• 제목/요약/키워드: high-energy particle detector (HEPD)

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Development of High Energy Particle Detector for the Study of Space Radiation Storm

  • Jo, Gyeong-Bok;Sohn, Jongdae;Choi, Cheong Rim;Yi, Yu;Min, Kyoung-Wook;Kang, Suk-Bin;Na, Go Woon;Shin, Goo-Hwan
    • Journal of Astronomy and Space Sciences
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    • 제31권3호
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    • pp.277-283
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    • 2014
  • Next Generation Small Satellite-1 (NEXTSat-1) is scheduled to launch in 2017 and Instruments for the Study of Space Storm (ISSS) is planned to be onboard the NEXTSat-1. High Energy Particle Detector (HEPD) is one of the equipment comprising ISSS and the main objective of HEPD is to measure the high energy particles streaming into the Earth radiation belt during the event of a space storm, especially, electrons and protons, to obtain the flux information of those particles. For the design of HEPD, the Geometrical Factor was calculated to be 0.05 to be consistent with the targets of measurement and the structure of telescope with field of view of $33.4^{\circ}$ was designed using this factor. In order to decide the thickness of the detector sensor and the classification of the detection channels, a simulation was performed using GEANT4. Based on the simulation results, two silicon detectors with 1 mm thickness were selected and the aluminum foil of 0.05 mm is placed right in front of the silicon detectors to shield low energy particles. The detection channels are divided into an electron channel and two proton channels based on the measured LET of the particle. If the measured LET is less than 0.8 MeV, the particle belongs to the electron channel, otherwise it belongs to proton channels. HEPD is installed in the direction of $0^{\circ}$, $45^{\circ}$, $90^{\circ}$ against the along-track of a satellite to enable the efficient measurement of high energy particles. HEPD detects electrons with the energy of 0.1 MeV to several MeV and protons with the energy of more than a few MeV. Thus, the study on the dynamic mechanism of these particles in the Earth radiation belt will be performed.

Calibration of HEPD on KOMPSAT-1 Using the KCCH Cyclotron

  • Shin, Young-Hoon;Rhee, Jin-Geun;Min, Kyoung-Wook;Lee, Chun-Sik;Lee, Ju-Hahn;Kwon, Young-Kwan;Kim, Jong-Chan;Ha, Jang-Ho;Park, Se-Hwan;Lee, Chang-Hack;Park, H.S.;Kim, Young-Kyun;Chai, Jong-Seo;Kim, Yu-Seong;Lee, Hye-Young
    • 대한원격탐사학회지
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    • 제15권4호
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    • pp.289-295
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    • 1999
  • Space Physics Sensor (SPS) on-board the KOMPSAT-1 consists of the High Energy Particle Detector (HEPD) and the Ionospheric Measurement Sensor (IMS). The HEPD is to characterize the low altitude high energy particle environment and the effects on the microelectronics due to these high energy particles. It is composed of four sensors: Proton and Electron Spectrometer(PES), Linear Energy Transfer Spectrometer (LET), Total Dose Monitor (TDM), and Single Event Monitor (SEM). 35 MeV proton beam from the medical KCCH cyclotron, at Korea Cancer Center Hospital in Seoul, is used to calibrate the PES. Primary proton beam of 35MeV scattered by polypropylene target is converted to various energy protons according to the elastic collision kinematics. In this calibration, the threshold level of the proton in the PES can be determined and the energy ranges of PES channels are also calibrated.

