Dissertations / Theses on the topic 'Space radiations'
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Gonon, Géraldine. "Space radiation-induced bystander effect : kinetics of biologic responses, mechanisms, and significance of secondary radiations." Phd thesis, Université de Franche-Comté, 2011. http://tel.archives-ouvertes.fr/tel-00987717.
Full textJouni, Ali. "Space radiation effects on CMOS single photon avalanche diodes (SPADs)." Electronic Thesis or Diss., Toulouse, ISAE, 2024. http://www.theses.fr/2024ESAE0012.
Full textThe subject of this thesis deals with the effects of space radiation on CMOS avalanche detectors, particularly on Single Photon Avalanche Diodes (SPADs). These photodiodes exhibit nearly infinite internal gain and are therefore sensitive to very low light conditions. Thus, with excellent temporal resolution, these sensors can be very interesting for space applications requiring time-of-flight measurements, such as the topography of celestial objects or space Rendezvous. However, space is a hostile environment due to radiation from the Sun, particles trapped in the Earth’s magnetosphere, and beyond the solar system. Consequently, within the framework of this thesis work, a model is established to predict thedegradation of the dark current of SPADs, the Dark Count Rate (DCR), after proton irradiations. Experimentally, two SPAD array technologies are irradiated with protons, X-rays, and γ rays. Hence, ionizing and non-ionizing effects are investigated for these avalanche sensors, and differences compared to pixels of standard image sensors are highlighted. Subsequently, the characteristics of defects induced by the creation of interface traps between oxides and silicon and atomic displacement damage in the substrate are examined, including the presence of Random Telegraph Signal (RTS) behaviors. Finally, the nature of these defects is identified through isochronal annealing after irradiations of the SPAD arrays using the three different radiation types mentioned above
Lopes, Jeremy. "Design of an Innovative GALS (Globally Asynchronous Locally Synchronous), Non-Volatile Integrated Circuit for Space Applications." Thesis, Montpellier, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017MONTS052/document.
Full textToday, there are several ways to develop microelectronic circuits adapted for space applications that meet the harsh constraints of immunity towards radiation, whether in terms of technical design or manufacturing process. The aim of this doctorate is on the one hand to combine several novel techniques of microelectronics to design architectures adapted to this type of application, and on the other hand to incorporate non-volatile magnetic components inherently robust to radiation. Such an assembly would be quite innovative and would benefit without precedent, in terms of surface, consumption, robustness and cost.In contrast with synchronous circuit designs that rely on a clock signal, asynchronous circuits have the advantage of being more or less insensitive to delay variations resulting for example from variations in the manufacturing process. Furthermore, by avoiding the use of a clock, asynchronous circuits have relatively low power consumption. Asynchronous circuits are generally designed to operate based on events determined using a specific handshake protocol.For aviation and/or spatial applications, it would be desirable to provide an asynchronous circuit that is rendered robust against the effects of radiation. Indeed, the presence of ionising particles at high altitudes or in space can induce currents in integrated circuits that may be enough to cause a flip in the binary state held by one or more gates. This may cause the circuit to malfunction, known in the art as a single event upset (SEU). It has been proposed to provide dual modular redundancy (DMR) or triple modular redundancy (TMR) in an asynchronous circuit design in order to provide radiation protection. Such techniques rely on duplicating the circuit in the case of DMR, or triplicating the circuit in the case of TMR, and detecting a discordance between the outputs of the circuits as an indication of the occurrence of an SEU.The integration of inherently robust non-volatile components, such as Magnetic Tunnel Junctions (MTJ), the main element of MRAM memory, could lead to new ways of data retention in harsh environments. MTJ devices are constituted of ferromagnetic materials with magnetic properties that are not sensitive to radiation. Data is stored in the form of the direction of the magnetisation and not in the form of an electric charge, which is an essential property for space applications. It is also widely recognised in the field of microelectronics that integrated circuits manufactured on SOI (Silicon On Insulator) substrates are more robust to radiation.There is thus a need in the art for a circuit having relatively low surface area and power consumption, and that allows recovery following an SEU without requiring a reset and that has non-volatile characteristics. The objective of this doctorate is to combine all the above mentioned benefits by regrouping several methods of microelectronic design responding to the constraints of space applications into a novel architecture. A complete circuit has been created, designed, simulated, validated and sent to manufacturing in a 28nm FD-SOI process. This circuit is composed of an adder pipeline and a complex BIST (Build In Self Test). When fabricated, this circuit will be tested. First a functional test will be realised, then laser pules attacks will be performed and finally a heavy ions attack campaign
Ladaci, Ayoub. "Rare earth doped optical fibers and amplifiers for space applications." Thesis, Lyon, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017LYSES027/document.
