source: JEM-EUSO/ICRC2013/EusoBalloonDetector/trunk/icrc2013-EBDet-morettodagoret.tex @ 150

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1%%
2% 33nd International Cosmic Ray Conference - 2013 - Rio de Janeiro, Brazil
3% Template adapted from the 2011 ICRC template.
4
5\documentclass[a4paper]{article}
6
7\usepackage{icrc2013}
8
9%The paper title
10\title{Global description of EUSO-BALLOON instrument}
11
12%The short title to appear at the header of the pages.
13\shorttitle{Instrumentation for JEM-EUSO }
14
15%All paper authors
16\authors{
17
18C. Moretto$^{1}$, S. Dagoret-Campagne$^{1}$, J.H. Adams$^{19}$, P. von Ballmoos$^{2}$,P. Barrillon$^{1}$, J. Bayer$^{5}$, M. Bertaina$^{12}$, S. Blin-Bondil$^{1}$, F. Cafagna$^{7}$, M. Casolino$^{13,10,11}$, C. Catalano$^{2}$, P. Danto$^{4}$, A. Ebersoldt$^{6}$, T. Ebisuzaki$^{13}$, J. Evrard$^{4}$, Ph. Gorodetzky$^{3}$, A. Haungs$^{6}$, A. Jung$^{14}$, Y. Kawasaki$^{13}$, H. Lim$^{14}$, G. Medina-Tanco$^{15}$, H. Miyamoto$^{1}$, D. Monnier-Ragaigne$^{1}$, T. Omori$^{13}$, G. Osteria$^{9}$, E. Parizot$^3$, I.H. Park$^{14}$, P. Picozza$^{13,10,11}$, G. Pr\'ev\^ot$^{3}$,  H. Prieto$^{13,17}$, M. Ricci$^{8}$, M.D. Rodr’guez Fr’ias$^{17}$, A. Santangelo$^{5}$, J. Szabelski$^{16}$, Y. Takizawa$^{13}$, K. Tsuno$^{13}$ 
19for the JEM-EUSO Collaboration$^{19}$.
20}
21
22%All the affiliations.
23\afiliations{
24$^1$ Laboratoire de l'Acc\'el\'erateur Lin\'eaire, Univ Paris Sud-11, CNRS/IN2P3, Orsay, France\\
25$^2$ Institut de Recherche en Astrophysique et Plan\'etologie, Toulouse, France\\
26$^3$ AstroParticule et Cosmologie, Univ Paris Diderot, CNRS/IN2P3, Paris, France\\
27$^4$ Centre National d'\'Etudes Spatiales, Centre Spatial de Toulouse, France\\
28$^5$ Institute for Astronomy and Astrophysics, Kepler Center, University of TŸ\"{u}bingen, Germany\\
29$^6$ Karlsruhe Institute of Technology (KIT), Germany\\
30$^7$ Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare - Sezione di Bari, Italy\\
31$^8$ Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare - Laboratori Nazionali di Frascati, Italy\\
32$^9$ Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare - Sezione di Napoli, Italy\\
33$^{10}$ Istituto Nazionale di Fisica Nucleare - Sezione di Roma Tor Vergata, Italy\\
34$^{11}$ UniversitaÕ di Roma Tor Vergata - Dipartimento di Fisica, Roma, Italy\\
35$^{12}$ Dipartimento di Fisica dellÕ Universit`a di Torino and INFN Torino, Torino, Italy\\
36$^{13}$ RIKEN Advanced Science Institute, Wako, Japan\\
37$^{14}$ Sungkyunkwan University, Suwon-si, Kyung-gi-do, Republic of Korea\\
38$^{15}$ Universidad Nacional Aut—noma de MŽxico (UNAM), Mexico\\
39$^{16}$ National Centre for Nuclear Research, Lodz, Poland\\
40$^{17}$ Universidad de Alcal‡ (UAH), Madrid, Spain\\
41$^{18}$ University of Alabama in Huntsville, Huntsville, USA\\
42$^{19}$ http://jemeuso.riken.jp
43}
44
45%email address of the contact person
46\email{moretto@lal.in2p3.fr} 
47
48%The abstract.
