The E.V. Benton Radiation Physics Laboratory at Oklahoma State University has built a radiation dosimetry program that spans the International Space Station, DIY solar balloons at 21 km altitude, and upcoming commercial aircraft deployments — all built around the Red Pitaya STEMlab 125-14 as its core spectrometer.
The E.V. Benton Radiation Physics Laboratory is a research group within the Department of Physics at Oklahoma State University (OSU) in Stillwater, Oklahoma. Led by Professor Eric Benton, the lab studies ionizing radiation in extreme environments including low Earth orbit, the upper atmosphere, and high-altitude aviation. The lab develops compact, affordable radiation dosimeters capable of measuring dose equivalent for tissue, with a particular focus on protecting astronauts, aviation crews, and passengers.
The lab’s three core instruments are:
All three instruments use the Red Pitaya STEMlab 125-14 as their multi-channel analyzer, converting conditioned analog signals from radiation detectors into digital spectra for real-time analysis.
Traditional spectrometer systems capable of the measurements the Benton lab requires typically cost upward of $5,000 per unit. For a research program that needs instruments on many different platforms simultaneously, including aircraft operating on a per-flight basis, that cost makes scaling impossible.
Professor Benton had been looking for an affordable multi-channel analyzer solution for more than 20 years before finding Red Pitaya. The STEMlab 125-14 met the key requirements: low cost, open software platform, existing community libraries for signal acquisition, and 14-bit ADC resolution at 125 MS/s suitable for the pulse shapes coming from radiation detectors.
Critically, the existing Red Pitaya software ecosystem meant the lab’s physics graduate students, who are not electrical engineers or embedded programmers, could adapt existing code rather than build a spectrometer from scratch.
“Using Red Pitaya, we were able to just jump right in and get something working. It’s been a steady progress rather than a very frustrating experience.” — Professor Eric Benton, Oklahoma State University
SpaceTED is a compact, self-contained Tissue Equivalent Proportional Counter (TEPC) approximately the size of a small shoebox (25.5 x 15.5 x 12.5 cm). Its core components include:
SpaceTED was launched aboard SpaceX CRS-29 on November 10, 2023 and deployed inside the ISS. It completed approximately one year of continuous operation in space, concluding in November 2024.
Astronaut Sunita Williams holding the SpaceTED device abourd the ISS
Credit: NASA
Astronauts aboard the ISS periodically downloaded SpaceTED’s data for transmission to the OSU team on the ground. The collected dataset is currently being analyzed to characterize how radiation levels vary with the ISS’s orbital position and solar activity.
The transition to the STEMlab 125-14 4-Input board is also underway. Where SpaceTED currently uses two separate boards running in parallel, the 4-Input board would consolidate that into a single unit, reducing power consumption and physical footprint for future missions.
Heliotrope solar balloon take-off
Credit: E.V. Benton Radiation Lab
While SpaceTED was designed to the specifications needed to operate in space, AirSiD was designed to operate in the atmosphere, specifically on high altitude solar balloons that float at altitudes of approximately 15 to 21 km.
AirSiD is a lightweight (1.2 kg) battery-powered radiation dosimeter containing:
The balloon program uses an unconventional approach that reflects the lab’s low-cost philosophy. The balloons themselves are handbuilt from painters’ plastic sheeting and clear packing tape, then darkened with charcoal. This creates a solar thermal balloon: as sunlight heats the trapped air during the day, the balloon rises. As temperatures fall at night, it descends. No helium, no complex inflation systems.
The payload, which weighs up to 2.3 kg, carries GPS, a radio transponder, a cut-down mechanism, and a parachute for recovery. The entire flight is monitored via geofencing. Flights typically reach altitudes of approximately 70,000 ft (21 km), can last up to 12 hours, and drift up to several hundred kilometers before recovery.
The payload housing is a cardboard box painted white for thermal management.
The OSU team has now completed multiple AirSiD balloon flights over central Oklahoma, generating atmospheric radiation profiles across altitude and time.
The next deployment environment for AirSiD is commercial aviation. Aviation crew and frequent passengers represent one of the highest-exposure groups for atmospheric ionizing radiation outside of spaceflight, as aircraft regularly operate at altitudes where the secondary cosmic ray flux is elevated compared to ground level.
