The Gaia pixel-level data simulator GIBIS (Gaia Instrument and Basic Image Simulator,
Babusiaux (2005)) provides detailed artificial data for all three instruments on-board the
Gaia spacecraft. This data is used for the preparation of procedures required for the
analysis of real Gaia data to come during the mission. Among the effects that strongly
affect all Gaia data, that therefore have to be modelled with GIBIS, is charge transfer
inefficiency (CTI). CTI, caused by radiation-induced microscopic defects in the CCD
detectors, becomes manifest in a distortion of the line spread functions of observed
objects, as well as in a loss of photo-generated charges inside the window allocated to
each observed source. It affects the astrometric, photometric, and spectroscopic accuracy
of the data. The CTI effects on a particular observation depend on observations done
before, on CCD operations such as gate activity and charge injections, and on physical
effects such as the sky background brightness and cosmic ray events in the detectors. In
this paper, an approach for the simulation of CTI with GIBIS is presented and the
influence of the sky background brightness and cosmic ray events of CTI is discussed in
more detail.