49\abstract{EUSO-Balloon is a pathfinder prefiguring the future fluorescence space telescope JEM-EUSO that should be installed on-board the Internal Space Station before the end of this decade.
50This telescope will be the payload of a stratospheric balloon operated by CNES, starting its flight campaign in 2014.
51Current technical developments for JEM-EUSO have been implemented in EUSO-Balloon.
52In this article, the complete design of this instrument will be presented. It consists of an advanced telescope structure, including a set of three Fresnel lenses having an excellent focusing performance onto its pixelized UV Camera. This camera is very sensitive to single photons, accepting signals within 6 orders of magnitude through an adaptive gain, and able to observe speed-of-light phenomena. The camera is an array of multi-anodes photomultipliers, whose dynodes are driven by Crockoft Walton HV generators capable of switching down the gain in few microseconds to protect the photodetectors against strongly luminous events.
53Analog signals of the anodes are digitised continuously each time window (2.5 $\mu$s) by ASICs, performing two kinds of signal measurements and readout by a FPGA applying a first level trigger algorithm.
54The electronics is operated by a digital processing unit comprising a CPU associated to Clocks generators board and a GPS receiver, an event filtering board based on a FPGA and an House-Keeping unit for the instrument monitoring. The CPU controls both acquisition and the data storage.
55This processing unit is interfaced with the CNES telemetry system to receive commands from ground and to download samples of the event or monitoring data.
56The whole instrument operates autonomously %with a battery package that drives a series of power supply boards that deliver the required voltage to each board.
57}
58
59%The keywords
60\keywords{JEM-EUSO, UHECR, space instrument, balloon experiment, instrumentation}
61
62
63\begin{document}
64\maketitle
65
66
67\section{Introduction}
68EUSO-Balloon is a telescope aiming at verifying the conceptual design as well as the technologies foreseen to be applied for the construction of the future space telescope JEM-EUSO ~\cite{bib:EUSOperf}. Even if this instrument is a reduced version of JEM-EUSO, it however includes almost all the required components of the original space mission. The scientific and technical goals on its mission are reviewed in the reference~\cite{bib:EBpath}. This instrument will be the payload of a stratospheric balloon operated by CNES, 
69to perform a series of night-flights at altitudes of 40 km, at various earth locations, lasting from a few hours to tens of hours. This program requires payload recovery after landing either in water or hard soil, and repairing after each mission. The special atmospheric environmental conditions and recovery requirements involve much precautions in the design and imply dedicated tests with the realisation of prototypes.
70
71This paper is organised as follows. First, section~\ref{sec:OverviewInstrument} gives the overview of the instrument, including its particular mechanical design adapted to the balloon flights.  Section~\ref{sec:Subsystems} provides details on the subsystems and highlights reasons for the chosen design. Afterward, the section~\ref{sec:AssemblyTest} deals with the series of preliminary measurements and tests which are mandatory before the commissioning of the instrument for exploration. Finally, the control and analysis tasks to be performed during the operation are mentioned in section ~\ref{sec:Operation}.
72
73
74\section{The Instrument Overview}
75\label{sec:OverviewInstrument}
76
77The EUSO-balloon instrument structure is shown in the figure~\ref{fig:globalview} and its main characteristics are given in the table~\ref{tab:properties}. These parameters will be justified in the section~\ref{sec:Subsystems} devoted to the subsystems. This parallelepiped-shaped telescope
78presents a wide field of view of 12$^\circ\times$12$^\circ$ for a collecting surface of  1 m$\times$1 m. It points to the nadir direction toward the earth.
79It basically consists in an optical bench associated to an instrument booth placed at the focal position.
