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Teledyne e2v HiRel offers new radiation dosimeters for space applications
by Staff Writers
Milpitas CA (SPX) Nov 19, 2021

Teledyne HiRel NuDOS Microdosimeter

Teledyne e2v HiRel has announced availability of 3 new radiation dosimeter models that further broaden its popular range of radiation measurement devices. Aimed at high altitude aerospace applications and all space applications from GEO satellites and LEO constellations to scientific exploration, each new model occupies minimal volume and adds only 17g weight to any mission.

For many space and high altitude aerospace applications, it is of critical importance to know the amount of radiation that the platform has been subjected to. Teledyne's Microdosimeter NuDOS001, NuDOS002 and NuDOS003 measure the Total Ionizing Dose (TID) of Low-, Medium-, and High-LET (Linear Energy Transfer) radiation, and can be polled in real-time to monitor events as they happen. Deploying a system of all three models can provide spectral information about the environment.

"Customers have fully embraced our existing dosimeters, but asked that we deliver the same functionality in a smaller package," said Hector Rivera, GM of Integrated Solutions at Teledyne HiRel. "We delivered with these new NuDOS models, each taking up a smaller volume, adding less weight, and requiring a lower supply voltage."

Devices are available for ordering and shipment today, from Teledyne e2v HiRel or an authorized distributor, in commercial versions and with the option of Class H equivalent screening. They are shipped from our DoD Trusted Facility in Milpitas, California.


Related Links
Teledyne HiRel
Space Technology News - Applications and Research


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TECH SPACE
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Moscow (Sputnik) Nov 12, 2021
Space radiation may ride roughshod over a satellite's electrical circuits and result in a full-fledged burnout of its onboard systems. This remains one of the main headaches for satellite manufacturers. Specialists from the Russian Space Systems holding (RSS) have successfully tested a miniature device designed to protect the electronic onboard systems of state-of-the-art satellites from cosmic radiation, the company's press service told Sputnik on Thursday. The press service explained in a ... read more

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