Full textRare earth doped fibers (REDFs) are a key component in optical laser sources and amplifiers (REDFAs). Their high performances render them very attractive for space applications as the active part of gyroscopes, high data transfer links and LIDARs. However, the high sensitivity of these active fibers to space radiations limits the REDFA integration in actual and future missions. To overcome these issues various studies were carried out and some mitigation techniques were identified such as the Cerium co-doping or the hydrogen loading of the REDFs. All these solutions occur at the component level and are classified as a hardening by component strategy allowing the manufacturing of radiation hardened REDFAs with adapted performances for low doses space mission. However, with the new space research programs, more challenging space missions are targeted with higher radiations doses requiring even more tolerant REDFs and REDFAs. To this aim, an optimization of the REDFA at the system level is investigated in this PhD thesis exploiting an approach coupling simulations and experiments offering the opportunity to benefit from the outputs of this hardening by system strategy in addition to other state-of-the-art approaches. After presenting the context, objectives of this work, the basic mechanisms about amplification and radiation effects as well as the architectures of REDFAs are described in chapters I and II. After that, we update a state of art REDFAs simulation code described in Chapter III, to consider not only the REDFA optical performances but also their evolutions when exposed to radiations. Several experiments on dedicated home-made REDFA have been performed using accelerated irradiation tests (Chapter IV) and the comparison between these data and those obtained through the new code validated the simulation tools. Thereafter, we exploit the validated code to highlight how the optimization of the REDFA architecture can participate to the mitigation of the radiation effects on the amplifier performances (Chapter V). Finally, in chapter VI the implementation in the code of several other effects, such as thermal effects, input signal multiplexing was investigated both from experimental and calculation point of views
Duchez, Jean-Bernard. "Étude du noircissement dans les fibres optiques dopées Ytterbium : interaction entre photo- et radio-noircissement." Thesis, Nice, 2015. http://www.theses.fr/2015NICE4029.
Full textThis thesis deals with the degradation induced by the pump (photodarkening, PN) and ionizing radiations (radiodarkening, RN) in ytterbium-doped optical fiber (YDF) used in harsh environments. Through original experimental characterizations and modeling, it analyses the interplay between PN and RN and reveals important and novel properties of the radiation resistance of pumped YDF. The first part investigates induced defects (color centers) together with their creation/recovery mechanisms. It used a set of post-irradiation characterizations (ESR, RIA, TSL) conducted on preform samples and benefited from their original correlation (thermal recovery protocols coupling TSL and RIA). A systematic study as a function of composition reveals the influence of co-dopants (Al, Ce) on the trapping of carrier freed during ionization processes. The second part examines the darkening build-up under the simultaneous action of the pump and an ionizing irradiation. By using a measurement bench that allowed us to follow the real-time “on line” degradation of fiber samples, we showed that photo- and radio-darkening both arise from the same color centers that can be bleached by the pump. On the basis of this finding and of the preceding identified mechanisms, we propose a local physical model of the photo-radio-induced darkening. The latter is thoroughly validated by further successful comparisons of simulated degradation with a wide variety of “on line” original observations. Then, we notably demonstrate that for dose rates lying below a critical value (explicited by our theory), the degradation of pumped and irradiated YDF never exceeds the photo-darkening level
Pedroza, Guillaume. "Evaluation de la fiabilité de composants optoélectroniques pour des applications spatiales : apport des caractérisations et des modélisations électro-optiques." Thesis, Bordeaux 1, 2011. http://www.theses.fr/2011BOR14470/document.
Full textIn this work, the reliability of 980 nm pump laser diode and InGaAs photodiode modules has been estimated for space applications. The space environment is particularly harsh (vacuum, radiation, thermal and mechanical stresses) for these electro-optical devices, which were designed for long-haul submerged telecommunication applications. The main objective of this thesis is to provide a guideline for the space evaluation of optoelectronic devices, using characterization, physical analysis and modeling.Eight laser diodes were aged in vacuum (10-7 mbar) during 5000h, at 60°C and 800 mA bias current. The hermeticity of four of them was voluntarily broken to simulate a long term vacuum exposition. Three of four non-hermetic devices failed during the ageing, because of COD (Catastrophic Optical Damage) whereas the electro-optical characteristics of hermetic devices remained unchanged. The MTBF of laser diodes operating in vacuum was estimated to 26 years, by means of modeling (electro-optics and pressure) and physical analyses (AFM, SEM, TEM, cathodoluminescence, ToF-SIMS).InGaAs photodiodes were irradiated by protons, with energies ranging from 30 to 190 MeV and fluences ranging from 5.1010 to 1012 p/cm². The dark current increased by three decades after irradiation. The photodiode MTBF was then estimating to 15 years using dark current modeling.This study also permitted to show up almost new failure mechanisms (COD under vacuum, NIEL scaling errors in InGaAs, Bragg grating degradation under ionizing radiation and its effects on laser diode stabilization), which could contribute to the space evaluation of laser diodes and photodiodes for future missions
Chen, Si. "Conception d’ASICs Mixtes Durcis aux Radiations pour Observatoires Spatiaux." Thesis, Université de Paris (2019-....), 2019. http://www.theses.fr/2019UNIP7051.
