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The Energetic Particle Detector: Energetic particle instrument suite for the Solar Orbiter mission
- 1.0534138 - ÚFA 2021 RIV FR eng J - Journal Article
Rodríguez-Pacheco, J. - Wimmer-Schweingruber, R.F. - Mason, G.M. - Souček, Jan … Total 99 authors
The Energetic Particle Detector: Energetic particle instrument suite for the Solar Orbiter mission.
Astronomy & Astrophysics. Roč. 642, Sep 30 (2020), č. článku A7. ISSN 0004-6361. E-ISSN 1432-0746
Institutional support: RVO:68378289
Keywords : acceleration of particles * detectors * coronal mass ejections (CMEs) * flares * heliosphere * particle emission
OECD category: Fluids and plasma physics (including surface physics)
Impact factor: 5.803, year: 2020
Method of publishing: Open access
https://www.aanda.org/articles/aa/pdf/2020/10/aa35287-19.pdf
After decades of observations of solar energetic particles from space-based observatories, relevant questions on particle injection, transport, and acceleration remain open. To address these scientific topics, accurate measurements of the particle properties in the inner heliosphere are needed. In this paper we describe the Energetic Particle Detector (EPD), an instrument suite that is part of the scientific payload aboard the Solar Orbiter mission. Solar Orbiter will approach the Sun as close as 0.28 au and will provide extra-ecliptic measurements beyond similar to 30 degrees heliographic latitude during the later stages of the mission. The EPD will measure electrons, protons, and heavy ions with high temporal resolution over a wide energy range, from suprathermal energies up to several hundreds of megaelectronvolts/nucleons. For this purpose, EPD is composed of four units: the SupraThermal Electrons and Protons (STEP), the Electron Proton Telescope (EPT), the Suprathermal Ion Spectrograph (SIS), and the High-Energy Telescope (HET) plus the Instrument Control Unit that serves as power and data interface with the spacecraft. The low-energy population of electrons and ions will be covered by STEP and EPT, while the high-energy range will be measured by HET. Elemental and isotopic ion composition measurements will be performed by SIS and HET, allowing full particle identification from a few kiloelectronvolts up to several hundreds of megaelectronvolts/nucleons. Angular information will be provided by the separate look directions from different sensor heads, on the ecliptic plane along the Parker spiral magnetic field both forward and backwards, and out of the ecliptic plane observing both northern and southern hemispheres. The unparalleled observations of EPD will provide key insights into long-open and crucial questions about the processes that govern energetic particles in the inner heliosphere.
Permanent Link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0312380
File Download Size Commentary Version Access 0534138_AA_2020_Souček.pdf 3 16.9 MB Publisher’s postprint open-access
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