Login / Signup

LIDAL, a Time-of-Flight Radiation Detector for the International Space Station: Description and Ground Calibration.

Giulia RomoliLuca Di FinoGiorgia Santi AmantiniVirginia BorettiLuca LunatiCarolina BerucciRoberto MessiAlessandro RizzoPietro AlbicoccoCinzia De DonatoGiuseppe MasciantonioMaria Cristina MoroneGiovanni NobiliGiorgio BaioccoAlice MentanaMarco Giuseppe PulliaFrancesco TommasinoElisa CarrubbaAntonio BardiMarco PasseraiDario CastagnoloGabriele MascettiMarino CrisconioLivio Narici
Published in: Sensors (Basel, Switzerland) (2023)
LIDAL (Light Ion Detector for ALTEA, Anomalous Long-Term Effects on Astronauts) is a radiation detector designed to measure the flux, the energy spectra and, for the first time, the time-of-flight of ions in a space habitat. It features a combination of striped silicon sensors for the measurement of deposited energy (using the ALTEA device, which operated from 2006 to 2012 in the International Space Station) and fast scintillators for the time-of-flight measurement. LIDAL was tested and calibrated using the proton beam line at TIFPA (Trento Institute for Fundamental Physics Application) and the carbon beam line at CNAO (National Center for Oncology Hadron-therapy) in 2019. The performance of the time-of-flight system featured a time resolution (sigma) less than 100 ps. Here, we describe the detector and the results of these tests, providing ground calibration curves along with the methodology established for processing the detector's data. LIDAL was uploaded in the International Space Station in November 2019 and it has been operative in the Columbus module since January 2020.
Keyphrases
  • monte carlo
  • image quality
  • low cost
  • climate change
  • computed tomography
  • magnetic resonance
  • mesenchymal stem cells
  • quantum dots
  • radiation therapy
  • deep learning
  • smoking cessation