2011 12th European Conference on Radiation and Its Effects on Components and Systems 2011
DOI: 10.1109/radecs.2011.6131428
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The micro radiation environment monitor (MuREM) and SSTL radiation monitor (SSTL RM) on TechDemoSat-1

Abstract: Abstract-Two new, miniaturised scientific radiation monitoring payloads are presented prior to their first flight on the TechDemoSat-1 Spacecraft. They are capable of monitoring the space radiation environment and its effects on radiation sensitive devices. MuREM and SSTL RM carry RADFET dosimeters, dose rate sensitive photodiodes and PIN diode particle detectors. SSTL RM is also connected to external RADFET sensors placed around the spacecraft, whilst MuREM carries a radiation effects payload consisting of CO… Show more

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“…The project started in 2008, and was developed as a collaboration between Langton Star Centre secondary school student researchers, the Medipix Collaboration, and Surrey Satellite Technology Limited (SSTL), who built both LUCID and TDS-1. LUCID is part of the TDS-1 Space Environment Suite, which consists of the Miniature Radiation Environment and effects Monitor (MuREM, Taylor et al, 2012, Underwood et al, 2016, the Charged Particle Spectrometer (ChaPS, Kataria et al, 2013) and the Highly Miniaturized Radiation Monitor (HMRM, Mitchell et al, 2014, Guerrini et al, 2013. TDS-1 launched on 8 July 2014 (15:58:28 UTC) on a Soyuz-2-1b launch vehicle with Fregat-M upper stage from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, into a 635 km, 98.4 • Sun-synchronous orbit.…”
Section: Lucid and Techdemosat-1mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The project started in 2008, and was developed as a collaboration between Langton Star Centre secondary school student researchers, the Medipix Collaboration, and Surrey Satellite Technology Limited (SSTL), who built both LUCID and TDS-1. LUCID is part of the TDS-1 Space Environment Suite, which consists of the Miniature Radiation Environment and effects Monitor (MuREM, Taylor et al, 2012, Underwood et al, 2016, the Charged Particle Spectrometer (ChaPS, Kataria et al, 2013) and the Highly Miniaturized Radiation Monitor (HMRM, Mitchell et al, 2014, Guerrini et al, 2013. TDS-1 launched on 8 July 2014 (15:58:28 UTC) on a Soyuz-2-1b launch vehicle with Fregat-M upper stage from the Baikonur Cosmodrome in Kazakhstan, into a 635 km, 98.4 • Sun-synchronous orbit.…”
Section: Lucid and Techdemosat-1mentioning
confidence: 99%