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The MERiT Onboard the CeREs: A Novel Instrument to Study Energetic Particles in the Earth's Radiation Belts

Authors :
S. Riall
E. R. Christian
A. Evans
Quintin Schiller
Lauren Blum
Nikolaos Paschalidis
Stefano Livi
J. Mukherjee
Jeff Dumonthier
D. Patel
Kristie LLera
S. Guerro
E. J. Summerlin
Shrikanth Kanekal
M. I. Desai
Keiichi Ogasawara
E. Pollack
John Lucas
G. Suarez
Gary Crum
J. MacKinnon
A. D. Greeley
Source :
Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics. 124:5734-5760
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
American Geophysical Union (AGU), 2019.

Abstract

The Miniaturized Electron pRoton Telescope, MERiT, is a low‐mass, low‐power, compact instrument using an innovative combination of particle detectors, sensor electronics, and onboard processing. MERiT is flying on the Compact Radiation belt Explorer, CeREs, a 3U CubeSat launched into a low earth orbit of 500‐km altitude and inclination of 85° on 16 December 2018. The primary and secondary science goals of CeREs are to investigate electron microbursts and to study solar particles. MERiT comprises a stack of solid state detectors (SSD) behind space facing avalanche photo diodes (APDs) surrounded by W‐Al shielding to reduce side‐penetrating particle background. The APD‐SSD combination enables measurement of electrons from 5 to 200 keV and 1 to 8 MeV; protons from 200–400 keV and 7–100 MeV in differential channels with energy resolution ΔE/E≈30% for both electrons and protons. MERiT measures microbursts with a high time resolution ranging from 4 to 16 ms and solar particles with a cadence of 1 s. MERiT energy channels and cadences are software configurable via algorithms and lookup tables residing on a field‐programmable gate array. The lookup tables can be changed via ground commands. MERiT geometry factor is 31 sq.cm‐sr and optimized to measure microbursts with the instrument viewing the local zenith in orbit. MERiT enables investigation of dynamical processes of radiation belt electron energization and loss, solar electron and proton transport, and their access to the Earth's polar caps. We describe the MERiT sensor design, calibration, operational modes, data products, and science goals.

Details

ISSN :
21699402 and 21699380
Volume :
124
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Geophysical Research: Space Physics
Accession number :
edsair.doi...........9423413cd0ba6711880324f9c28667d0