26 research outputs found
Radiation Models for Exposure Analyses in Deep Space
No abstract availabl
Investigating Material Approximations in Spacecraft Radiation Analysis
During the design process, the configuration of space vehicles and habitats changes frequently and the merits of design changes must be evaluated. Methods for rapidly assessing astronaut exposure are therefore required. Typically, approximations are made to simplify the geometry and speed up the evaluation of each design. In this work, the error associated with two common approximations used to simplify space radiation vehicle analyses, scaling into equivalent materials and material reordering, are investigated. Over thirty materials commonly found in spacesuits, vehicles, and human bodies are considered. Each material is placed in a material group (aluminum, polyethylene, or tissue), and the error associated with scaling and reordering was quantified for each material. Of the scaling methods investigated, range scaling is shown to be the superior method, especially for shields less than 30 g/cm2 exposed to a solar particle event. More complicated, realistic slabs are examined to quantify the separate and combined effects of using equivalent materials and reordering. The error associated with material reordering is shown to be at least comparable to, if not greater than, the error associated with range scaling. In general, scaling and reordering errors were found to grow with the difference between the average nuclear charge of the actual material and average nuclear charge of the equivalent material. Based on this result, a different set of equivalent materials (titanium, aluminum, and tissue) are substituted for the commonly used aluminum, polyethylene, and tissue. The realistic cases are scaled and reordered using the new equivalent materials, and the reduced error is shown
An Improved Neutron Transport Algorithm for HZETRN
Long term human presence in space requires the inclusion of radiation constraints in mission planning and the design of shielding materials, structures, and vehicles. In this paper, the numerical error associated with energy discretization in HZETRN is addressed. An inadequate numerical integration scheme in the transport algorithm is shown to produce large errors in the low energy portion of the neutron and light ion fluence spectra. It is further shown that the errors result from the narrow energy domain of the neutron elastic cross section spectral distributions, and that an extremely fine energy grid is required to resolve the problem under the current formulation. Two numerical methods are developed to provide adequate resolution in the energy domain and more accurately resolve the neutron elastic interactions. Convergence testing is completed by running the code for various environments and shielding materials with various energy grids to ensure stability of the newly implemented method
Fragmentation of 14-N, 16-O, 20-Ne, and 24-Mg Nuclei at 290 to 1000 MeV/nucleon
We report fragmentation cross sections measured at 0 deg for beams of 14-N,
16-O, 20-Ne, and 24-Mg ions, at energies ranging from 290 MeV/nucleon to 1000
MeV/nucleon. Beams were incident on targets of C, CH2, Al, Cu, Sn, and Pb, with
the C and CH2 target data used to obtain hydrogen-target cross sections. Using
methods established in earlier work, cross sections obtained with both
large-acceptance and small-acceptance detectors are extracted from the data and
when necessary corrected for acceptance effects. The large-acceptance data
yield cross sections for fragments with charges approximately half of the beam
charge and above, with minimal corrections. Cross sections for lighter
fragments are obtained from small-acceptance spectra, with more significant,
model-dependent corrections that account for the fragment angular
distributions. Results for both charge-changing and fragment production cross
sections are compared to the predictions of the Los Alamos version of the Quark
Gluon String Model (LAQGSM) as well as the NUCFRG2 and PHITS models. For all
beams and targets, cross sections for fragments as light as He are compared to
the models. Estimates of multiplicity-weighted helium production cross sections
are obtained from the data and compared to PHITS and LAQGSM predictions.
Summary statistics show that the level of agreement between data and
predictions is slightly better for PHITS than for either NUCFRG2 or LAQGSM.Comment: 26 pages, 15 figures, 13 tables, to be published in Phys. Rev.
Correlated Uncertainties in Radiation Shielding Effectiveness
The space radiation environment is composed of energetic particles which can deliver harmful doses of radiation that may lead to acute radiation sickness, cancer, and even death for insufficiently shielded crew members. Spacecraft shielding must provide structural integrity and minimize the risk associated with radiation exposure. The risk of radiation exposure induced death (REID) is a measure of the risk of dying from cancer induced by radiation exposure. Uncertainties in the risk projection model, quality factor, and spectral fluence are folded into the calculation of the REID by sampling from probability distribution functions. Consequently, determining optimal shielding materials that reduce the REID in a statistically significant manner has been found to be difficult. In this work, the difference of the REID distributions for different materials is used to study the effect of composition on shielding effectiveness. It is shown that the use of correlated uncertainties allows for the determination of statistically significant differences between materials despite the large uncertainties in the quality factor. This is in contrast to previous methods where uncertainties have been generally treated as uncorrelated. It is concluded that the use of correlated quality factor uncertainties greatly reduces the uncertainty in the assessment of shielding effectiveness for the mitigation of radiation exposure
A Reference Field for GCR Simulation and an LET-Based Implementation at NSRL
No abstract availabl
Analysis of Mass Averaged Tissue Doses in CAM, CAF, MAX, and FAX
To estimate astronaut health risk due to space radiation, one must have the ability to calculate exposure-related quantities averaged over specific organs and tissue types. In this study, we first examine the anatomical properties of the Computerized Anatomical Man (CAM), Computerized Anatomical Female (CAF), Male Adult voXel (MAX), and Female Adult voXel (FAX) models by comparing the masses of various tissues to the reference values specified by the International Commission on Radiological Protection (ICRP). Major discrepancies are found between the CAM and CAF tissue masses and the ICRP reference data for almost all of the tissues. We next examine the distribution of target points used with the deterministic transport code HZETRN to compute mass averaged exposure quantities. A numerical algorithm is used to generate multiple point distributions for many of the effective dose tissues identified in CAM, CAF, MAX, and FAX. It is concluded that the previously published CAM and CAF point distributions were under-sampled and that the set of point distributions presented here should be adequate for future studies involving CAM, CAF, MAX, or FAX. It is concluded that MAX and FAX are more accurate than CAM and CAF for space radiation analyses
Parametrizations of Inclusive Cross Sections for Pion Production in Proton-Proton Collisions
Accurate knowledge of cross sections for pion production in proton-proton
collisions finds wide application in particle physics, astrophysics, cosmic ray
physics and space radiation problems, especially in situations where an
incident proton is transported through some medium, and one requires knowledge
of the output particle spectrum given the input spectrum. In such cases
accurate parametrizations of the cross sections are desired. In this paper we
review much of the experimental data and compare to a wide variety of different
cross section parametrizations. In so doing, we provide parametrizations of
neutral and charged pion cross sections which provide a very accurate
description of the experimental data. Lorentz invariant differential cross
sections, spectral distributions and total cross section parametrizations are
presented.Comment: 32 pages with 15 figures. Published in Physical Review D62, 094030.
File includes 6 tex files. The main file is paper.tex which has include
statements refering to the rest. figures are in graphs.di
Threshold meson production and cosmic ray transport
An interesting accident of nature is that the peak of the cosmic ray
spectrum, for both protons and heavier nuclei, occurs near the pion production
threshold. The Boltzmann transport equation contains a term which is the cosmic
ray flux multiplied by the cross section. Therefore when considering pion and
kaon production from proton-proton reactions, small cross sections at low
energy can be as important as larger cross sections at higher energy. This is
also true for subthreshold kaon production in nuclear collisions, but not for
subthreshold pion production.Comment: 9 pages, 1 figur
GCR Simulator Reference Field Specification and a Preliminary Beam Selection Strategy at the NASA Space Radiation Laboratory
No abstract availabl