Full textThe subject of my thesis is the development of radiation-hardened mixed-signal Application-Specific Integrated Circuits (ASICs) for space observatories. The thesis takes place in the context of a future X-ray space observatory of the European Space Agency, named Advanced Telescope for High ENergy Astrophysics (ATHENA). The ASICs developed belong to one of the two scientific instruments of the observatory, called X-ray Integral Field Unit (X-IFU) and are dedicated to one of the subsystems of the X-IFU instrument, the WFEE (Warm Front End Electronics).The WFEE is a mixed electronic system, mainly including a Low Noise Amplifier (LNA), a configurable SQUID bias, a buffer and a thermometer. Consequently, my thesis work is composed of two parts: the digital part and the analogue part.My contributions to the digital microelectronics of the WFEE are presented in Part III of my thesis. It includes the design of a new radiation-hardened digital library and the creation of a new I2C decoder with optimised schematic and layout, made of my new digital library. The representative radiation assessment results concerning the components and 8-bit registers with such radiation-hardened design are also discussed in Part III of the thesis. All the digital circuits of the two new ASICs “AwaXe_v2” and “AwaXe_v2.5” are made of this new radiation-hardened digital library, as well as those in the future ASICs. The optimised I2C decoders have been proved a good functioning along with the other circuits, integrated into the “AwaXe_v2” and “AwaXe_v2.5”.My contributions on the analogue circuits of the WFEE are presented in Part IV. It includes the design of an LNA, a buffer, a current reference and a Digital-to-Analog Converter (DAC). The LNA is critical for fulfilling the unprecedented high spectral resolution of 2.5 eV proposed by the X-IFU instrument. Its original design has been integrated into the ASICs v2 and v2.5, both fully tested and showing satisfying and coherent results. Its performance has been experimentally proved to fulfil all the specifications required by the CNES. Operating within the frequency band of 1-5 MHz, it provides a super-linear voltage gain of 85 V/V, with a large bandwidth of −1 dB up to 17.5 MHz and a low gain drift < 350 ppm/K. It realises an ultra-low voltage noise ≈ 0.8 nV/√Hz at the input, as well as a low 1/f noise corner frequency < 4 kHz, a good PSRR and CMRR. The buffer uses a similar design as the LNA and needs to be further studied in future work. The current reference has been fully tested with an output of 1 mA. Thanks to its original design compensating a CTAT and a PTAT reference, it has been proved to be capable of providing a super-stable temperature independent current, perfect for the SQUID bias. At last, I have also developed an 8-bit DAC for the SQUID bias. 8 DACs along with a current reference and a series bus compose a complete SQUID bias of one WFEE channel. This circuit has been integrated into the ASIC “AwaXe_v2.5” and showed a good result for the first measurement.In conclusion, my thesis has yielded two ASICs for the WFEE: “AwaXe_v2” and “AwaXe_v2.5”. Both ASICs show good performance. In particular, the last ASIC integrates all the components of one WFEE channel, which can be considered as a prototype. Thus, it is a good representative of my work. Moreover, the high performance of the LNA and the current reference also give them the potential to adapt with other similar scientific missions
Lalucaa, Valérian. "Etude des effets singuliers produits par les particules énergétiques chargées de l’environnement radiatif spatial sur les capteurs d’images CMOS." Thesis, Toulouse, ISAE, 2013. http://www.theses.fr/2013ESAE0042/document.
Full textThis thesis studies the single event effects of space environment in CMOS image sensors (CIS). This work focuses on the effects of heavy ions on 3T standard photodiode pixels, and 4T and 5T pinned photodiode pixels. The first part describes the space radioactive environment and the sensor architecture. The most harmful events (SEL and SETs) are identified thanks to the scientific literature. The experimentally tested sensors agree with the theoretical work. SETs are compared to STARDUST simulations with a good agreement for all ions and sensors. The work explains why the SETs on 3T pixels are insensitive to the various photodiode designs, and they are decreased when an epitaxial substrate is used. A method using anti-blooming was successfully used in 4T and 5T pixels to prevent the spread of the SETs. The mechanism of latchup in 4T pixel sensors is described. All the identified mechanisms are very useful to provide hardening methods for the CISs
Belloir, Jean-Marc. "Spectroscopie du courant d’obscurité induit par les effets de déplacement atomique des radiations spatiales et nucléaires dans les capteurs d’images CMOS à photodiode pincée." Thesis, Toulouse, ISAE, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016ESAE0029/document.
