Abstract
Solar particle events (SPEs) can pose serious threats for future crewed missions to the Moon. Historically, there have been several extreme SPEs that could have been dangerous for astronauts, and thus analyzing their potential risk on humans is an important step towards space exploration. In this work, we study the effects of a well-known SPE that occurred on 23 February 1956 on a mission in cis-Lunar space. Estimates of the proton fluence spectra of the February 1956 event were obtained from three different parameterized models published within the past 12 years. The studied geometry consists of a female phantom in the center of spherical spacecraft shielded by aluminum area densities ranging from 0.4 to 40 g cm−2. The effective dose, along with lens, skin, blood forming organs, heart, and central nervous system doses, were tallied using the On Line Tool for the Assessment of Radiation In Space (OLTARIS), which utilizes the High Z and Energy TRansport code (HZETRN), a deterministic radiation transport code. Based on the parameterized models, the results herein show that thicknesses comparable to a spacesuit might not protect against severe health consequences from a February 1956 category event. They also show that a minimum aluminum shielding of around 20 g cm−2 is sufficient to keep the effective dose and critical organ doses below NASA’s permissible limits for such event. In addition, except for very thin shielding, the input models produced results that were within good agreement, where the doses obtained from the three proton fluence spectra tended to converge with slight differences as the shielding thickness increases.
Highlights
At thicknesses of 5 g cm−2 and above, the effective dose obtained using the three spectra start to converge relative to each other, with all dose values being below the 30-year old limit
We present the biological risk of a February 1956 category event on a mission in cis-Lunar space
Three different parametrizations approximating the proton fluence spectra of the event, BF10, BF18, and U20, were transported in OLTARIS to compare the critical organ doses received by female astronauts protected by aluminum shield with varying thicknesses
Summary
Publisher’s Note: MDPI stays neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations. In the mid-1950s, at the dawn of the modern space program, an enormous solar flare, accompanied by a large flux of very energetic charged particles, mainly protons, occurred on 23 February 1956. A plethora of scientific observations of this event were available due to preparations for the upcoming International Geophysical Year in 1957. At 0331 UT, the optical flare was observed and reached its peak intensity increase shortly thereafter at 0342
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