Earth, Planets and Space (Dec 2017)

Low-energy particle experiments–electron analyzer (LEPe) onboard the Arase spacecraft

  • Yoichi Kazama,
  • Bo-Jhou Wang,
  • Shiang-Yu Wang,
  • Paul T. P. Ho,
  • Sunny W. Y. Tam,
  • Tzu-Fang Chang,
  • Chih-Yu Chiang,
  • Kazushi Asamura

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s40623-017-0748-6
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 69, no. 1
pp. 1 – 13

Abstract

Read online

Abstract In this report, we describe the low-energy electron instrument LEPe (low-energy particle experiments–electron analyzer) onboard the Arase (ERG) spacecraft. The instrument measures a three-dimensional distribution function of electrons with energies of $$\sim 19$$ ∼ 19 eV–19 keV. Electrons in this energy range dominate in the inner magnetosphere, and measurement of such electrons is important in terms of understanding the magnetospheric dynamics and wave–particle interaction. The instrument employs a toroidal tophat electrostatic energy analyzer with a passive 6-mm aluminum shield. To minimize background radiation effects, the analyzer has a background channel, which monitors counts produced by background radiation. Background counts are then subtracted from measured counts. Electronic components are radiation tolerant, and 5-mm-thick shielding of the electronics housing ensures that the total dose is less than 100 kRad for the one-year nominal mission lifetime. The first in-space measurement test was done on February 12, 2017, showing that the instrument functions well. On February 27, the first all-instrument run test was done, and the LEPe instrument measured an energy dispersion event probably related to a substorm injection occurring immediately before the instrument turn-on. These initial results indicate that the instrument works fine in space, and the measurement performance is good for science purposes.

Keywords