Loading [a11y]/accessibility-menu.js
The StarLight formation-flying interferometer system architecture | IEEE Conference Publication | IEEE Xplore
Scheduled Maintenance: On Monday, 30 June, IEEE Xplore will undergo scheduled maintenance from 1:00-2:00 PM ET (1800-1900 UTC).
On Tuesday, 1 July, IEEE Xplore will undergo scheduled maintenance from 1:00-5:00 PM ET (1800-2200 UTC).
During these times, there may be intermittent impact on performance. We apologize for any inconvenience.

The StarLight formation-flying interferometer system architecture


Abstract:

The StarLight project, formerly known as ST3 and scheduled for a 6 month mission in 2006, will demonstrate the new technologies of spaceborne long-baseline optical interf...Show More

Abstract:

The StarLight project, formerly known as ST3 and scheduled for a 6 month mission in 2006, will demonstrate the new technologies of spaceborne long-baseline optical interferometry and precision formation flying necessary for the Terrestrial Planet Finder and other future astrophysics missions. A primary goal is to fully characterize the interferometer capabilities by obtaining 100-500 fringe visibility amplitude measurements for stars in the band 600-1000 nm with a variety of stellar visibilities (0.2-1.0), stellar magnitudes (Mv = 2-5), and baselines (B = 30-125 meters). Interferometry on StarLight will be performed both in a 1 meter fixed-baseline combiner-only mode and in a formation-flying mode, in which two spacecraft operate in a novel Parabolic Geometry Interferometer configuration. The Interferometer System will consist of the following subsystems, each of which will have components on both the combiner and collector spacecraft: stellar, metrology, optical bench, electronics, and flight software. This paper provides an overview of the Interferometer System driving requirements, its overall architecture, and subsystems.
Date of Conference: 09-16 March 2002
Date Added to IEEE Xplore: 15 April 2003
Print ISBN:0-7803-7231-X
Conference Location: Big Sky, MT, USA

Contact IEEE to Subscribe

References

References is not available for this document.