RADOM-7
RADOM is a Bulgarian Liulin-type spectrometry-dosimetry instrument, designed to precisely measure cosmic radiation around the Moon. It is installed on the Indian satellite Chandrayaan-1. Another three instruments were deployed on the International Space Station. All Liulin-type instruments are designed and build by the Solar-Terrestrial Influences Laboratory at the Bulgarian Academy of Sciences.
Further reading
Dachev, Yu.; Dimitrov, F.; Tomov, O.; Matviichuk, Y.; et al. (2011). "Liulin-type spectrometry-dosimetry instruments". Radiation Protection Dosimetry. Oxford University Press. 144 (1–4): 675–679. doi:10.1093/rpd/ncq506. ISSN 1742-3406. PMID 21177270.
gollark: I might use some of their stuff, then? I mean, I already run proprietary *games*.
gollark: In theory they have more accountability, and I think they actually do testing.
gollark: I trust them to not randomly break things more than I do Microsoft, honestly, at least.
gollark: With binary packages you are relying on the trust of your distro packagers I guess.
gollark: Well, at least *in theory* other people are looking at it, and you can.
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