Full textCMOS image sensors are envisioned for an increasing number of high-end scientific imaging applications such asspace imaging or nuclear experiments. Indeed, the performance of high-end CMOS image sensors has dramaticallyincreased in the past years thanks to the unceasing improvements of microelectronics, and these image sensors havesubstantial advantages over CCDs which make them great candidates to replace CCDs in future space missions.However, in space and nuclear environments, CMOS image sensors must face harsh radiation which can rapidlydegrade their electro-optical performances. In particular, the protons, electrons and ions travelling in space or thefusion neutrons from nuclear experiments can displace silicon atoms in the pixels and break the crystalline structure.These displacement damage effects lead to the formation of stable defects and to the introduction of states in theforbidden bandgap of silicon, which can allow the thermal generation of electron-hole pairs. Consequently, nonionizingradiation leads to a permanent increase of the dark current of the pixels and thus a decrease of the imagesensor sensibility and dynamic range. The aim of the present work is to extend the understanding of the effect ofdisplacement damage on the dark current increase of CMOS image sensors. In particular, this work focuses on theshape of the dark current distribution depending on the particle type, energy and fluence but also on the imagesensor physical parameters. Thanks to the many conditions tested, an empirical model for the prediction of the darkcurrent distribution induced by displacement damage in nuclear or space environments is experimentally validatedand physically justified. Another central part of this work consists in using the dark current spectroscopy techniquefor the first time on irradiated CMOS image sensors to detect and characterize radiation-induced silicon bulk defects.Many types of defects are detected and two of them are identified, proving the applicability of this technique to studythe nature of silicon bulk defects using image sensors. In summary, this work advances the understanding of thenature of the radiation-induced defects responsible for the dark current increase in space or nuclear environments. Italso leads the way to the design of more advanced dark current prediction models, or to the development ofmitigation strategies in order to prevent the formation of the responsible defects or to allow their removal
Wahle, Peter Joseph 1961. "Radiation effects on power MOSFETs under simulated space radiation conditions." Thesis, The University of Arizona, 1989. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/277024.
Full textBayer, Ozgur. "Simulation Of Refrigerated Space With Radiation." Phd thesis, METU, 2009. http://etd.lib.metu.edu.tr/upload/3/12610454/index.pdf.
Full textAmutkan, Ozge. "Space Radiation Environment And Radiation Hardness Assurance Tests Of Electronic Components To Be Used In Space Missions." Phd thesis, METU, 2010. http://etd.lib.metu.edu.tr/upload/12612238/index.pdf.
Full textRadiation Hardness Assurance&rdquo
. In this thesis, the hardening of electronics against space radiation is discussed. This thesis describes the space radiation environments, physical mechanisms, effects of space radiation, models of the space radiation environment, simulation of the Total Ionizing Dose, and &rdquo
Radiation Hardness Assurance&rdquo
which covers Total Ionizing Dose and Single Event Effects testing and analyzing of the electronics.
Rosenberg, Max. "Comparative Analysis of Electrodynamic Toroidal Radiation Shielding Configurations." DigitalCommons@CalPoly, 2018. https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/theses/1963.
Full textGIRAUDO, MARTINA. "Passive shielding of space radiation for human exploration missions - Simulations and Radiation Tests." Doctoral thesis, Politecnico di Torino, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/11583/2711122.
Full textNorman, Ryan Bradley. "Resonance production and nuclear fragmentation for space radiation." Worcester, Mass. : Worcester Polytechnic Institute, 2008. http://www.wpi.edu/Pubs/ETD/Available/etd-042208-131402/.
Full textKeywords: nuclear physics, particle physics, phyiscs, resonance, nuyclear fragmentation, nucleon-nucleon interactions, radiation shileding, heavy-ion physics, space radiation. Includes bibliographical references (leaves 163-141).
Ko, Stephen C. "Development of Radiation Shielding Materials for Space Applications." W&M ScholarWorks, 1997. https://scholarworks.wm.edu/etd/1539626106.
Full textSnell, Holly. "Modelling and testing the effects of space radiation on space-borne electronic components." Master's thesis, University of Cape Town, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/28110.
Full textRuekberg, Jared Allen. "STRUCTURAL MICROMETEOROID AND RADIATION SHIELDING FOR INTERPLANETARY SPACECRAFT." DigitalCommons@CalPoly, 2015. https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/theses/1401.
Full textReed, Martin. "The Free Space Radiation Mode method in integrated optics." Thesis, University of Nottingham, 1998. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.263413.
Full textRushton, Joseph Edward. "Radiation damage in CMOS image sensors for space applications." Thesis, Open University, 2018. http://oro.open.ac.uk/53005/.
Full textWhite, Ryan D. "A high-altitude nuclear environment simulation." Thesis, Manhattan, Kan. : Kansas State University, 2009. http://hdl.handle.net/2097/2315.
Full textMarques, Greicy Costa. "Etude de la fiabilité des algorithmes self-convergeants face aux soft-erreurs." Thesis, Grenoble, 2014. http://www.theses.fr/2014GRENT086/document.
