Abstract
As part of a study funded by NASA headquarters, we are developing a probe-class mission concept called the Cosmic Evolution through UV Spectroscopy (CETUS). CETUS includes a 1.5-m aperture diameter telescope with a large field of view (FOV). CETUS includes three scientific instruments: a far ultraviolet (FUV) and near ultraviolet (NUV) imaging camera (CAM); a NUV multiobject spectrograph (MOS); and a dual-channel point/slit spectrograph (PSS) in the Lyman ultraviolet (LUV), FUV, and NUV spectral regions. The large FOV three-mirror anastigmatic (TMA) optical telescope assembly (OTA) simultaneously feeds the three separate scientific instruments. That is, the instruments view separate portions of the TMA image plane, enabling parallel operation by the three instruments. The field viewed by the MOS, whose design is based on an Offner-type spectrographic configuration to provide wide FOV correction, is actively configured to select and isolate numerous field sources using a next-generation micro-shutter array. The two-channel CAM design is also based on an Offner-like configuration. The PSS performs high spectral resolution spectroscopy on unresolved objects over the NUV region with spectral resolving power, R ∼ 40,000, in an echelle mode. The PSS also performs long-slit imaging spectroscopy at R ∼ 20,000 in the LUV and FUV spectral regions with two aberration-corrected, blazed, holographic gratings used in a Rowland-like configuration. The optical system also includes two fine guidance sensors, and wavefront sensors that sample numerous locations over the full OTA FOV. In-flight wavelength calibration is performed by a wavelength calibration system, and flat-fielding is also performed, both using in-flight calibration sources. We describe the current optical design of CETUS and the major trade studies leading to the design.
Highlights
The planned termination of the highly successful Hubble Space Telescope (HST) mission will eliminate scientific access to large aperture ultraviolet (UV)-optimized space-borne instrumentation in the reasonably near future
Cosmic Evolution through UV Spectroscopy (CETUS) is a NASA headquarters-selected probe-class mission concept which includes a 1.5-m aperture diameter large field of view (FOV) optical telescope assembly (OTA) optimized for imaging and spectroscopy with three science instruments (SIs) that observe within the 100- to 400-nm spectral region
We considered picking off the beam to the fine guidance sensor (FGS) and inserting the beam from the wavelength calibration system (WCS) at the three-mirror anastigmatic (TMA) focus
Summary
The planned termination of the highly successful Hubble Space Telescope (HST) mission will eliminate scientific access to large aperture ultraviolet (UV)-optimized space-borne instrumentation in the reasonably near future. The Cosmic Evolution through UV Spectroscopy (CETUS) mission concept, if approved and implemented, will partially fill this void.[1,2] CETUS is a NASA headquarters-selected probe-class mission concept which includes a 1.5-m aperture diameter large field of view (FOV) optical telescope assembly (OTA) optimized for imaging and spectroscopy with three science instruments (SIs) that observe within the 100- to 400-nm spectral region. The CETUS design enables simultaneous far UV/near UV (FUV/NUV) wide-field imaging, NUV multiobject spectroscopy, and LUV/FUV long-slit spectroscopy and NUV point source spectroscopy. The CETUS mission concept design started in earnest in the spring of 2017 and the entire study
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More From: Journal of Astronomical Telescopes, Instruments, and Systems
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