Abstract
The first unmanned flight of the Orion Multipurpose Crew Vehicle (MPCV) was successfully completed on December 5, 2014. The total mission duration was 4.5 h, and the EFT-1 trajectory consisted of a high apogee (∼6000 km, 28.6° inclination), high eccentricity orbit through the Van Allen belts. Radiation measurements on Orion included a novel Battery-operated Independent Radiation Detector (BIRD) based on Timepix hybrid pixel technology, luminescence dosimeters (LiF:Mg,Ti, 6LiF:Mg,Ti, 7LiF:Mg,Ti, CaF2:Tm and Al2O3:C) and plastic nuclear track detectors (CR-39). This paper will discuss the advantages of the BIRD instrument with respect to analysis of the environment changes along the flight trajectory using the time stamp tracking capability of the pixel detector. In addition, a dosimetry comparison between the active BIRD instrument and the passive radiation area monitor (RAM) detectors in terms of mission absorbed dose.
Published Version
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