Calibration of HEPD on KOMPSAT-1 Using the KCCH Cyclotron

  • Shin, Young-Hoon;Rhee, Jin-Geun;Min, Kyoung-Wook;Lee, Chun-Sik;Lee, Ju-Hahn;Kwon, Young-Kwan;Kim, Jong-Chan;Ha, Jang-Ho;Park, Se-Hwan;Lee, Chang-Hack;Park, H.S.;Kim, Yong-Kyun;Chai, Jong-Seo;Kim, Yu-Seog;Lee, Hye-Young
    • 대한원격탐사학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 대한원격탐사학회 1999년도 Proceedings of International Symposium on Remote Sensing
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    • pp.208-213
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    • 1999
  • Space Physics Sensor (SPS) on-board the KOMPSAT-1 consists of the High Energy Particle Detector (HEPD) and the Ionospheric Measurement Sensor (IMS). The HEPD is to characterize the low altitude high energy particle environment and the effects on the microelectronics due to these high energy Particles. It is composed of four sensors: Proton and Electron Spectrometer(PES), Linear Energy Transfer Spectrometer (LET), Total Dose Monitor (TDM), and Single Event Monitor(SEM). 35MeV proton beam from the medical KCCH cyclotron, at Korea Cancer Center Hospital in Seoul, is used to calibrate the PES. Primary proton beam of 35MeV scattered by polypropylene target is converted to various energy Protons according to the elastic collision kinematics. In this calibration, the threshold level of the proton in the PES can be determined and the energy ranges of PES channels are also calibrated.

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다목적 실용위성 1호 탑재 센서의 특성 (Characteristics of Remote Sensors on KOMPSAT-I)

  • 조영민;백홍렬
    • 대한원격탐사학회지
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    • 제12권1호
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    • pp.1-16
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    • 1996
  • 한국항공우주연구소 총괄주관하에 개발 중인 다목적 실용위성(KOMPSAT) 1호기는 지도 제작, 해양관측, 우주과학실험에 활용할 지구저궤도용 실용위성으로서 고해상도 전자광학 카메라 (Electro-Optical Camera: ECO), 해양관측카메라(Ocean Color Images: OCI), 과학실험 탑재체 (Space Physics Sensor: SPS)를 탑재한다. 다목적 실용위성 1호기는 무게 약 500kg의 위성으로 고도 685km의 태양동기궤도에서 궤도주기 98분과 재방문 주기 28일을 갖는다. 본 위성은 1999년 8-9월 발사 예정이며 최소 3년의 궤도 수명을 갖는다. EOC는 한반도 표준 지도 제작을 위한 위 성영상정보 획득의 임무를 가지며, 가시광선 영역의 관측 파장 대역 510-730nm으로 주어지는 흑 백 단일 채널을 통해 수직촬영시 지상해상도 6.6m와 최소 15km 이상의 지상관측폭을 갖고 push-broom방식으로 한 궤도당 800km의 지상 길이를 촬영한다. OCI의 임무는 생물학적 해양지 리학 연구를 위한 전세계 해표면 색깔 관측이다. OCI는 다중 스펙트랄 영상 카메라로서 whisk-broom방식을 사용하여 지상관측폭 800km이내에서 1km 이하의 지상해상도를 갖는 6가지 색의 해표면 영상을 만들어낸다. OCI는 중심 파장이 443, 490, 510, 555, 670, 865nm인 6개의 관측 파장대역을 수시로 선정할 수 있다. SPS는 고에너지 입자 검출기(High Energy Particle Detector: HEPD)와 이온 측정기 (Ionosphere Measurement Sensor: IMS)로 구성된다. HEPD는 저고도 우 주 공간의 방사선입자 측정을 수행하며 이를 통해 우주방사선이 전자회로에 미치는 영향을 연구 할 수 있으며, IMS는 지구 이온층의 전자 밀도와 전자 온도 측정을 통해 KOMPSAT 궤도상의 이온층의 전지구적 특성 조사에 이용된다.

A Substorm Injection Event and the Radiation Belt Structure Observed by Space Radiation Detectors onboard Next Generation Small Satellite-1 (NEXTSat-1)

