Bibcode
Wimmer-Schweingruber, Robert F.; Rodriguez-Pacheco, J.; Lin, R. P.; Mason, G. M.; Heber, B.; Valtonen, E.; Sanchez, S.; Blanco, J.; Prieto, M.; Martin, C.; Ho, G.; Andrews, B.; Burmeister, S.; Boettcher, S.; Kulkarni, S. R.; Seimetz, L.; Schuster, B.
Bibliographical reference
38th COSPAR Scientific Assembly. Held 18-15 July 2010, in Bremen, Germany, p.2
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2010
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Description
Multiple processes in the solar atmosphere or near the Sun are capable
of energizing electrons and ions which are remotely observed as Solar
Energetic Particle (SEP) events. SEP events are of great interest not
only because they can cause large radiation increases in the
interplanetary space and over the Earth's polar regions, but also
because they are part of a broad range of astrophysical sources of
energetic particles. Since astrophysical particle accelerators cannot be
studied directly, SEPs provide the best opportunity to study all aspects
of the problem, namely the acceleration process itself and the ways in
which the particles escape the source and travel to remote sites. The
Energetic Particle Detector (EPD) addresses two primary science goals of
Solar Orbiter: 1) What are the sources of energetic particles and how
are they accelerated to high energy? 2) How are solar energetic
particles released from their sources and distributed in time? To
address these questions, the Energetic Particle Detector (EPD) suite
consists of five sensors measuring electrons, protons, and ions from
helium to iron, and operating at partly overlapping energy ranges from 2
keV up to 200 MeV/n. The five EPD sensors are the SupraThermal
Elec-trons, Ions, Neutrals (STEIN) sensor, the Suprathermal Ion
Spectrograph (SIS), the Electron Proton Telescope (EPT), the Low Energy
Telescope (LET), and the High Energy Telescope (HET). All sensors share
a Common Data Processing Unit (CDPU), and EPT and HET share a common
E-Box. EPT/HET and LET consist of two separate sensors with multiple
viewing directions. The overall energy coverage achieved with the EPD
sensors is 0.002 MeV to 20 MeV for electrons, 0.003 MeV to 100 MeV for
protons, 0.008 MeV/n to 200 MeV/n for heavy ions (species-dependent),
and 3 keV 30 keV for neutral atoms.