A low-energy ion spectrometer with half-space entrance for three-axis stabilized spacecraft

A low-energy ion spectrometer (LEIS) for use aboard three-axis stabilized spacecraft has been developed to measure ion energy per charge distribution in three-dimensional space with good energy-, angular- and temporal-resolutions. For the standard top-hat electrostatic analyzer used widely in space...

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Veröffentlicht in:Science China. Technological sciences 2019-06, Vol.62 (6), p.1015-1027
Hauptverfasser: Hu, RenXiang, Shan, Xu, Yuan, GuangYuan, Wang, ShuWen, Zhang, WeiHang, Qi, Wei, Cao, Zhe, Li, YiRen, Chen, ManMing, Yang, XiaoPing, Wang, Bo, Shao, SiPei, Li, Feng, Zhong, XiaoQing, Fan, Dan, Hao, XinJun, Feng, ChangQing, Su, ZhenPeng, Shen, ChengLong, Li, Xin, Dai, GuYue, Qiu, BingLin, Pan, ZongHao, Liu, Kai, Xu, ChunKai, Liu, ShuBin, An, Qi, Zhang, TieLong, Wang, YuMing
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:A low-energy ion spectrometer (LEIS) for use aboard three-axis stabilized spacecraft has been developed to measure ion energy per charge distribution in three-dimensional space with good energy-, angular- and temporal-resolutions. For the standard top-hat electrostatic analyzer used widely in space plasma detection, three-axis stabilized spacecraft makes it difficult to obtain complete coverage of all possible ion arrival directions. We have designed angular scanning deflectors supplementing to a cylindrically symmetric top-hat electrostatic analyzer to provide a half-space field of view as 360°×90° (–45°–+45°), and fabricated the LEIS flight model for detecting magnetospheric ions in geosynchronous orbit. The performance of this payload has been evaluated in detail by a series of simulation and environmental tests, and the payload has also been calibrated through laboratory experiments using a low-energy ion source. The results show that capabilities of the LEIS payload are in accordance with the requirements of a magnetospheric mission.
ISSN:1674-7321
1869-1900
DOI:10.1007/s11431-018-9288-8