JWST Radiation Environment 1March 13, 2003 JWST Radiation Environment Don Figer (STScI) Janet Barth, Ray Ladbury, Jim Pickel, Robert Reed (GSFC) March 13, 2003
JWST Radiation Environment 2March 13, 2003 Ionizing Particle Impacts to FPA lNote that secondaries and delta electrons are time coincident with primary and have limited range Surrounding Material FPA secondaries primary natural radioactivity induced radioactivity (latent emission) deltas
JWST Radiation Environment 3March 13, 2003 Primaries 1.Barth, Isaacs, & Poviey (2000): “The Radiation Environment for the NGST” 2.the transient particles (TeV GCRs and GeV solar particles) a.protons and b.heavier ions of all of the elements of the periodic table 3.the trapped particles a.which include protons (100s of MeV) b.electrons (10 MeV) and c.heavier ions (100s of MeV)
JWST Radiation Environment 4March 13, 2003 Primaries – Sunspot Cycle
JWST Radiation Environment 5March 13, 2003 Secondaries 1.Single Event Effects (excluding detectors) 2.Single Event Effects (detectors) 3.Total Ionizing Dose 4.Displacement Damage 5.Spacecraft Charging
JWST Radiation Environment 6March 13, 2003 Single Event Effects (excluding detectors) lThese effects result from interaction between a single energetic particle and electronics. lContributors here are the galactic cosmic rays and solar protons. lThese environments are the same as those given in Barth et al.
JWST Radiation Environment 7March 13, 2003 Single Event Effects (detectors) lThese effects produce transient charge in detector pixels. Effects in the MUX might be included in this category. lThe secondary environment (possibly including radioactivation) may become primary in this case. Proton, electrons and just about anything else can cause glitches in the detectors by direct ionization.
JWST Radiation Environment 8March 13, 2003 Total Ionizing Dose lThis is the accumulated detector exposure to particles. lMain contributors here are primary solar protons and the secondary environment. Electrons in the geotail (and maybe even from the Jovian magnetosphere) may contribute somewhat, but these are thought to be mostly low energy, and the environment is not well characterized at L2 in any case. lNote that this affects detectors, optics (increased absorption or phosphorescence) and electronics. l5 year dose is 18 krad-Si and 10 year dose is 24 krad-Si with zero margin.
JWST Radiation Environment 9March 13, 2003 Displacement Damage lThis is long-term damage due to crystal lattice disruption. lThe main contributors here are solar protons, although for some applications, secondary neutrons may also be important.
JWST Radiation Environment 10March 13, 2003 Spacecraft Charging lThis is the charge that the spacecraft gradually accumulates. lWhile not normally covered in radiation analyses, but it is a threat (or threats) that is caused by the radiation environment. lThe important environment here is the flux electrons as a function of electron energy. lThis environment is not at all well understood. lWe know the geotail contributes, but that's a rather dynamic region that isn't particularly well modeled. And the Jovian electrons? Who knows? The physics argues that the electrons will be low energy, but L2 is really beyond the point where we know "there be dragons".
JWST Radiation Environment 11March 13, 2003 Post-Barth et al. (from Ladbury) lBarth et al. is structured to be "general" regardless of launch date and even mission duration. lUncertainties in this document are still uncertain. lMain advances are with respect to defining the secondary environments. lThere really is no single JWST radiation environment. the environment appropriate for each instrument is the sum of the transported Primary Environment and the Secondary Environment for JWST, the secondary particles may dominate the corruption of detector pixels, etc with regard to the primary environment, we tend to "construct" the environment appropriate for the threat we are dealing with. Since there are really 4 threats (spacecraft charging, single-event effects, total- ionizing dose and displacement damage) we are looking at 4 different environments
JWST Radiation Environment 12March 13, 2003 Rate will be higher when secondaries, diffusion and radioactivity are included Primary GCR Hit Amplitude Distribution for Detectors (NOVICE Calculations) - No Secondary Particles or Delta Electrons -
JWST Radiation Environment 13March 13, 2003 Primary GCR Hit Amplitude Distribution for Array (NOVICE Calculations) There is considerable uncertainty in region below 1000 e - Rate will be higher when secondaries, diffusion and radioactivity is included 100 events/s x 1000 s = 1e5 contaminated pixels 2kx2k = 4.19e6 pixels 1e5 / 4.19e6 = 2.4 %
JWST Radiation Environment 14March 13, 2003 Studies lRauscher et al. (2000) –Used SIRTF/IRAC data to model effects of cosmic rays on sensitivity for NIRCam –Estimated that 20% of pixels will be affected by cosmic rays in 1000 seconds –Found negligible impact by cosmic rays if data are sent to the ground every 125 seconds lRegan and Stockman (2001) –Modeled S/N for three read modes in detector-limited case: long integration, MULTIACCUM, short coadded integrations –Found MUTLIACCUM with total exposure of several thousand seconds to be most effective
JWST Radiation Environment 15March 13, 2003 SIRTF/IRAC lRauscher et al. (2000)
JWST Radiation Environment 16March 13, 2003 JWST/IDTL
JWST Radiation Environment 17March 13, 2003 Ideal Readout Modes lRegan et al. (2001)
JWST Radiation Environment 18March 13, 2003 HST/NICMOS lPersistence from cosmic ray hits (post-SAA passage)
JWST Radiation Environment 19March 13, 2003 HST/NICMOS lOn-board cosmic-ray rejection has been “rejected” on NICMOS because: 1. The detector instabilities were such that in order to derive "good" slopes in the early readouts, we needed to add in a delay between the flush and the initial (zeroth) read of on the order of 30 seconds to let the detector stabilize. This greatly reduced the usefulness of RAMP mode for extending the dynamic range in the final image, as any object that was was relatively bright would be saturated before a good slope could be produced (at least four, preferably more, readouts). 2. I believe there were (are) some problems still remaining with the slope calculation and/or the variance calculation in the FSW, and there was no acceptable solution offered. These are the reasons I can remember -- but I think there may be more reasons, too. The obvious source for "definitive" information is Glenn Schneider at UofA. Of course, the actual reason RAMP is not used now is that it has been removed from the ground system (it is no longer supported by TRANS; we did remember to capture the TRANS requirements before removing them, though!). :) Courtesy – Wayne Baggett
JWST Radiation Environment 20March 13, 2003 JWST Radiation Efforts lRadiation Effects and Analysis Group (REAG, GSFC), Robert Reed –Effects of materials on secondary environment –Effects of secondaries and primaries on detector functions and performance. –Effects of radiation on electrical devices, i.e. RAM lSensors and Instrumentation Branch (ARC), Craig McCreight –Effects of proton beam irradiation (UC, Davis) on JWST prototype detectors lIndependent Detector Testing Lab (IDTL, STScI/JHU), Don Figer –Effects of gamma source (Cf-252) irradiation on JWST NIR prototype detectors
JWST Radiation Environment 21March 13, 2003 Summary lPrimary radiation environment at L2 has ~5 ions/cm 2 /s lSecondary radiation environment will be determined by hardware designs lDetector susceptibilities will be determined by ground tests