  • Yoo, Ji-Hyeon;Lee, Dae-Young;Kim, Eojin;Seo, Hoonkyu;Ryu, Kwangsun;Kim, Kyung-Chan;Min, Kyoungwook;Sohn, Jongdae;Lee, Junchan;Seon, Jongho;Kang, Kyung-In;Lee, Seunguk;Park, Jaeheung;Shin, Goo-Hwan;Park, SungOg
    • Journal of Astronomy and Space Sciences
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    • 제38권1호
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    • pp.31-38
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    • 2021
  • In this paper, we present observations of the Space Radiation Detectors (SRDs) onboard the Next Generation Small Satellite-1 (NEXTSat-1) satellite. The SRDs, which are a part of the Instruments for the study of Stable/Storm-time Space (ISSS), consist of the Medium-Energy Particle Detector (MEPD) and the High-Energy Particle Detector (HEPD). The MEPD can detect electrons, ions, and neutrals with energies ranging from 20 to 400 keV, and the HEPD can detect electrons over an energy range from 0.35 to 2 MeV. In this paper, we report an event where particle flux enhancements due to substorm injections are clearly identified in the MEPD A observations at energies of tens of keV. Additionally, we report a specific example observation of the electron distributions over a wide energy range in which we identify electron spatial distributions with energies of tens to hundreds of keV from the MEPD and with energy ranging up to a few MeV from the HEPD in the slot region and outer radiation belts. In addition, for an ~1.5-year period, we confirm that the HEPD successfully observed the well-known outer radiation belt electron flux distributions and their variations in time and L shell in a way consistent with the geomagnetic disturbance levels. Last, we find that the inner edge of the outer radiation belt is mostly coincident with the plasmapause locations in L, somewhat more consistent at subrelativistic energies than at relativistic energies. Based on these example events, we conclude that the SRD observations are of reliable quality, so they are useful for understanding the dynamics of the inner magnetosphere, including substorms and radiation belt variations.

Space Physics Sensor on KOMPSAT-1

  • Min, Kyoung-Wook;Choi, Young-Wan;Shin, Young-Hoon;Lee, Jae-Jin;Lee, Dae-Hee;Kim, Jhoon
    • 대한원격탐사학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 대한원격탐사학회 1998년도 Proceedings of International Symposium on Remote Sensing
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    • pp.355-360
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    • 1998
  • A small package of plasma instruments, Space Physics Sensor, will monitor the space environment and its effects on microelectronics in the low altitude region as it operates on board the KOMPSAT-1 from 1999 over the maximum of the solar cycle 23. The Space Physics Sensor (SPS) consists of two parts: the Ionospheric Measurement Sensor (IMS) and the High Energy Particle Detector (HEPD). IMS will make in situ Measurements of the thermal electron density and temperature, and is expected to provide a global map of the thermal electron characteristics and the variability according to the solar and geomagnetic activity in the high altitude ionosphere of the KOMPSAT-t orbit. HEPD will measure the fluxes of high energy protons and electrons, monitor the single event upsets caused by these energetic charged particles, and give the information of the total radiation dose received by the spacecraft. The continuous operation of these sensors, along with the ground measurements such as incoherent scatter radars, digital ionosondes and other spacecraft measurements, will enhance our understanding of this important region of practical use for the low earth orbit satellites.

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Scientific Missions and Technologies of the ISSS on board the NEXTSat-1

  • Choi, Cheong Rim;Sohn, Jongdae;Lee, Jun-Chan;Seo, Yong Myung;Kang, Suk-Bin;Ham, Jongwook;Min, Kyoung-Wook;Seon, Jongho;Yi, Yu;Chae, Jang-Soo;Shin, Goo-Hwan
    • Journal of Astronomy and Space Sciences
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    • 제31권1호
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    • pp.73-81
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    • 2014
  • A package of space science instruments, dubbed the Instruments for the Study of Space Storms (ISSS), is proposed for the Next Generation Small Satellite-1 (NEXTSat-1), which is scheduled for launch in May 2016. This paper describes the instrument designs and science missions of the ISSS. The ISSS configuration in NEXTSat-1 is as follows: the space radiation monitoring instruments consist of medium energy particle detector (MEPD) and high energy particle detector (HEPD); the space plasma instruments consist of a Langmuir probe (LP), a retarding potential analyzer (RPA), and an ion drift meter (IDM). The space radiation monitoring instruments (MEPD and HEPD) measure electrons and protons in parallel and perpendicular directions to the geomagnetic field in the sub-auroral region, and they have a minimum time resolution of 50 msec for locating the region of the particle interactions with whistler mode waves and electromagnetic ion cyclotron (EMIC) waves. The MEPD measures electrons and protons with energies of tens of keV to ~400 keV, and the HEPD measures electrons with energies of ~100 keV to > ~1 MeV and protons with energies of ~10 MeV. The space plasma instruments (LP, RPA, and IDM) observe irregularities in the low altitude ionosphere, and the results will be compared with the scintillations of the GPS signals. In particular, the LP is designed to have a sampling rate of 50 Hz in order to detect these small-scale irregularities.