80The optical bench comprises two lenses. The instrument booth includes the whole electronics inside a pressurised watertight box. One side of the instrument booth is provided by the third lens.
81 \begin{figure} 
82  \centering
83  \includegraphics[width=0.4\textwidth]{GlobalViewInstrument.jpg}
84  \caption{EUSO-Balloon Instrument Overview.}
85  \label{fig:globalview}
86 \end{figure}
87 The instrument includes an external roof-rack permitting the fixation of complementary instrument like an infra-red camera for atmosphere monitoring.
88 
89 
90\subsection{General characteristics and functions}
91The optical subsystem includes the optical bench which have the purpose of focusing parallel light rays in a  narrow focal point on a pixelized surface, consisting in an array of photodetectors called MAPMTs (Multi-Anode Photomultipliers). This Focal Surface (FS) is instrumented by an electronics which has the properties of a very high sensitivity in the UV range, fast measurement rate within the microsecond time scale, auto-triggering capability, event filtering and event recording. This electronics is capable to record on disk a burst of 128 consecutive sky pictures separated each-other by a Gate Time Unit (GTU) of 2.5 $\mu$s.
92
93\begin{table}[h!]
94\centering
95\includegraphics[width=0.48\textwidth]{InstrumentTable}
96\caption{Typical parameters of the instrument}
97\label{tab:properties}
98\end{table}
99
100\subsection{Instrument structure}
101The mechanics of the instrument is made of Fibrelam\textregistered \ panels, arranged together through fibreglass sections.
102The instrument is coated by an insulating cover to protect the instrument's components from fast temperature changes during balloon ascent and descent.
103Special watertight valves inserted in the optical bench are used to enable pressure equilibrium with the atmosphere. Wherever the after-flight landing location occurs, the instrument must be recovered  with the smallest damages.
104The bottom part is equipped with crash-pads which absorb brutal deceleration (up to 15 G) when landing on ground. A baffle with special holes in the optical bench are used as a piston-effect to damp the shock for a fall over water.
105The instrument booth which is a totally watertight sealed box, consists of a central aluminium plate on which the various electronic boxes are fixed. One of its side is the third lens. The opposite one is an aluminium radiator used to dissipate the heat generated by electronics equipments.
106The instrument is surrounded by buoys to avoid sinking in case of splashdown and to raise straight up the instrument booth above the water level.
107\section{The Instrument Subsystems}
108\label{sec:Subsystems}
109The instrument is broken down into subsystems defined to be the optics, the Focal Surface (FS), the photodetector with the MAPMTs, the signal measurement with the ASICs, the trigger readout with the Photo-Detector Module Board (PDMB) and the Cluster Control Board (CCB). The Data Acquisition System (DAQ) and the utilities like the monitoring also called the House-Keepting (HK) and the power supplies. Those subsystems are all described below. 
110\subsection{Optics subsystem}
111The optics subsystem involves three lenses.
112Its goal is to provide the best focusing for the smallest focal distance. The focusing requirement is constrained by the pixel size of the photodetection system.
113Due to the wide angular field of view, it is necessary to combine 3 flat lenses. External ones are focusing one-sided Fresnel lens and the middle one is purely dispersive to correct for chromatic aberrations. These lenses are manufactured in PMMA material~\cite{bib:Optics}. The ray tracing calculations including the temperature profile expected for flights in cold and warm cases provide a focal length of 1.62 m and a focal point spread width of the order of 2.6 mm, smaller than the pixel size.
114
115\subsection{Front-End Electronics}
116MAPMTs constituting the FS, provide anode signals measured and digitised by ASICs, themselves readout by FPGA to run the trigger algorithm. The FS is arranged into a so-called Photo-Detector Module (PDM) whose design and effective realisation is described in details in~\cite{bib:FrontEndEl}. We review in the following the main properties of this electronics.
