DocumentCode
1702745
Title
Gamma ray large area space telescope balloon flight engineering model: overview
Author
Thompson, D.J. ; Hartman, R.C. ; Kelly, H. ; Kotani, T. ; Krizmanic, J. ; Moiseev, A. ; Ormes, J.F. ; Ritz, S. ; Schaefer, R. ; Sheppard, D. ; Singh, S. ; Godfrey, G. ; Silva, E. Do Couto e ; Dubois, R. ; Giebels, B. ; Haller, G. ; Handa, T. ; Kamae, T. ;
Author_Institution
NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, USA
Volume
1
fYear
2001
Firstpage
447
Abstract
The Gamma Ray Large Area Space Telescope (GLAST) Large Area Telescope (LAT) is a pair-production high-energy (>20 MeV) gamma-ray telescope being built by an international partnership of astrophysicists and particle physicists for a satellite launch in 2006, designed to study a wide variety of high-energy astrophysical phenomena. As part of the development effort, the collaboration has built a Balloon Flight Engineering Model (BFEM) for flight on a high-altitude scientific balloon. The BFEM is approximately the size of one of the 16 GLAST-LAT towers and contains all the components of the full instruments: plastic scintillator anticoincidence system (ACD), high-Z foil/Si strip pair-conversion tracker (TKR), CsI hodoscopic calorimeter (CAL), triggering and data acquisition electronics (DAQ), commanding system, power distribution, telemetry, real-time data display, and ground data processing system. The principal goal of the balloon flight was to demonstrate the performance of this instrument configuration under conditions similar to those expected in orbit. Results from a balloon flight from Palestine, Texas, on August 4, 2001, show that the BFEM successfully obtained gamma-ray data in this high-background environment.
Keywords
astronomical telescopes; coincidence circuits; cosmic ray apparatus; data acquisition; gamma-ray detection; nuclear electronics; particle calorimetry; power amplifiers; silicon radiation detectors; solid scintillation detectors; BFEM; CsI; GLAST; Si; commanding system; data acquisition electronics; gamma ray large area space telescope balloon flight engineering model; ground data processing system; high-altitude scientific balloon; high-background environment; high-energy astrophysical phenomena; hodoscopic calorimeter; instrument configuration; plastic scintillator anticoincidence system; power distribution; real-time data display; satellite launch; silicon strip pair-conversion tracker; telemetry; triggering electronics; Aerospace engineering; Collaboration; Data acquisition; Extraterrestrial phenomena; Instruments; Optical design; Plastics; Poles and towers; Satellites; Telescopes;
fLanguage
English
Publisher
ieee
Conference_Titel
Nuclear Science Symposium Conference Record, 2001 IEEE
ISSN
1082-3654
Print_ISBN
0-7803-7324-3
Type
conf
DOI
10.1109/NSSMIC.2001.1008496
Filename
1008496
Link To Document