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Approaches for software based digital signal processing and numerical deconvolution of measured signals which overcome limitations of state-of-the-art systems are described. The basic technical equipment for digital signal processing consists of an energy resolving detector with a preamplifier followed by a fast sampling analogue-to-digital converter (ADC). The main idea is the numerical decomposition of the measured signal into contributions caused by single photon absorption using standard pulses. The latter can be obtained by measurements under definite conditions. The maximum pulse rate is then limited only by the ratio of sampling time to the time between two pulses which should be attributed to single events. Thus pulse overlaps do not require pulse rejection. At sampling rates of 108 samples per second theoretically a comparable photon rate can be detected at throughputs of 100%. Beyond that it is outlined that in a comparable manner a numerical deconvolution of measured energy spectra (statistic distribution functions of single events) into combinations of standard spectra, which can likewise be determined by measurement, offers outstanding possibilities, too. On the one hand the energy resolution attainable for individual events for a given detector can be improved drastically by the statistical treatment of spectra. On the other hand an energy resolving work principle becomes possible for certain detectors, which do not permit this conventionally due to their poor signal to noise ratio.

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