117
118\paragraph{Focal Surface} The focal surface is a slightly curved surface, similarly to that of the JEM-EUSO central PDM. It is an array of 48$\times$48 pixels of 2.88 mm $\times$ 2.88 mm size exceeding slightly the focal point spread. Practically, the focal surface of the PDM is broken up into a set of 9 identical Elementary Cells (ECs), which are matrices of 2$\times$2 MAPMTs. The photocathode is covered by a BG3 UV filter. Inside the PDM structure, the 9 ECs are disposed and tilted according to the appropriate shape required for the FS.
119
120\paragraph{MAPMTs} They are photon detectors consisting of a matrix of 8$\times$8 pixels. Each pixel is associated to an anode generating a charge or a current in output. Their sensitivity is as low as a few tens of photoelectrons and their dynamic range can extend up to few thousands photoelectrons per $\mu$s when working at high gain ($10^6$).
121
122\paragraph{High voltage power supply}
123MAPMTs require to be polarised with 14 high voltages. The latter are generated by a high voltage power supply (Crockoft-Walton type to \hyphenation{li-mits} the power consumption). The nominal high voltage of the photocathode is -900 V for a MAPMT gain of $10^6$. The effective dynamic range can be extended up to 10$^7$ photons/$\mu$s by reducing gradually the gain down to 30. Fast switches reactive at $\mu$s time scale adapt HV values to tune the MAPMT gain according to the intensity of photon flux.
124Because a large photon flux generating anode current above 100$\mu$A would destroy the tube, this automatic control system can even switch off the gain. Practically this switching decision logic is implemented in a FPGA reading out the \mbox{ASICs}. In the PDM, there is 9 independent HVPS controlling the 9 ECs.
125
126
127\paragraph{ASICs} 36 SPACIROC~\cite{bib:ASIC} type ASICs are used to perform the anode signals measurement and digitisation of the 36 MAPMTs. These ASICs have 64 channels. Their analog inputs are DC-coupled to the MAPMT anodes. They process the 64 analog signals in parallel in two modes : 1) in photoelectron counting mode, in a range from 1/3 of photoelectrons up to 100 photoelectrons, by discriminating over a programmed threshold each of the channels, 2) by estimating the charge from 20~pC to 200~pC, by time over threshold determination for exclusive groups of 8 anodes current sums. The 64 analog channels are balanced each-other relatively by gain matching over 8-bits.
128The discrimination voltage level used in the photon-counting is provided by a 10-bit DAC (Digital to Amplitude converter).
129In both cases the digitisation is performed by 8-bits counters every GTU. There is no data buffering on the ASIC. The data are transferred to the FPGA each GTU under the sequencing frequency of a 40MHz clock.
130
131\paragraph{Trigger} The Instrument includes two trigger stages. The level 1 trigger (L1) implemented in the FPGA (Xinlinks Virtex 6) of a PDM-Board (PDMB), belonging to the Front-End Electronics. The PDMB readouts the data from the 36 ASICs into its internal memory (the event buffer) each GTU to compute the trigger L1. Its principle consists in counting an excess of signals over background in groups of 3$\times$3 pixels lasting more than a preset persistence time. The background rate seen by pixel is monitored continuously to adjust in real-time the trigger threshold which is adjusted such as the L1 rate is kept at a fixed level of a few Hz compatible with the DAQ recording rate. The trigger is evaluated each GTU. Because Air-Showers may extend over 100 GTU, this trigger has the buffering capability of 128 consecutive GTU.
132To reduce the dead-time induced by event readout, the event buffer is doubled.
133
134\subsection{Data acquisition}
135The data acquisition system is part of the computing system DP (Data Processing).
