Proton Irradiation of SiPM arrays for POLAR-2
Slawomir Mianowski, Nicolas De Angelis, Johannes Hulsman, Merlin Kole,, Tomasz Kowalski, Sebastian Kusyk, Hancheng Li, Zuzanna Mianowska, Jerzy, Mietelski, Agnieszka Pollo, Dominik Rybka, Jianchao Sun, Jan Swakon, Damian, Wrobel, Xin Wu

TL;DR
This study evaluates the radiation damage effects on silicon photomultiplier arrays for the POLAR-2 space instrument, focusing on performance degradation due to proton irradiation and implications for space missions.
Contribution
It provides detailed analysis of radiation-induced performance degradation in specific SiPM models under space-like proton irradiation conditions.
Findings
Radiation increases dark current and counts in SiPMs.
Performance degradation corresponds to space exposure of up to 62.9 years.
Annealing effects observed but not extensively studied.
Abstract
POLAR-2 is a space-borne polarimeter, built to investigate the polarization of Gamma-Ray Bursts and help elucidate their mechanisms. The instrument is targeted for launch in 2024 or 2025 aboard the China Space Station and is being developed by a collaboration between institutes from Switzerland, Germany, Poland and China. The instrument will orbit at altitudes between 340km and 450km with an inclination of 42 and will be subjected to background radiation from cosmic rays and solar events. It is therefore pertinent to better understand the performance of sensitive devices under space-like conditions. In this paper we focus on the radiation damage of the silicon photomultiplier arrays S13361-6075NE-04 and S14161-6050HS-04 from Hamamatsu. The S13361 are irradiated with 58MeV protons at several doses up to 4.96Gy, whereas the newer series S14161 are irradiated at doses of…
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Taxonomy
TopicsRadiation Therapy and Dosimetry · Nuclear Physics and Applications · Gamma-ray bursts and supernovae