The Benton lab is currently in discussions with airline partners to mount AirSiD units on commercial flights. This program has not yet launched.
During instrument testing, one of the lab’s detectors was flown as a payload on a rocket test that ended in a malfunction and a hard landing. The Red Pitaya board survived intact and continued functioning.
Graduate student Garrett Thronton with the rocket payload
Credit: E.V. Benton Radiation Lab
Combined with a full year of continuous operation in the radiation environment of low Earth orbit, this incident offers practical evidence of the STEMlab 125-14’s durability in demanding conditions.
A recurring theme in the Benton lab’s work is that the technical development has been carried out largely by physics graduate and undergraduate students, not dedicated instrumentation engineers. The open Red Pitaya software stack, existing community libraries for signal acquisition, and active support forum all lowered the barrier to entry substantially.
One undergraduate student in the lab has now built a working gamma-ray spectrometer using a sodium iodide scintillator, at a fraction of the cost of comparable commercial systems. The Red Pitaya handles the multi-channel analyzer function; a laptop displays the resulting spectra. Commercial equivalents start at approximately $5,000.
Professor Benton draws a direct parallel to the broader history of the Raspberry Pi as a platform that began in education and expanded into serious research and commercial applications. He sees Red Pitaya following the same trajectory, with the added capability of fast analog-to-digital and digital-to-analog conversion that makes it suited to sensor-interfacing challenges the Raspberry Pi cannot address.
Professor Benton describes a shift in perspective that came through years of competing in a field dominated by well-funded national labs and large university programs. Early in his career he envied the resources those groups had. Over time, he came to see constraint as a productive force.
The DIY solar balloon, the cardboard payload housing, the off-the-shelf Red Pitaya boards: these are not compromises forced by insufficient funding. They are an engineering philosophy: build instruments that are good enough, cheap enough to replicate, and accessible enough for students to develop and iterate.
“It opens the door to smaller laboratories at smaller universities that have had a difficult time competing. I think Red Pitaya is going to go this way. It’s the future.” — Professor Eric Benton
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Field |
Detail |
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Institution |
Oklahoma State University, Department of Physics |
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Lab |
E.V. Benton Radiation Physics Laboratory |
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Principal Investigator |
Professor Eric Benton |
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Red Pitaya boards used |
STEMlab 125-14 (2x per SpaceTED); STEMlab 125-14 4-Input (in testing) |
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Role of Red Pitaya |
Multi-channel analyzer / spectrometer for radiation pulse acquisition |
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Deployment environments |
International Space Station, high-altitude solar balloons, rockets |
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SpaceTED ISS launch |
SpaceX CRS-29, November 1, 2023 |
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SpaceTED ISS end |
November 2024 |
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Balloon altitude |
~70,000 ft / ~21 km |
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NASA funding |
EPSCoR award |
Red Pitaya STEMlab 125-14 boards are used as multi-channel analyzers (also called spectrometers) in radiation dosimetry instruments. They convert analog pulses from radiation detectors, such as tissue equivalent proportional counters and silicon PIN photodiodes, into digital spectra for real-time analysis and data logging.
Yes. Two Red Pitaya STEMlab 125-14 boards were part of the SpaceTED radiation dosimeter developed by Oklahoma State University. SpaceTED was deployed inside the Japanese Experiment Module of the ISS from November 2023 to approximately November 2024.
Yes. The 14-bit ADC at 125 MS/s makes the STEMlab 125-14 suitable for pulse-height analysis in spectroscopy applications. The OSU Radiation Physics Laboratory used it as a multi-channel analyzer for both space and atmospheric radiation detection.
Commercial multi-channel analyzers for radiation spectroscopy typically cost $5,000 or more. The Red Pitaya STEMlab 125-14 delivers comparable functionality for scientific and educational applications at significantly lower cost, with the added advantage of an open software platform that researchers can adapt to their specific requirements.
AirSiD (Atmospheric Ionizing Radiation Silicon Dosimeter) is a compact, battery-powered radiation dosimeter developed by OSU’s Benton Lab. It uses a Red Pitaya-based spectrometer and is deployed on DIY solar-thermal balloons for atmospheric radiation profiling at altitudes up to approximately 21 km.
Related article: From Space to Skies: Innovative Radiation Dosimeters Enhance Human Safety