Full textThis thesis is devoted to the study of the robustness/sensitivity of a self-converging algorithm with respect to SEU's. These phenomenon also called bit-flips which may modify the content of memory elements as the result of the silicon ionization resulting from the impact of a charged particles. This study may have a significant impact given the conditions of miniaturization that will soon have circuits with hundreds to thousands of processing cores on a single chip, this will require make the cores communicate effectively and robust manner. In this context the so-called self-converging algorithm can be used to ensure that communication between cores is reliable and without external intervention. A fault injection study of the robustness of the algorithm was performed, this algorithm was initially executed by a processor LEON3 implemented in the FPGA embedded in a specific platform test. Preliminary fault injection from a method the state of the art called CEU showed some sensitivity to SEUs of algorithm. To cope with the software changes were made and techniques for fault tolerance have been implemented in software in the program implementing the self-converging algorithm. The fault injection experiments were made to demonstrate the robustness to SEU's and potential problems of the modified algorithm. The impact of SEUs was explored on a hardware-implemented self-converging algorithm in a FPGA. The evaluation of this method was performed by fault injection at RTL level circuit. These results obtained with this method have shown a significant improvement of the robustness of the algorithm in comparison with its software version
Srikasem, Suthum. "Radiation from an aperture into an anisotropic plasma half-space." Ohio : Ohio University, 1993. http://www.ohiolink.edu/etd/view.cgi?ohiou1173761928.
Full textHu, Yueyuan [Verfasser]. "Effects of space-relevant radiation on pre-osteoblasts / Yueyuan Hu." Bonn : Universitäts- und Landesbibliothek Bonn, 2014. http://d-nb.info/1048616096/34.
Full textTaylor, Paul Alan. "Proton radiation effects on space solar cell structures and materials." Thesis, University of Southampton, 1996. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.242506.
Full textVirdee, Hira Singh. "Radiation pressure torque and computational attitude modelling of space debris." Thesis, University College London (University of London), 2017. http://discovery.ucl.ac.uk/1571169/.
Full textRuhlmann, Sébastien. "The FLARE Suit: A protection against solar radiation in space." Thesis, KTH, Rymdteknik, 2019. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-261181.
Full textThe FLARE Suit is a device that aims to protect astronauts from intense solar radiation when travelling out of the magnetosphere on future Deep Space missions. This suit is an emergency solution against solar particles that, due to their high density, can cause acute radiation sickness and lead to excessive destruction of internal organs (gastro-intestinal system, nervous system, blood forming bone marrow) and eventually to death. These symptoms will be a lot stronger out of the Earth’s magnetosphere, towards the Moon or Mars. For now, the FLARE Suit is being studied in the intra-vehicular environment as a supplement to already existing shielding provided by the spacecraft’s structure, but extra vehicular activities in space and on other planets can be considered. It consists of a bladder-suit that is to be filled with water when needed, the water being already present on any human carrying spacecraft. The suit can be deployed within a few minutes, be very lightweight at launch due to the resource utilization of on-board water, and does not use a lot of material compared to a fully shielded module since it is fitted to the individual human body. Furthermore, water has been shown to provide a decent shielding per mass capability, the third most shielding efficient material after hydrogenated boron nanotubes (H-BNNT) and high-density polyethylene (HDPE). Water could eventually be complemented with salt that shows high neutron blocking efficiency and could help shield from neutrons (present in secondary particles). Finally, it has a fully adaptive multilayered and shape changing design which allows for real-time scenario adaptation depending on the intensity of the solar radiation, the number of astronauts involved, the time frame and the water supplies. Preliminary design of the FLARE suit is show cased and radiation simulations are being performed in a 1D environment within the Columbus module, highlighting a fifty percent reduction in radiation exposure with 3.5 to 4 centimeters of water, depending on the salt content. Afterwards, a 3D environment is being built, however not tested. For this, selection of a relevant 3D human model, construction of the Columbus module and design choices on human morphology have been made. Matlab codes also were written to build and shape the 3D suit on top of the human model, following diverse radiation shielding strategies.
Ersmark, Tore. "Geant4 Monte Carlo Simulations of the International Space Station Radiation Environment." Doctoral thesis, Stockholm, 2006. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-4007.
Full textVan, der Horst Johannes Gerhardus. "Radiation tolerant implementation of a soft-core processor for space applications." Thesis, Stellenbosch : University of Stellenbosch, 2007. http://hdl.handle.net/10019.1/1857.
