Radiation-Induced Dark Counts for Silicon Single-Photon Detectors in Space
Brandon A. Wilson, Alexander Miloshevsky, David A. Hooper, and, Nicholas A. Peters

TL;DR
This study evaluates how space radiation affects silicon single-photon detectors used in satellite-based quantum communication, highlighting the importance of orbit choice and shielding to mitigate radiation damage and dark count increases.
Contribution
It provides a detailed analysis of radiation-induced dark count rates in silicon detectors across different satellite orbits and environmental conditions, including nuclear explosions.
Findings
Protons are the main source of damage in low Earth orbit.
Shielding with over 10 mm aluminum reduces damage in medium and geostationary orbits.
High-altitude nuclear explosions create artificial belts that severely damage low Earth orbit detectors.
Abstract
Single-photon detectors operating on satellites for use in a quantum communications network can incur large dark count rate increases from the natural radiation environment of space. Displacement damage to the material lattice of a detector from the ionizing radiation can result in a permanent dark count increase in the detector. In this work, we analyze the radiation-induced dark count rate of a silicon single-photon avalanche diode onboard a satellite at different orbiting altitudes, as well as, the additional radiation from a nuclear-disturbed environment caused by a high-altitude nuclear explosion. For detectors on low Earth orbit satellites, protons are the biggest source of radiation damage and are best mitigated by choosing an orbit that minimizes exposure when passing through the South Atlantic Anomaly and Polar Cusps. Detectors on medium Earth orbit and geostationary orbit…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadiation Therapy and Dosimetry · Advanced Optical Sensing Technologies · CCD and CMOS Imaging Sensors
