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A summary on an investigation of GAGG:Ce afterglow emission in the context of future space applications within the HERMES nanosatellite mission

Authors :
Gábor Galgóczi
N. Zampa
Enrico Verroi
B. Di Ruzza
Filippo Ambrosino
I. Rashevskaya
Claudio Labanti
A. Vacchi
G. Dilillo
M. Baruzzo
Jakub Ripa
G. Pauletta
Fabrizio Fiore
G. Della Casa
Francesco Tommasino
D. Cirrincione
M. Citossi
Y. Evangelista
D. Cauz
Riccardo Campana
F. Fuschino
Source :
Space Telescopes and Instrumentation 2020: Ultraviolet to Gamma Ray
Publisher :
SPIE

Abstract

GAGG:Ce (Cerium-doped Gadolinium Aluminium Gallium Garnet) is a promising new scintillator crystal. A wide array of interesting features, such as high light output, fast decay times, almost non-existent intrinsic background and robustness, make GAGG:Ce an interesting candidate as a component of new space-based gamma-ray detectors. As a consequence of its novelty, literature on GAGG:Ce is still lacking on points crucial to its applicability in space missions. In particular, GAGG:Ce is characterized by unusually high and long-lasting delayed luminescence. This afterglow emission can be stimulated by the interactions between the scintillator and the particles of the near-Earth radiation environment. By contributing to the noise, it will impact the detector performance to some degree. In this manuscript we summarize the results of an irradiation campaign of GAGG:Ce crystals with protons, conducted in the framework of the HERMES-TP/SP (High Energy Rapid Modular Ensemble of Satellites - Technological and Scientific Pathfinder) mission. A GAGG:Ce sample was irradiated with 70 MeV protons, at doses equivalent to those expected in equatorial and sun-synchronous Low-Earth orbits over orbital periods spanning 6 months to 10 years, time lapses representative of satellite lifetimes. We introduce a new model of GAGG:Ce afterglow emission able to fully capture our observations. Results are applied to the HERMES-TP/SP scenario, aiming at an upper-bound estimate of the detector performance degradation due to the afterglow emission expected from the interaction between the scintillator and the near-Earth radiation environment.<br />8 pages, 3 figures. Proceedings of SPIE "Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation" 2020

Details

Language :
English
ISBN :
978-1-5106-3675-0
978-1-5106-3676-7
ISBNs :
9781510636750 and 9781510636767
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Space Telescopes and Instrumentation 2020: Ultraviolet to Gamma Ray
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....5c608fc5c0c75692442ef28a0b0fe83d
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2561053