This Document describes the BARREL Balloon 2A X-Ray Instrument.
The X-Ray Instrument measures the Energy Spectrum and Flux of Bremsstrahlung X-Rays over Time. It consists of a cylindrical 7.5 cm Diameter by 7.5 cm Height Scintillator NaI Crystal, a Photomultiplier Tube, PMT, and a Peak Detect Board. It has an Energy Response from 10 keV to 10 MeV with a Spectral Resolution of 5 keV. When X-Rays from Precipitating Electrons enter the Crystal, visible light Photons are generated. The Number of Photons produced in the Scintillator is proportional to the incident X-Ray Energy. These Photons are detected by a PMT which converts the Light Pulse into Charge Pulses. The Amplitude of each Charge Pulse is then determined by a Pulse Height Analyzer. The Charge Pulse Amplitudes can be plotted to show the X-Ray Spectrum, which can then be used to study the Energies of the precipitating Electrons. This Part of the Description is adapted from Reference #1 in the Information URL List.
To fit within Telemetry Constraints, the X-Ray Data are binned into three different Kinds of Spectra that trade between Energy Resolution and Time Resolution. The highest Time Resolution Data, important for detecting Electron Microbursts, are Count Rates in four Energy Bands (10 keV to 180 keV, 180 keV to 550 keV, 550 keV to 840 keV, and 840 keV to 1500 keV) every 50 ms, similar to those shown in Figure 1. Higher Energy Resolution is necessary for inverting the X-Ray Observations to determine the Energy and Flux of precipitating Electrons (e.g., Smith et al., 1995). This is provided with binned X-Ray Spectra, acquired every 4 s in 48 logarithmically spaced Energy Channels between 20 keV and 7 MeV. Finally, the highest Energy Resolution Spectra, used for in-flight Calibration, consist of 256 Energy Channels between 20 keV and 7 MeV acquired over 32 s. This Part of the Description is adapted from Reference #3 in the Information URL List.
Version:2.3.0
This Document describes the BARREL Balloon 2A X-Ray Instrument.
The X-Ray Instrument measures the Energy Spectrum and Flux of Bremsstrahlung X-Rays over Time. It consists of a cylindrical 7.5 cm Diameter by 7.5 cm Height Scintillator NaI Crystal, a Photomultiplier Tube, PMT, and a Peak Detect Board. It has an Energy Response from 10 keV to 10 MeV with a Spectral Resolution of 5 keV. When X-Rays from Precipitating Electrons enter the Crystal, visible light Photons are generated. The Number of Photons produced in the Scintillator is proportional to the incident X-Ray Energy. These Photons are detected by a PMT which converts the Light Pulse into Charge Pulses. The Amplitude of each Charge Pulse is then determined by a Pulse Height Analyzer. The Charge Pulse Amplitudes can be plotted to show the X-Ray Spectrum, which can then be used to study the Energies of the precipitating Electrons. This Part of the Description is adapted from Reference #1 in the Information URL List.
To fit within Telemetry Constraints, the X-Ray Data are binned into three different Kinds of Spectra that trade between Energy Resolution and Time Resolution. The highest Time Resolution Data, important for detecting Electron Microbursts, are Count Rates in four Energy Bands (10 keV to 180 keV, 180 keV to 550 keV, 550 keV to 840 keV, and 840 keV to 1500 keV) every 50 ms, similar to those shown in Figure 1. Higher Energy Resolution is necessary for inverting the X-Ray Observations to determine the Energy and Flux of precipitating Electrons (e.g., Smith et al., 1995). This is provided with binned X-Ray Spectra, acquired every 4 s in 48 logarithmically spaced Energy Channels between 20 keV and 7 MeV. Finally, the highest Energy Resolution Spectra, used for in-flight Calibration, consist of 256 Energy Channels between 20 keV and 7 MeV acquired over 32 s. This Part of the Description is adapted from Reference #3 in the Information URL List.
| Role | Person | |
|---|---|---|
| 1. | PrincipalInvestigator | spase://SMWG/Person/Robyn.Millan |
| 2. | CoInvestigator | spase://SMWG/Person/Robert.P.Lin |
| 3. | CoInvestigator | spase://SMWG/Person/David.M.Smith |
| 4. | CoInvestigator | spase://SMWG/Person/Michael.P.McCarthy |
| 5. | CoInvestigator | spase://SMWG/Person/Mary.K.Hudson |
| 6. | CoInvestigator | spase://SMWG/Person/Mikhail.I.Panasyuk |
| 7. | CoInvestigator | spase://SMWG/Person/Lindsay.Magnus |
| 8. | CoInvestigator | spase://SMWG/Person/Andrew.B.Collier |
| 9. | CoInvestigator | spase://SMWG/Person/Mark.Clilverd |
| 10. | MetadataContact | spase://SMWG/Person/Lee.Frost.Bargatze |
Overall BARREL Instrument Descriptions for the Arctic Flight MINIS North
BARREL Mission Foldout Sheet Overview Poster
Understanding Relativistic Electron Losses with BARREL, J. Atmos. and Sol.-Terr. Phys., 73(11-12), July 2011, pages 1425-1434 by R. Millan et al. Description of Science Output from BARREL Test Flights, includes Discussion of Instruments and Usage. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1016/j.jastp.2011.01.006
Site used for BARREL Science Team Information