Evaluation of new cosmic radiation monitors designed for aircrew exposure assessment

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Abstract

With the development of next generation aircraft designs capable of ultralong-range flight and extended flight endurance, new experimental dosimetry equipment has been specifically designed to enable aircrewto monitor and respond to airborne alerts of potential doses that exceed recommended limits. The new QinetiQ QDOS/Rayhound monitor and designer-specific Liulin 4SA both provide real-time monitoring and readout with both audible and visual alert functions. The potential advantage to pilots and airlines is a more rational response to an alert by minimizing the altitude descent and time at lower levels in response to a significant event. This not only protects passengers and crew from solar particle events but provides a "greener" option to fuel burn at lower altitudes when events have abated. Thus, it will allow the crew to determine safer optimum flight levels during and after the event. These monitors were flown on numerous high- and low-latitude flights in combination with a "Hawk" tissue equivalent proportional counter acting as the reference instrument as it measured the total ambient dose equivalent H*(10). An FH 41B Eberline monitor and bubble detectors were also used in the comparison. Copyright 2010 by the American Geophysical Union.

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APA

Getley, I. L., Bennett, L. G. I., Lewis, B. J., Bennett, B., Dyer, C. S., Hands, A. D. P., & Duldig, M. L. (2010). Evaluation of new cosmic radiation monitors designed for aircrew exposure assessment. Space Weather, 8(1). https://doi.org/10.1029/2009SW000492

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