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Modeling of proton-induced radioactivation background in hard X-ray telescopes: Geant4-based simulation and its demonstration by Hitomi’s measurement in a low Earth orbit.

Authors :
Odaka, Hirokazu
Asai, Makoto
Hagino, Kouichi
Koi, Tatsumi
Madejski, Greg
Mizuno, Tsunefumi
Ohno, Masanori
Saito, Shinya
Sato, Tamotsu
Wright, Dennis H.
Enoto, Teruaki
Fukazawa, Yasushi
Hayashi, Katsuhiro
Kataoka, Jun
Katsuta, Junichiro
Kawaharada, Madoka
Kobayashi, Shogo B.
Kokubun, Motohide
Laurent, Philippe
Lebrun, Francois
Source :
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A. May2018, Vol. 891, p92-105. 14p.
Publication Year :
2018

Abstract

Hard X-ray astronomical observatories in orbit suffer from a significant amount of background due to radioactivation induced by cosmic-ray protons and/or geomagnetically trapped protons. Within the framework of a full Monte Carlo simulation, we present modeling of in-orbit instrumental background which is dominated by radioactivation. To reduce the computation time required by straightforward simulations of delayed emissions from activated isotopes, we insert a semi-analytical calculation that converts production probabilities of radioactive isotopes by interaction of the primary protons into decay rates at measurement time of all secondary isotopes. Therefore, our simulation method is separated into three steps: (1) simulation of isotope production, (2) semi-analytical conversion to decay rates, and (3) simulation of decays of the isotopes at measurement time. This method is verified by a simple setup that has a CdTe semiconductor detector, and shows a 100-fold improvement in efficiency over the straightforward simulation. To demonstrate its experimental performance, the simulation framework was tested against data measured with a CdTe sensor in the Hard X-ray Imager onboard the Hitomi X-ray Astronomy Satellite, which was put into a low Earth orbit with an altitude of 570 km and an inclination of 31 ° , and thus experienced a large amount of irradiation from geomagnetically trapped protons during its passages through the South Atlantic Anomaly. The simulation is able to treat full histories of the proton irradiation and multiple measurement windows. The simulation results agree very well with the measured data, showing that the measured background is well described by the combination of proton-induced radioactivation of the CdTe detector itself and thick Bi 4 Ge 3 O 12 scintillator shields, leakage of cosmic X-ray background and albedo gamma-ray radiation, and emissions from naturally contaminated isotopes in the detector system. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
01689002
Volume :
891
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Nuclear Instruments & Methods in Physics Research Section A
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
128587957
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1016/j.nima.2018.02.071