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Dose measurements in space by the Hungarian Pille TLD system
- Publication Year :
- 2002
-
Abstract
- Exposure of crew, equipment, and experiments to the ambient space radiation environment in low Earth orbit poses one of the most significant problems to long-term space habitation. Accurate dose measurement has become increasingly important during the assembly (extravehicular activity (EVA)) and operation of space stations such as on Space Station Mir. Passive integrating detector systems such as thermoluminescent dosemeters (TLDs) are commonly used for dosimetry mapping and personal dosimetry on space vehicles. The well-known advantages of passive detector systems are their independence of power supply, small dimensions, high sensitivity, good stability, wide measuring range, resistance to environmental effects, and relatively low cost. Nevertheless, they have the general disadvantage that for evaluation purposes they need a laboratory or large--in mass and power consumption--terrestrial equipment, and consequently they cannot provide time-resolved dose data during long-term space flights. KFKI Atomic Energy Research Institute (KFKI AEKI) has developed and manufactured a series of thermoluminescent dosemeter systems for measuring cosmic radiation doses in the 10 microGy to 10 Gy range, consisting of a set of bulb dosemeters and a compact, self-contained, TLD reader suitable for on-board evaluation of the dosemeters. By means of such a system, highly accurate measurements were carried out on board the Salyut-6, -7 and Mir Space Stations as well as on the Space Shuttle. A detailed description of the system is given and the comprehensive results of these measurements are summarised.
- Subjects :
- Instrumentation
Nuclear engineering
United States National Aeronautics and Space Administration
TLD
Space Shuttle
Dose profile
Radiation Dosage
law.invention
Russia
law
Dosimetry
Humans
Solar Activity
Spacecraft
Atlantic Ocean
Hungary
Radiation
Weightlessness
Space suit
Detector
Equipment Design
South America
Space Flight
United States
Ambient space
Extravehicular Activity
Environmental science
Astronauts
Thermoluminescent Dosimetry
Dose measurements
Thermoluminescent dosimeter
Protons
Space Suits
Space Radiation
Cosmic Radiation
Subjects
Details
- Database :
- OpenAIRE
- Accession number :
- edsair.doi.dedup.....6ea5f1c01d10420c2fd6f79a70ce15e0