136It comprises the CCB designed to produce the second level trigger L2, which is described in~\cite{bib:CCB}. For each generated L1 trigger, the CCB reads the data corresponding to the 128 consecutive GTU from the PDMB buffer. In JEM-EUSO, the CCB is devoted to the combination of 9-PDMB triggers and to reduce the resulting combined trigger rate to about a few Hz or less compatible with the data storage capabilities of the DAQ. The triggering role of the CCB in EUSO-Balloon is marginal as there is only one PDM. However it has the task to read the whole event from the Front-End and to pass it to the CPU. The L2 decision is propagated to the Clock-Board (CLK-B, based on a Xilinks Virtex5 FPGA) generating all the clocks used by the electronics, itself associated with a GPS-Board to provide the event time tagging data with an accuracy of a few microseconds.
137The CPU (Motherboard iTX-i2705 model, processor  Atom N270 1.6 GHz)  merges the event data with the time tagging data to build an event of a size of 330 kB, leading to a data flow of 3MB/s for a 10 Hz L1-L2 trigger. The CPU write all the data on disks (1 TB CZ Octane SATA II 2.5Ó SSD) and may also send to telemetry a subset of flagged events by CCB for event monitoring.
138
139\subsection{Monitoring}
140The instrument behaviour is controlled at low frequency by the House-Keeping system (HK) which is a part of DP. It is based on a commercial micro controller board (Arduino Mega 2560) designed to control temperatures, voltages, and alarms raised by several boards. The CPU poll from time to time the alarms and initiate corresponding foreseen actions. HK is connected to the telemetry system to receive basic commands namely those that allow to turn on-off most of the boards power supplies through relay control.
141
142\subsection{Power supply and electrical architecture}
143The instrument runs autonomously thanks to a set of 60 battery cells providing 28 V (225 W during 24 H) to a set of Low-Voltage boards generating isolated-decoupled lower voltages to the PDM (HVPS and PDMB), DP (CPU, CCB and HK). The electrical architecture follows the EMC rules to prevent  floating reference voltage  induced by bad grounding (ground current loop effect).
144
145\section{Assembly and Tests}
146\label{sec:AssemblyTest}
147After fabrication, the subsystems directly related to the physics measurements need to be calibrated in an absolute way.
148The goal of the absolute calibration is to relate a measured digitised signal into the true number of photons impinging on the Focal Surface or on the first lens.
149Thus the Optics and the photodetection done by the MAPMTs will be calibrated.
150Other subsystems like the trigger has to be tested once the instrument is close to final assembly.
151Each of the subsystems of the instrument are calibrated if necessary and tested before the full integration. Then the assembled instrument is then tested entirely.
152
153\subsection{The optical tests}
154Even if the focal length of each lens and the combined focal length can be predicted by calculation, the real values resulting from the machining are poorly known at several centimetres accuracy. This is not enough to achieve a resolution smaller than the pixel size. The relative distance between the three lenses and the Focal Surface has to be measured experimentally by using a large parallel UV beam along optical axis, sent over the first lens and measuring the Focal Length by adjusting the position of a CCD camera to get a narrow point-like focused spot.
155
156\subsection{Measuring the MAPMT performances}
157Each channel of the MAPMT is characterised by its photodetection efficiency (product of the photocathode quantum efficiency and the collection efficiency) and by the gain of the phototubes. This efficiency is firstly measured before the mounting of MAPMTs inside EC-Units (see~\cite{bib: PMT}) and also after the EC-Units assembly.
158This measurement is done by illuminating the photocathode with a LED (monitored with a NIST-photodiode). The MAPMT operates in single photoelectron mode~\cite{bib:Calib} to measure the single photoelectron spectrum for each of the 2304 pixels of the instrument camera.
159This procedure allows to determine the exact high voltage to apply to each MAPMTs photocathodes.
160\subsection{The ASIC settings}
161The ASICs measure the single photoelectron spectra at nominal high voltage for each of the channels by performing S-curve (by performing series of runs by ramping the discriminator voltage).