Full textThe availability of high density FPGAs has made the use of soft-core processors an attractive proposition for the low volume space market. Soft-core processors combine the power of programmable logic with the ease of use of a conventional processor to provide a highly customisable solution. However, the SRAM FPGAs used as implementation platform are especially susceptable to radiation induced single event upsets, due to the sensitivity of their configuration memory. To safely use these processors in a space environment requires the modification of the processor to safely mitigate these effects. This thesis presents the process followed to develop and test a fault tolerant implementation of an 8-bit PicoBlaze soft-core processor on a Xilinx Spartan-3 SRAM FPGA. A thorough investigation was made into the available methods that can be used to mitigate single event upsets, in order to identify the most suitable ones. Guidelines for the application of SEU mitigation techniques to SRAM FPGAs were proposed. A single event upset simulator was designed and constructed to compare the different techniques. It mimics SEUs by injecting errors into the configuration memory of an FPGA. The results of error injection were used to develop a PicoBlaze implementation with limited overhead, while it still offers a high degree of error mitigation. Three different designs were tested by proton irradiation to verify the protection afforded by the mitigation techniques. It was found that protected designs were more robust. The cross-section of the FPGA was also determined, which can be used with the SEU simulator to predict the dynamic cross-section of designs. The work contained in this thesis demonstrates the use of open-source intellectual property with commercial-off-the-shelf components to develop a robust component for use in the miniature spacecraft market.
Oliveri, Roberto. "Applications of space-time symmetries to black holes and gravitational radiation." Doctoral thesis, Universite Libre de Bruxelles, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/2013/ULB-DIPOT:oai:dipot.ulb.ac.be:2013/276311.
Full textDoctorat en Sciences
info:eu-repo/semantics/nonPublished
Bosser, Alexandre Louis. "Single-event effects from space and atmospheric radiation in memory components." Thesis, Montpellier, 2017. http://www.theses.fr/2017MONTS085/document.
Full textElectronic memories are ubiquitous components in electronic systems: they are used to store data, and can be found in all manner of industrial, automotive, aerospace, telecommunication and entertainment systems. Memory technology has seen a constant evolution since the first practical dynamic Random-Access Memories (dynamic RAMs) were created in the late 60's. The demand for ever-increasing performance and capacity and decrease in power consumption was met thanks to a steady miniaturization of the component features: modern memory devices include elements barely a few tens of atomic layers thick and a few hundred of atomic layers wide.The side effect of this constant device miniaturization was an increase in the sensitivity of devices to radiation. Since the first radiation-induced single-event effects (SEEs) were identified in satellites in the late 70’s and particle-induced memory upsets were replicated in laboratory tests, radiation hardness has been a concern for computer memory manufacturers and for systems designers as well. In the early days, the need for data storage in radiation-rich environments, e.g. nuclear facilities, particle accelerators and space, primarily for military use, created a market for radiation-hardened memory components, capable of withstanding the effects of radiation. This market dwindled with the end of the Cold War and the loss of government interest, and in a matter of years, the shortage of available radiation-hard components led system designers to turn to so-called Commercial Off-The-Shelf (COTS) components.Since COTS devices are not designed with radiation hardness in mind, each COTS component must be assessed before it can be included in a system where reliability is important – a process known as Radiation Hardness Assurance (RHA). This has led to the emergence of radiation testing as a standard practice in the industry (and in the space industry in particular). Irradiation tests with particle accelerators and radioactive sources are performed to estimate a component’s radiation-induced failure rate in a given radiation environment, and thus its suitability for a given mission.The present work focuses on SEE testing of memory components. It presents the requirements, difficulties and shortcomings of radiation testing, and proposes methods for radiation test data processing; the detection and study of failure modes is used to gain insight on the tested components. This study is based on data obtained over four years on several irradiation campaigns, where memory devices of different technologies (static RAMs, ferroelectric RAM, magnetoresistive RAM, and flash) were irradiated with proton, heavy-ion, neutron and muon beams. The yielded data also supported the development of MTCube, a CubeSat picosatellite developed jointly by the Centre Spatial Universitaire (CSU) and LIRMM in Montpellier, whose mission is to carry out in-flight testing on the same memory devices. The underlying concepts regarding radiation, radiation environments, radiation-matter interactions, memory component architecture and radiation testing will be introduced in the first chapters, while the academic advances which were made during this study are presented in the final chapter
Daldorff, Lars Kristen Selberg. "Numerical Simulation as a Tool for Studying Waves and Radiation in Space." Doctoral thesis, Uppsala : Acta Universitatis Upsaliensis, 2008. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-9517.
Full textGowens, Eric Christopher. "Two dimensional radiation sensor development for use in space bound reconfigurable computers." Thesis, Montana State University, 2011. http://etd.lib.montana.edu/etd/2011/gowens/GowensE0511.pdf.
Full textWilcox, Edward. "Silicon-germanium devices and circuits for cryogenic and high-radiation space environments." Thesis, Georgia Institute of Technology, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/1853/33850.
Full textShea, Patrick. "DESIGN AND MODELING OF RADIATION HARDENED LDMOSFET FOR SPACE CRAFT POWER SYSTEMS." Master's thesis, University of Central Florida, 2007. http://digital.library.ucf.edu/cdm/ref/collection/ETD/id/2822.
Full textM.S.E.E.
School of Electrical Engineering and Computer Science
Engineering and Computer Science
Electrical Engineering MSEE
Underwood, Craig Ian. "Single event effects in commercial memory devices in the space radiation environment." Thesis, University of Surrey, 1996. http://epubs.surrey.ac.uk/743/.