THE KOMPSAT- I PAYLOADS OVERVIEW

  • Paik, Hong-Yul;Park, Gi-Hyuk;Youn, Hyeong-Sik;Lee, Seunghoon;Woo, Sun-Hee;Shim, Hyung-Sik;Oh, Kyoung-Hwan;Cho, Young-Min;Yong, Sang-Soon;Lee, Sang-Gyu;Heo, Haeng-Pal
    • 대한원격탐사학회:학술대회논문집
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    • 대한원격탐사학회 1998년도 Proceedings of International Symposium on Remote Sensing
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    • pp.301-306
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    • 1998
  • Korea Aerospace Research Institute (KARI) is developing a Korea Multi-Purpose Satellite I (KOMPSAT-I) which accommodates Electro-Optical Camera (EOC), Ocean Scanning Multi-spectral Imager (OSMI), and Space Physics Sensor (SPS). The satellite has the weight of about 500kg and will be operated on the 10:50 AM sun-synchronized orbit with the altitude of 685 km. The satellite will be launched in 1999 and its lifetime is expected to be over 3 years. The main mission of EOC is the cartography to provide the images from a remote earth view for the production of 1/25000-scale maps of KOREA. EOC collects 510 ~ 730 nm panchromatic imagery with the ground sample distance(GSD) of 6.6 m and the swath width of 17 km by push broom scanning. EOC also can scan $\pm$45 degree across the ground track using body pointing method. The primary mission of OSMI is worldwide ocean color monitoring for the study of biological oceanography. It will generate 6 band ocean color images with 800 km swath width and 1km GSD by whiskbroom scanning. OSMI is designed to provide on-orbit spectral band selectability in the spectral range from 400 nm to 900 nm through ground command. This flexibility in band selection can be used for various applications and will provide research opportunities to support the next generation sensor design. SPS consists of High Energy Particle Detector (HEPD) and ionosphere Measurement Sensor (IMS). HEPD has missions to characterize the low altitude high-energy Particle environment and to study the effects of radiation environment on microelectronics. IMS measures densities and temperature of electrons in the ionosphere and monitors the ionospheric irregularities at the KOMPSAT orbit.

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Initial Operation and Preliminary Results of the Instrument for the Study of Stable/Storm-Time Space (ISSS) on Board the Next Generation Small Satellite-1 (NEXTSat-1)

  • Kim, Eojin;Yoo, Ji-Hyeon;Kim, Hee-Eun;Seo, Hoonkyu;Ryu, Kwangsun;Sohn, Jongdae;Lee, Junchan;Seon, Jongho;Lee, Ensang;Lee, Dae-Young;Min, Kyoungwook;Kang, Kyung-In;Lee, Sang-Yun;Kang, Juneseok
    • Journal of Astronomy and Space Sciences
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    • 제37권3호
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    • pp.209-218
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    • 2020
  • This paper describes the initial operations and preliminary results of the Instrument for the study of Stable/Storm-time Space (ISSS) onboard the microsatellite Next Generation Small Satellite-1 (NEXTSat-1), which was launched on December 4, 2018 into a sun-synchronous orbit at an altitude of 575 km with an orbital inclination angle of 97.7°. The spacecraft and the instruments have been working normally, and the results from the observations are in agreement with those from other satellites. Nevertheless, improvement in both the spacecraft/instrument operation and the analysis is suggested to produce more fruitful scientific results from the satellite operations. It is expected that the ISSS observations will become the main mission of the NEXTSat-1 at the end of 2020, when the technological experiments and astronomical observations terminate after two years of operation.