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Test Beam Simulation for ESA BepiColombo Mission. Monte Carlo 2005 Chattanooga, April 2005. Marcos Bavdaz, Alfonso Mantero, Barbara Mascialino, Petteri Nieminen, Alan Owens, Tone Peacock, Maria Grazia Pia. Mercury. Observations from Earth are difficult
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Test Beam Simulation for ESA BepiColombo Mission Monte Carlo 2005 Chattanooga, April 2005 Marcos Bavdaz, Alfonso Mantero, Barbara Mascialino, Petteri Nieminen, Alan Owens, Tone Peacock, Maria Grazia Pia
Mercury • Observations from Earth are difficult • Impossible observations from Hubble (optics damage) Interplanetary Spacecrafts 3 fly-by (Mariner 10 - 1974-75) Atmosphere generated by solar wind High density (5.3 g/cm3) Magnetic field (~ 330 nT - 1/1000 Earth) Magnetosphere Planet formation theories Water presence at the poles (?)
A number of missions are planned in the coming years to measure the fluorescence spectra of solar system object, as a method to ascertain their composition planets Evaluation of the elemental composition of the crust of solar system objects asteroids moons Mercury formation solar system objects Understanding the formation of the solar system as a whole
The ESA BepiColombo mission Two orbiters for a variety of scientific experiments: Magnetic field study - Planet mapping - Surface study Named in honour of Giuseppe Colombo - Planetary evolutionary models - Solar corona measurements - Precision measurements of general relativity - Search for Near Earth Objects (NEO) Launch date 2012 MPO Mercury Planetary Orbiter Mercury Magnetospheric Orbiter
HERMES experiment Planetary surface composition measurements by means of X-ray spectrography Fluorescence spectra EBEAM=8.5 keV Incident Radiation Fluorescence Mercury soil Counts Solar radiation variability + Cosmic Radiation Energy (keV) Choice for the most appropriate detector under study, particularly for GaAs. Detector for incident radiation monitoring
Simulation Mission related problems • Poor knowledge and no control on the measurement environment • No repair possible in space Risk Analysis and Mitigation FUNCTIONAL REQUIREMENTS • Fluorescence simulation resulting from atomic deexcitation • Reproduction capability for complex materials, like the geological ones • Geometry detailed description • Detector features reproduction NON-FUNCTIONAL REQUIREMENTS • Results reliability, by means of PHYSICALVALIDATION • GRIDtransposition for statistically significant samples production
It is a - based application for the simulation of X-ray emission spectra from rock geological samples of astrophysical interest The physics involved is based on the The simulation Geant4 Low Energy Electromagnetic Package Geant4 Atomic Relaxation Package X-ray Fluorescence Emission model
The simulation has been validated with comparison to experimental data taken at Bessy by ESA in two different phases: The simulation validation PHASE II PHASE I Geological complex samples irradiation Pure element irradiation
Pure material samples: • Cu • Fe • Al • Si • Ti • Stainless steel Test beam at Bessy - I Advanced Concepts and Science Payloads A. Owens, T. Peacock Monocromatic photon beam HPGe detector
Simulation validation - I Photon energy: mean Experimental data Simulation Parametric analysis: fit to a gaussian Compare experimental and simulated distributions Detector effects - resolution - efficiency % difference of photon energies Precision better than 1%
Si FCM beamline Si reference XRF chamber GaAs Test beam at Bessy - II Complex geological materials of astrophysical interest Advanced Concepts and Science Payloads A. Owens, T. Peacock Monocromatic photon beam Hawaiian basalt Icelandic basalt Anorthosite Dolerite Gabbro Hematite
Modeling the experimental set-up The simulation reproduces: Complex geological materials Geometry of the experimental set-up Response and efficiency of the detector
Simulation design Detector (Si(Li)) response function and efficiency reproduction User-friendly modification of experimental set-up
Simulation validation - II The application demonstrates Geant4 capability to generate the fluorescence spectra resulting from complex materials Quantitative analysis: comparison on the entire distribution non-parametric testing techniques
Complex materials Anderson-Darling test • Goodness-of-Fit test belonging to Kolmogorov test family • Not sensitive to data binning • No need for symmetric distributions • No threshold counts/bin Several peaks Physical background Comparison between experimental and simulated entire distributions Statistical analysis Goodness-of-Fit Statistical Toolkit Good agreement between simulations and experimental data (p >0.05) Geant4 Atomic Deexcitation Package Physics Validation
Anderson Darling test A2 0.04 0.01 0.21 0.41 Beam Energy 4.9 6.5 8.2 9.5 Ac (95%) = 0.752 Fluorescence spectra from Hawaiian Basalt EBEAM=8.3 keV Quantitative comparisons: Hawaiian basalt Counts Fluorescence spectra from Hawaiian Basalt Energy (keV) simulations experimental Pearson correlation analysis: r>0.93 p<0.0001 Counts High statistical correlation between experimental data and simulations EBEAM=6.5 keV Energy (keV)
Simulation results: EBEAM=6.5 keV Differences between simulations and experimental data are ascribable to: - The nominal composition of the rock could be different from the real one (extra peaks are due to K and L lines of Cr) • The detector response is “unknown” at low energies (E < 3.5 keV)
Simulation results: EBEAM=7.0 keV • i Simulation results: EBEAM=8.3 keV
DIANE (Distributed Analysis Environment) Execution time reducion gives fruibility for application Complex simulations require long execution time Integration for the application performed generally, available for any Geant4 application DIANE allows GRID usage transaprently 2 tests: public cluster (30 – 35 machines LXPLUS) and dedicated cluster (15 machines LXSHARE) Execution times reduction: ~ one order of magnitude (24h – 750M events) IN COLLABORATION WITH JUKUB MOSCICKI
Rocks X-ray emission library Space missions are risky, so solid strategies for risk mitigation are to be undertaken HERMES EXPERIMENT It is necessary to study all the possible responses of the instruments before they are in flight with a very good precision for all the possible situations they can find The simulation development has open the possibility to create a libraryof simulated rocks spectra, to be used as a reference for various planetary missions Venus Express BepiColombo SMART-1
CONCLUSIONS • Creation of rocks libraries of astrophysics interest simulated spectra are validated with respect to experimental data • Geant4 is capable of generating X-Ray spectra for rocks of known composition • The production of an extensive library is in progress Test beams contributed significantly to the validation of Geant4 Low Energy Electromagnetic Package/Atomic Deexcitation
For further informations: Alfonso.Mantero@ge.infn.it Future developments Solar radiation Mercury incident radiation is composed by Cosmic radiation A new model for VALIDATION PIXE Future test beam is available in Geant4