Full textWang, Jiong. "Linear theory of radiation from large space structures with induced AC current." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1987. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/35939.
Full textLumpkins, Sarah B. "Space radiation-induced bystander signaling in 2D and 3D skin tissue models." Thesis, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 2012. http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/70817.
Full textPage 157 blank. Cataloged from PDF version of thesis.
Includes bibliographical references (p. 145-156).
Space radiation poses a significant hazard to astronauts on long-duration missions, and the low fluences of charged particles characteristic of this field suggest that bystander effects, the phenomenon in which a greater number of cells exhibit damage than expected based on the number of cells traversed by radiation, could be significant contributors to overall cell damage. The purpose of this thesis was to investigate bystander effects due to signaling between different cell types cultured within 2D and 3D tissue architectures. 2D bystander signaling was investigated using a transwell insert system in which normal human fibroblasts (A) and keratinocytes (K) were irradiated with 1 GeV/n protons or iron ions at the NASA Space Radiation Laboratory using doses from either 2 Gy (protons) or 1 Gy (iron ions) down to spacerelevant low fluences. Medium-mediated bystander responses were investigated using three cell signaling combinations. Bystander signaling was also investigated in a 3D model by developing tissue constructs consisting of fibroblasts embedded in a collagen matrix with a keratinocyte epidermal layer. Bystander experiments were conducted by splitting each construct in half and exposing half to radiation then placing the other half in direct contact with the irradiated tissue on a transwell insert. Cell damage was evaluated primarily as formation of foci of the DNA repair-related protein 53BP1. In the 2D system, both protons and iron ions yielded a strong dose dependence for the induction of 53BP1 in irradiated cells, while the magnitudes and time courses of bystander responses were dependent on radiation quality. Furthermore, bystander effects were present in all three cell signaling combinations even at the low proton particle fluences used, suggesting the potential importance of including these effects in cancer risk models for low-dose space radiation exposures. Cells cultured in the 3D constructs exhibited a significant reduction in the percentages of both direct and bystander cells positive for 53BP1 foci, although the qualitative kinetics of DNA damage and repair were similar to those observed in 2D. These results provide evidence that the microenvironment significantly influences intercellular signaling and that cells may be more radioresistant in 3D compared to 2D systems.
by Sarah B. Lumpkins.
Sc.D.
Tysk, Carl, Elvira Brenner, and Anton Olsson. "Construction of a Geiger counter : For cosmic radiation in near space conditions." Thesis, Uppsala universitet, Institutionen för teknikvetenskaper, 2018. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:uu:diva-353023.
Full textGehrke, Nathan Ryan. "Utilizing Permanent On-Board Water Storage for Efficient Deep Space Radiation Shielding." DigitalCommons@CalPoly, 2018. https://digitalcommons.calpoly.edu/theses/1933.
Full textBhattacharya, Yajnavalkya. "Analysis of a solar occultation experiment from the space shuttle Columbia." Thesis, National Library of Canada = Bibliothèque nationale du Canada, 1997. http://www.collectionscanada.ca/obj/s4/f2/dsk2/tape15/PQDD_0030/MQ27334.pdf.
Full textTapia, S. "Ground Observations of Polarimetric Standards for the Hubble Space Telescope." Steward Observatory, The University of Arizona (Tucson, Arizona), 1988. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/623884.
Full textBagatin, Marta. "Effects of Ionizing Radiation in Flash Memories." Doctoral thesis, Università degli studi di Padova, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/11577/3426925.
