Abstract
This paper describes NASA's Solar Optical Telescope (SOT), which is designed to measure the density temperature, magnetic fields, and the nonthermal velocity fields of solar features on a scale at which the basic physical processes are occurring. A series of 7- to 14-day missions carrying a 1.3-meter solar-observing telescope that has a spatial resolution only slightly larger than the photon mean-free-path of about 80 km will be flown as a Spacelab-attached payload aboard the Space Transportation System (STS) in mid-1990. The telescope (Fig. 1) will be built and integrated by the Perkin-Elmer Corporation and is managed by NASA's Goddard Space Flight Center. Coarse pointing to the sun is provided by the Spacelab instrument pointing system (IPS), whereas fine pointing is provided by the Observatory pointing and control system. The science instruments for the first mission, the photometric filtergraph and the coordinated filtergraph/spectrograph, that are integrated into a combined instrument package are also described.
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