
gElementTable gParticleIterator gUImanager
gEmCalculator gParticleTable gVisManager
gEventManager gProcessTable
gExceptionHandler gProductionCutsTable
gG4Date gRunManager
gG4VERSION_NUMBER gRunManagerKernel
gG4Version gStackManager
gGeometryManager gStartUISession
gGetCurrentValues gStateManager
Once a Python object of a GEANT4 class instantiated, GEANT4 methods can be directly called the same way as in
C++.
>>> from Geant4 import *
*************************************************************
Geant4 version Name: geant4-10-01 (5-December-2014)
Copyright : Geant4 Collaboration
Reference : NIM A 506 (2003), 250-303
WWW : http://cern.ch/geant4
*************************************************************
11.5.3 Site-modules
Geant4Py provides additional utility modules called “g4py” in the directory site-modules. It consists of prede-
fined geometries, materials, physics lists, primary generator actions, and so on.
ezgeom module
The ezgeom module provides an alternative way of defining simple geometry. An example code for defining a simple
geometry is shown here:
import g4py.ezgeom
from g4py.ezgeom import G4EzVolume
def ConstructGeom():
print "* Constructing geometry..."
# reset world material
air= G4Material.GetMaterial("G4_AIR")
g4py.ezgeom.SetWorldMaterial(air)
NISTmaterials module
The NISTmaterials module provides an instant use of GEANT4 NIST materials. An example code for creating NIST
materials:
from Geant4 import *
import g4py.NISTmaterials
g4py.NISTmaterials.Construct()
print Geant4.gMaterialTable
ParticleGun module
The ParticleGun module provides a primary generator action with G4ParticleGun. An example code is shown
here:
import g4py.ParticleGun
11.5.4 Examples
There are some examples of Geant4Py in the directories "tests/" and "examples/".
=============================================================
Ncomp Name density(g/cm^3) I(eV) ChFormula
=============================================================
6 G4_A-150_TISSUE 1.127 65.1
1 0.101327
6 0.7755
7 0.035057
8 0.0523159
9 0.017422
20 0.018378
3 G4_ACETONE 0.7899 64.2
6 3
1 6
8 1
2 G4_ACETYLENE 0.0010967 58.2
6 2
1 2
3 G4_ADENINE 1.6 71.4
(continues on next page)
=============================================================
Ncomp Name density(g/cm^3) I(eV) ChFormula
=============================================================
1 G4_lH2 0.0708 21.8
1 G4_lN2 0.807 82
1 G4_lO2 1.141 95
1 G4_lAr 1.396 188
1 G4_lBr 3.1028 343
1 G4_lKr 2.418 352
1 G4_lXe 2.953 482
3 G4_PbWO4 8.28 0
8 4
82 1
74 1
1 G4_Galactic 1e-25 21.8
1 G4_GRAPHITE_POROUS 1.7 78 Graphite
3 G4_LUCITE 1.19 74
1 0.080538
6 0.599848
8 0.319614
3 G4_BRASS 8.52 0
29 62
(continues on next page)
=============================================================
Ncomp Name density(g/cm^3) I(eV) ChFormula
=============================================================
4 G4_KEVLAR 1.44 0
6 14
1 10
8 2
7 2
3 G4_DACRON 1.4 0
6 10
1 8
8 4
3 G4_NEOPRENE 1.23 0
6 4
1 5
17 1
=============================================================
Ncomp Name density(g/cm^3) I(eV) ChFormula
=============================================================
4 G4_CYTOSINE 1.55 72
1 5
6 4
7 3
8 1
4 G4_THYMINE 1.23 72
1 6
6 5
7 2
8 2
4 G4_URACIL 1.32 72
1 4
6 4
7 2
8 2
3 G4_DNA_ADENINE 1 72
1 4
(continues on next page)
This method is new in Geant4 release 10.5, and uses the G4PhysicsListHelper which has methods to choose a pre-
selected set of parameter values. The choices are between a set each of low and high thresholds. Either one can be
enabled by calling correspondingly method.
It is possible to select a set of pre-selected values of the parameters for looping particles using
New functionality in G4PhysicsListHelper, introduced in Geant4 release 10.5, enables the Transportation pro-
cess chosen to be provided with this set of parameters. This reuses the AddTransportation method, which is
called in each thread.
To configure with low values of the thresholds, appropriate for typical applications using low-energy physics, choose
#include "G4PhysicsListHelper.hh"
plHelper->UseLowLooperThresholds();
//
// Use low values for the thresholds
// Warning 1 keV, Important 1 MeV, trials 10
The original high values of the parameters can be selected with a similar call
plHelper->UseHighLooperThresholds();
//
// Configures with the original (high) values of parameters. Currently:
// Warning 100 MeV, Important 250 MeV, trials 10
11.7.3 Fine grained control of the parameters for killing looping particles
Fine grained control is also possible. The user can choose arbitrary values for the different parametes related to killing
loopers and also refine the integration of charged particle propagation in particular volumes in order to eliminate or
reduce the incidence of looping tracks.