Full textLe memorie a semiconduttore che operano al livello del mare sono costantemente bombardate dalla radiazione ionizzante. Particelle alfa, emesse dai contaminanti radioattivi che sono inevitabilmente presenti nei materiali dei componenti e delle saldature, possono raggiungere le aree sensibili dei chip e generare cambiamenti indesiderati dello stato logico dei bit di memoria. Inoltre, una continua pioggia di neutroni causata dalle interazioni dei raggi cosmici con gli strati esterni dell’atmosfera costituisce una seria minaccia per il corretto funzionamento dell’elettronica in ambiente terrestre. L'elettronica che opera nello spazio deve funzionare in un ambiente ancora più critico dal punto di vista delle radiazioni ionizzanti, data la presenza massiccia di protoni, elettroni e ioni pesanti. Le memorie Flash sono sensibili agli effetti di radiazione. Essendo componenti sfaccettati, con blocchi funzionali eterogenei, la loro risposta alle radiazioni ionizzanti è variegata e talvolta la sua interpretazione può risultare complessa. Le SRAM, dal canto loro, sono il benchmark più comune per valutare la sensibilità al soft error di una data generazione tecnologica CMOS, nonchè dispositivi presenti virtualmente in tutti i circuiti integrati, non da ultimo nel page buffer delle memorie Flash. Questo lavoro di tesi contiene dei contributi originali nel campo degli effetti delle radiazioni sulle memorie Flash e SRAM. E’ stato effettuato uno studio completo, sperimentale e teorico, di memorie Flash commerciali, usando raggi x, ioni pesanti e neutroni, per simulare sia l’ambiente spaziale che quello terrestre. Per quanto riguarda gli effetti di dose totale, si studiano le diverse dosi di fallimento della matrice di celle Floating Gate, delle pompe di carica e del decoder di riga, irraggiando selettivamente i vari blocchi funzionali del dispositivo, in contrasto con la metodologia più comune di esporre alla radiazione l’intero chip. Nel Capitolo 3, dedicato agli effetti da evento singolo, si chiarisce il ruolo del page buffer nel determinare la sensibilità a ioni pesanti di una memoria NAND, studiando anche la dipendenza dei diversi tipi di errori (page buffer vs celle Floating Gate) dalle condizioni operative del dispositivo. Si propone quindi una ‘sezione d’urto efficace’ allo scopo di tenere conto di questi parametri. Negli ultimi anni sono stati discussi gli effetti di annealing post-irraggiamento degli errori osservati nelle celle Floating Gate, ma, apparentemente, le spiegazioni fornite collidevano con le teorie di perdita di carica dal Floating Gate. In questo lavoro di tesi si presentano risultati nuovi su questo fronte (Capitolo 4), che dimostrano come le teorie di perdita e intrappolamento di carica nel Floating Gate possano in realtà coesistere e spiegare in modo efficace i dati sperimentali. Il Capitolo 5 mostra, per la prima volta, che i neutroni atmosferici sono in grado di indurre errori in memorie Flash avanzate, cosa che fino a poco fa si riteneva possibile solo per memorie SRAM e DRAM. Questi risultati rivelano l’importanza di una nuova tematica connessa all’uso questi dispositivi in ambito terrestre. Infine, il Capitolo 6 illustra i fattori principali che determinano la dipendenza dalla temperatura del tasso di soft error in una memoria SRAM. Si presentano i risultati sperimentali, di simulazioni SPICE e modellizzazione analitica, per evidenziare la complessa miscela di parametri in gioco, molti dei quali fortemente dipendenti dalle caratteristiche tecnologiche del dispositivo.
Larsson, Oscar. "Analysis of the Radiation Environment on Board the International Space Station Using Data from the SilEye-3/Alteino Experiment." Doctoral thesis, KTH, Partikel- och astropartikelfysik, 2014. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:kth:diva-145339.
Full textQC 20140521
Dow, K. L., M. V. Sykes, F. J. Low, and F. Vilas. "Detection of Earth Orbiting Objects by IRAS." Steward Observatory, The University of Arizona (Tucson, Arizona), 1989. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/623903.
Full textLizarrage, Adrian, Brittany Lynn, and Jeremiah Lange. "Remote Imaging System Acquisition (RISA) Space Environment Multispectral Imager." International Foundation for Telemetering, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/604306.
Full textThe purpose of the NASA Remote Imaging System Acquisition space camera prototype is to integrate multiple optical instruments into a small wireless system using radiation tolerant components. This stage of prototyping was the development of a broadband variable-focus camera that can transmit data wirelessly. A liquid lens in conjunction with a cerium doped double gauss eliminates traditional focusing mechanisms.
McMahon, Michael, Albert Rhoads, Frank Winter, and Graham Pierson. "A VERSATILE PROGRAMMABLE FUNCTION RF ASIC FOR SPACE-BASED RF SYSTEMS." International Foundation for Telemetering, 1999. http://hdl.handle.net/10150/608302.
Full textA programmable RF ASIC is described which provides most of the RF functions within a next generation S-band transponder for space applications. The unique 18-contact LCC device can be programmed to perform a variety of RF and analog functions. This single space qualified high speed bipolar "function toolbox" is used in 39 locations throughout the transponder to provide a flexible radio architecture. The ASIC design process, internal electrical design, circuit application, space environment performance, and RF testing of the RF ASIC are described. This proprietary part provides a space-qualified solution for RF circuitry that can be applied to a variety of space application products.
Coudeyras, James C. "Radiation testing of the Configurable Fault Tolerant Processor (CFTP) for space-based applications." Thesis, Monterey, Calif. : Springfield, Va. : Naval Postgraduate School ; Available from National Technical Information Service, 2005. http://library.nps.navy.mil/uhtbin/hyperion/05Dec%5FCoudeyras.pdf.
Full textThesis Advisor(s): Herschel H. Loomis, Alan A. Ross. Includes bibliographical references (p. 137-140). Also available online.
Park, HyeongKae. "Coupled Space-Angle Adaptivity and Goal-Oriented Error Control for Radiation Transport Calculations." Diss., Georgia Institute of Technology, 2006. http://hdl.handle.net/1853/13944.
Full textReed, Susan Marie. "The effects of space radiation on a chemically modified graphite- epoxy composite material." Thesis, Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University, 1986. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/101320.
Full textM.S.