Neutron-Induced, Single-Event Effects on Neuromorphic Event-based Vision Sensor: A First Step Towards Space Applications
Seth Roffe, Himanshu Akolkar, Alan D. George, Bernab\'e, Linares-barranco, Ryad Benosman

TL;DR
This study evaluates the resilience of neuromorphic event-based vision sensors to neutron radiation, demonstrating their potential for space applications by analyzing noise effects and introducing a simulation environment.
Contribution
It is the first analysis of neutron-induced noise on neuromorphic vision sensors, showing their suitability for space environments and providing a new simulation tool.
Findings
Sensors recover quickly during radiation exposure.
Radiation-induced noise does not impair event-level computation.
Noise characteristics vary with angle of incidence.
Abstract
This paper studies the suitability of neuromorphic event-based vision cameras for spaceflight, and the effects of neutron radiation on their performance. Neuromorphic event-based vision cameras are novel sensors that implement asynchronous, clockless data acquisition, providing information about the change in illuminance greater than 120dB with sub-millisecond temporal precision. These sensors have huge potential for space applications as they provide an extremely sparse representation of visual dynamics while removing redundant information, thereby conforming to low-resource requirements. An event-based sensor was irradiated under wide-spectrum neutrons at Los Alamos Neutron Science Center and its effects were classified. We found that the sensor had very fast recovery during radiation, showing high correlation of noise event bursts with respect to source macro-pulses. No significant…
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