THEMIS Electrostatic Analyzer: Difference between revisions

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The THEMIS ion and electron electrostatic analyzers (iESA and eESA) measure plasma over the energy range from a few eV up to 30 keV for electrons and 25 keV for ions. The instrument consists of a pair of "top hat" electrostatic analyzers with common 180° by 6° fields-of-view that sweep out 4π steradians each 3s spin period. Particles are detected by microchannel plate detectors and binned into six distributions whose energy, angle, and time resolution depend upon instrument mode. On-board moments are also calculated and processing includes corrections for spacecraft potential.
The THEMIS ion and electron electrostatic analyzers (iESA and eESA) measure plasma over the energy range from a few eV up to 30 keV for electrons and 25 keV for ions. The instrument consists of a pair of "top hat" electrostatic analyzers with common 180° by 6° fields-of-view that sweep out 4π steradians each 3s spin period. Particles are detected by microchannel plate detectors and binned into six distributions whose energy, angle, and time resolution depend upon instrument mode. On-board moments are also calculated and processing includes corrections for spacecraft potential.
Development Institution:
Development Institution:
University of California, Berkeley (UCB) ESA Leads
 
University of California, Berkeley (UCB)
 
ESA Leads
 
C. W. Carlson (UCB), J.P. McFadden (UCB)
C. W. Carlson (UCB), J.P. McFadden (UCB)




Detailed information on the THEMIS ESA plasma instrument can be found in the following articles published in Space Science Reviews:


The THEMIS ion and electron Electrostatic Analyzers (ESAs) are packaged together to provide a common field of view. The left-hand figure shows an ESA with the anode cover removed, revealing coupling capacitors. The LVPS (black) is mounted on the side and the nitrogen purge inlet (red) is exposed. The right-hand figure is an analyzer cutaway showing the common aperture mechanism and electronics packaging. (from McFadden et al., 2008a)


Detailed information on the THEMIS ESA plasma instrument can be found in the following articles published in Space Science Reviews:
[http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs11214-008-9440-2 McFadden, J.P., Carlson, C.W., Larson, D., Angelopoulos, V., Ludlam, M., Abiad, R., Elliott, B., Turin, P., Marckwordt, M. (2008a), The THEMIS ESA plasma instrument and in-flight calibration, Space Sci. Rev, doi: 10.1007/s11214-008-9440-2.]
 
[http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007%2Fs11214-008-9433-1 McFadden, J.P., Carlson, C.W., Larson, D., Bonnell, J., Mozer, F., Angelopoulos, V., Glassmeier, K.-H., Auster, U. (2008b), THEMIS ESA first science results and performance issues, Space Sci. Rev., doi: 10.1007/s11214-008-9433-1.]

Latest revision as of 17:24, 13 May 2016

The THEMIS ion and electron electrostatic analyzers (iESA and eESA) measure plasma over the energy range from a few eV up to 30 keV for electrons and 25 keV for ions. The instrument consists of a pair of "top hat" electrostatic analyzers with common 180° by 6° fields-of-view that sweep out 4π steradians each 3s spin period. Particles are detected by microchannel plate detectors and binned into six distributions whose energy, angle, and time resolution depend upon instrument mode. On-board moments are also calculated and processing includes corrections for spacecraft potential.

Development Institution:

University of California, Berkeley (UCB)

ESA Leads

C. W. Carlson (UCB), J.P. McFadden (UCB)


Detailed information on the THEMIS ESA plasma instrument can be found in the following articles published in Space Science Reviews:


McFadden, J.P., Carlson, C.W., Larson, D., Angelopoulos, V., Ludlam, M., Abiad, R., Elliott, B., Turin, P., Marckwordt, M. (2008a), The THEMIS ESA plasma instrument and in-flight calibration, Space Sci. Rev, doi: 10.1007/s11214-008-9440-2.

McFadden, J.P., Carlson, C.W., Larson, D., Bonnell, J., Mozer, F., Angelopoulos, V., Glassmeier, K.-H., Auster, U. (2008b), THEMIS ESA first science results and performance issues, Space Sci. Rev., doi: 10.1007/s11214-008-9433-1.