4.6 Article

Background model of phoswich X-ray detector on board small balloon

Journal

ADVANCES IN SPACE RESEARCH
Volume 68, Issue 7, Pages 3052-3063

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.asr.2021.05.013

Keywords

Scintillation detectors; Cosmic-ray interactions; Background radiations

Funding

  1. Science and Engineering Research Board (SERB, Department of Science and Technology, Government of India) [EMR/2016/003870]
  2. Higher Education department of West Bengal

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The study thoroughly modeled the background counts observed in an X-ray detector at balloon altitude used for astronomical observations, utilizing Monte Carlo simulation to estimate detector background from various plausible sources. It was found that high energy particles and radiation from Galactic Cosmic Rays interacting with atmospheric nuclei are major contributors to background counts, with induced radioactivity in detector materials also playing a significant role. The research considered detailed 3D modeling of Earth's atmosphere and magnetosphere to calculate the radiation environment at balloon altitude and utilized a proper mass model of the detector to calculate background counts.
We performed a detailed modelling of the background counts observed in a phoswich scintillator X-ray detector at balloon altitude, used for astronomical observations, on board small scientific balloon. We used Monte Carlo simulation technique in Geant4 simulation environment, to estimate the detector background from various plausible sources. High energy particles and radiation generated from the interaction of Galactic Cosmic Rays with the atmospheric nuclei is a major source of background counts (under normal solar condition) for such detectors. However, cosmogenic or induced radioactivity in the detector materials due to the interaction of high energy particles and natural radioactive contamination present in the detector can also contribute substantially to the detector background. We consid-ered detailed 3D modelling of the earth's atmosphere and magnetosphere to calculate the radiation environment at the balloon altitude and deployed a proper mass model of the detector to calculate the background counts in it. The calculation satisfactorily explains the observed background in the detector at 30 km altitude (atmospheric depth: 11.5 g/cm(2)) during the balloon flight experiment from a loca-tion near 14.5 degrees N geomagnetic latitude. (C) 2021 COSPAR. Published by Elsevier B.V. All rights reserved.

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