This method will work in all Geant4 versions since 7.0.
To obtain reliable configuration of the G4Transportation (or G4CoupledTransportation ) process in a po-
tentially multi-threaded application, we configure it using a G4VUserRunAction. In particular such configuration
can be undertaken in the BeginOfRunAction methods.
For example, to ensure that only looping particles with energy 10 keV are killed silently we change the value of the
‘Warning’ Energy
transport->SetThresholdWarningEnergy( 1.0 * CLHEP::keV );
As a result the killing of any (stable) looping track with energy over 10 keV will generate a warning.
The second configurable energy threshold is labelled the ‘important’ energy and it enables tracks above its value to
survive a chosen number of ‘tracking’ steps. They will be only be killed only if they are still looping after the given
number of tracking steps.
These are demonstrated also in the F01RunAction’s ChangeLooperParameters method, which is called by the Begi-
nOfRunAction.
To obtain the appropriate Transportation object for a particular particle type G4ParticleDefinition
\*particleDef; we can use a helper method F01RunAction::FindTransportation, or else manually
obtain it :: G4VProcess* partclTransport = particleDef->GetProcessManager()->GetProcess(“Transportation”);
auto transport= dynamic_cast<G4Transportation*>(partclTransport);
In case a different Transportation type is used, e.g. G4CoupledTransportation or G4ITTransportation,
similar code is currently required for each class. ( This is also backward compatible with previous G4 versions. )
Once a pointer is obtained to the transportation process, it is a simple matter to change the values of the relevant
parameters, e.g.
transport->SetThresholdWarningEnergy( 1.0 * CLHEP::keV );
transport->SetThresholdImportantEnergy( 1.0 * CLHEP::MeV );
transport->SetNumberOfTrials( 20 );
Such an example on how to overwrite the thresholds in the G4Transportation class can be found in F01RunAction
‘s .. comment ChangeLooperParameters(const G4ParticleDefinition* particleDef )
ChangeLooperParameters method
if( transport != nullptr )
{
// Change the values of the looping particle parameters of Transportation
transport->SetThresholdWarningEnergy( theWarningEnergy );
transport->SetThresholdImportantEnergy( theImportantEnergy );
transport->SetThresholdTrials( theNumberOfTrials );
}
else if( coupledTransport != nullptr )
{
// Change the values for Coupled Transport
coupledTransport->SetThresholdWarningEnergy( theWarningEnergy );
coupledTransport->SetThresholdImportantEnergy( theImportantEnergy );
coupledTransport->SetThresholdTrials( theNumberOfTrials );
}
.. SetTransportationParams2::
Note that for all pre-configured and modular physics lists share a single Transportation process for all types of particles.
So the parameters for killing loopers will be shared by all particle types in this case.
F01RunAction plays the role of a helper object, which holds the proposed (new) values of parameters, and which
can allow them to be set, e.g., in the main() function
runAction->SetWarningEnergy( 10.0 * CLHEP::keV );
F01RunAction then forwards them to the Transportation object of each thread at the start of each run.
Using a helper object to forward parameter changes
Since the type of the transportation it can be useful to use a helper object to hold the desired values for the parameters
(thresholds, number of iterations), and to forward them to the Transportation class.
This is demonstrated in the class F01RunAction and its ChangeLooperParameters method of the field01
extended example.
It copes with either transportation class, G4Transportation or a G4CoupledTransportation, and passes
new values of parameters as needed.
In field01 the methods of F01RunAction
runAction->SetImportantEnergy( 0.1 * CLHEP::MeV );
runAction->SetNumberOfTrials( 30 );
which the run action passes to the G4Transportation or G4CoupledTransportation object registered for
the electron in F01RunAction ‘s method ChangeLooperParameters.
Avoiding loopers or reducing the incidence of looping particles
There are different ways to reduce the occurence of looping particles. This section will provide an overview, and refer
the user to the detailed information on particle propagation in a magnetic field for details.
Volumes which have a strong field and contain vacuum, large air cavities or large volumes of gases are prime candidates
for causing integration difficulties for low energy charged particles, which result in looping particles.
• A very simple way to reduce the incidence of looping particles is to reduce the maximum step size which
particles that interact very infrequently can travel. Geant4 attempts to estimate an effective maximum using
the diameter of the world volume, and frequently the maximum step size is large if the experimental hall is
used as the world volume and has large dimentions. A smaller value can be impose by using the method.
G4PropagatorInField::SetMaximumStepSize()
• Assign a separate G4FieldManager class to each such volue. It can use adapted methods for the integration
of the ODEs of motion.
• One solution is to use a helical stepper, such as G4HelixImplicitEuler or G4HelixHeum which are
inherently for steps over multiple ‘turns’ of a helix-like track. Their reason d’ etre is the ability to use the helix
solution as baseline ‘first-order’ like solution and treat deviations from this as something like pertubations.
• A different approach is to the G4HelixMixedStepper which combines a helix stepper for large steps with
a Runge-Kutta stepper for small and intermediate step sizes.
TWELVE
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