Development of a radiation-hard photomultiplier tube
Abstract
In a radiation-hard photomultiplier tube (PMT) such as has been developed for stabilization of the Galileo spacecraft as it goes through the Jovian high energy radiation belts, the primary effects of high energy electron and proton radiation that must be resisted are the production of fluorescence and Cerenkov emission. The present PMT envelope is ceramic rather than glass, and employs a special, electron-focusing design which will collect, accelerate and amplify electrons only from desired photocathode areas. Tests in a Co-60 radiation facility have shown that the radiation-hard PMT produces less than 2.5 percent of the radiation noise of a standard PMT.
- Publication:
-
Guidance and Control Conference
- Pub Date:
- 1984
- Bibcode:
- 1984guco.conf..162B
- Keywords:
-
- Electron Optics;
- Galileo Spacecraft;
- Photomultiplier Tubes;
- Radiation Belts;
- Radiation Hardening;
- Star Trackers;
- Ceramics;
- Cerenkov Radiation;
- Electrophotometers;
- Fluorescence;
- Photocathodes;
- Photoelectrons;
- Radiation Tolerance;
- Electronics and Electrical Engineering