162Because the relative gain of the channels inside an EC-Unit differs slightly from one-another, the ASICs allow balancing the discrepancies between the channels. This done once the PDM is mounted and each MAPMT is associated to an ASIC. Then the nominal discriminator threshold at 1/3 of a photoelectron to apply to each ASIC is established.
163
164\subsection{The Trigger tests}
165Once the PDM is mounted, the L1 trigger algorithm performance is checked by illuminating the Focal Surface by the light spot moving closely to speed-of-light, generated by an "old" persistent-screen scope.
166
167\subsection{The Instrument tests}
168The final tests will be performed after the integration of all subsystems inside the instrument. A check of the correct final position of the lenses  as well as that of the Focal Surface will be done by lighting up the first lens by a parallel UV beam along the optical axis. The size of the focused point on the Focal surface will be minimised by finely adjusting the position of the PDM at the sub-millimetre scale.
169At the end of  the integration and at launch site, basic health tests on the electronics will be performed by illuminating in single photon mode uniformly the Focal Surface or the first lens by a LED-controlled as described in~ \cite{bib:Calib}.
170
171
172\section{Operation and Analysis}
173\label{sec:Operation}
174During the balloon flight operation, the instrument will be controlled from ground by an operator using a control program~\cite{bib:OffOnLineAna} interfaced to the TC/TM system (Telecommand and Telemetry) NOSYCA of CNES.
175At a given altitude reached by the balloon, a command will be issued to turn on the instrument. The HK system will turn on one by one each of the subsystems while the monitoring parameter will be downloaded at ground.
176When every parameters looks perfect, the balloon operator can launch the DAQ program running on the CPU. He will control basic run parameters, namely the background rate calculated by the PDMB. Conventionally the thresholds auto-adapt to the required L1-L2 rates unless the operator forces another mode of trigger settings. At any moment, the operator can shut down the instrument. This will be done when the balloon descent will be activated.
177
178
179\vspace*{0.5cm}
180\footnotesize{{\bf Acknowledgment:}{ This work was technically and financially supported  by \mbox{CNES} and the JEM-EUSO collaboration.
181}
182
183\begin{thebibliography}{}
184
185\bibitem{bib:EUSOperf} J.H. Adams Jr. \textit{et al.} - JEM-EUSO Collaboration, Astroparticle Physics 44 (2013) 76-90 http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.astropartphys.2013.01.008
186\bibitem{bib:EBpath} P. von Ballmoos \textit{et al.} - EUSO-BALLOON: a pathfinder for observing UHECR's from space, this proceedings, paper 1171,
187\bibitem{bib:EBSimulation} T. Mernik \textit{et al.} ESAF-Simulation of the EUSO-Balloon, this proceedings, paper 875,
188\bibitem{bib:Optics} Manufacturing of the TA-EUSO and EUSO-Balloon lenses, this proceedings, paper 1040,
189\bibitem{bib:FrontEndEl}P. Barrillon \textit{et al.}, The Front-End Electronics of the EUSO-Balloon UV camera,this proceedings, paper 765,
190\bibitem{bib:ASIC} H. Miyamoto \textit{et al.}, Performance of the SPACIROC front-end ASIC for JEM-EUSO, this proceedings, paper 1089,
191\bibitem{bib:CCB} J. Bayer \textit{et al.}, Second level trigger and Cluster Control Board for the JEM-EUSO mission,this proceedings, paper 432,
192\bibitem{bib:Calib} P. Gorodetzky \textit{et al.}, Absolute calibrations of JEM-EUSO,this proceedings, paper 858,
193\bibitem{bib: PMT} C. Blaksley, Photomultiplier Tube Sorting for JEM-EUSO and EUSO-Balloon, this proceedings, paper 628,
194\bibitem{bib:OffOnLineAna} L.W. Piotrowski \textit{et al.}, On-line and off-line data analysis for the TA-EUSO and BALLOON-EUSO experiments, this proceedings, paper 713,
195
196
197
198\end{thebibliography}
199
200\end{document}
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