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Dive into the research topics where Bogdan Nicula is active.

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Featured researches published by Bogdan Nicula.


Solar Physics | 2013

On-Orbit Degradation of Solar Instruments

A. BenMoussa; S. Gissot; U. Schühle; G. Del Zanna; F. Auchère; Sabri Mekaoui; Andrew Jones; D. Walton; C. J. Eyles; Gérard Thuillier; Daniel B. Seaton; Ingolf E. Dammasch; Gaël Cessateur; Mustapha Meftah; V. Andretta; David Berghmans; Danielle Bewsher; D. Bolsée; L. Bradley; Daniel Stephen Brown; Phillip C. Chamberlin; Steven Dewitte; Leonid V. Didkovsky; Marie Dominique; F. G. Eparvier; Thomas Foujols; Didier Gillotay; B. Giordanengo; Jean-Philippe Halain; R. A. Hock

We present the lessons learned about the degradation observed in several space solar missions, based on contributions at the Workshop about On-Orbit Degradation of Solar and Space Weather Instruments that took place at the Solar Terrestrial Centre of Excellence (Royal Observatory of Belgium) in Brussels on 3 May 2012. The aim of this workshop was to open discussions related to the degradation observed in Sun-observing instruments exposed to the effects of the space environment. This article summarizes the various lessons learned and offers recommendations to reduce or correct expected degradation with the goal of increasing the useful lifespan of future and ongoing space missions.


Solar Physics | 2013

The SWAP EUV Imaging Telescope. Part II: In-flight Performance and Calibration

Jean-Philippe Halain; David Berghmans; Daniel B. Seaton; Bogdan Nicula; A. De Groof; M. Mierla; Alexandra Mazzoli; Jean-Marc Defise; P. Rochus

The Sun Watcher with Active Pixel System detector and Image Processing (SWAP) telescope was launched on 2 November 2009 onboard the ESA PROBA2 technological mission and has acquired images of the solar corona every one to two minutes for more than two years. The most important technological developments included in SWAP are a radiation-resistant CMOS-APS detector and a novel onboard data-prioritization scheme. Although such detectors have been used previously in space, they have never been used for long-term scientific observations on orbit. Thus SWAP requires a careful calibration to guarantee the science return of the instrument. Since launch we have regularly monitored the evolution of SWAP’s detector response in-flight to characterize both its performance and degradation over the course of the mission. These measurements are also used to reduce detector noise in calibrated images (by subtracting dark-current). Because accurate measurements of detector dark-current require large telescope off-points, we also monitored straylight levels in the instrument to ensure that these calibration measurements are not contaminated by residual signal from the Sun. Here we present the results of these tests and examine the variation of instrumental response and noise as a function of both time and temperature throughout the mission.


The Astrophysical Journal | 2013

SWAP OBSERVATIONS OF THE LONG-TERM, LARGE-SCALE EVOLUTION OF THE EXTREME-ULTRAVIOLET SOLAR CORONA

Daniel B. Seaton; Anik De Groof; Paul Shearer; David Berghmans; Bogdan Nicula

The Sun Watcher with Active Pixels and Image Processing (SWAP) EUV solar telescope on board the Project for On-Board Autonomy 2 spacecraft has been regularly observing the solar corona in a bandpass near 17.4?nm since 2010 February. With a field of view of 54 ? 54 arcmin, SWAP provides the widest-field images of the EUV corona available from the perspective of the Earth. By carefully processing and combining multiple SWAP images, it is possible to produce low-noise composites that reveal the structure of the EUV corona to relatively large heights. A particularly important step in this processing was to remove instrumental stray light from the images by determining and deconvolving SWAPs point-spread function from the observations. In this paper, we use the resulting images to conduct the first-ever study of the evolution of the large-scale structure of the corona observed in the EUV over a three year period that includes the complete rise phase of solar cycle 24. Of particular note is the persistence over many solar rotations of bright, diffuse features composed of open magnetic fields that overlie polar crown filaments and extend to large heights above the solar surface. These features appear to be related to coronal fans, which have previously been observed in white-light coronagraph images and, at low heights, in the EUV. We also discuss the evolution of the corona at different heights above the solar surface and the evolution of the corona over the course of the solar cycle by hemisphere.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2010

First light of SWAP on-board PROBA2

Jean-Philippe Halain; David Berghmans; Jean-Marc Defise; Etienne Renotte; Tanguy Thibert; Emmanuel Mazy; Pierre Rochus; Bogdan Nicula; Anik De Groof; Daniel Seaton; U. Schühle

The SWAP telescope (Sun Watcher using Active Pixel System detector and Image Processing) is an instrument launched on 2nd November 2009 on-board the ESA PROBA2 technological mission. SWAP is a space weather sentinel from a low Earth orbit, providing images at 174 nm of the solar corona. The instrument concept has been adapted to the PROBA2 mini-satellite requirements (compactness, low power electronics and a-thermal opto-mechanical system). It also takes advantage of the platform pointing agility, on-board processor, Packetwire interface and autonomous operations. The key component of SWAP is a radiation resistant CMOS-APS detector combined with onboard compression and data prioritization. SWAP has been developed and qualified at the Centre Spatial de Liège (CSL) and calibrated at the PTBBessy facility. After launch, SWAP has provided its first images on 14th November 2009 and started its nominal, scientific phase in February 2010, after 3 months of platform and payload commissioning. This paper summarizes the latest SWAP developments and qualifications, and presents the first light results.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2015

Design status of ASPIICS, an externally occulted coronagraph for PROBA-3

Etienne Renotte; Andres Alia; A. Bemporad; Joseph Bernier; Cristina Bramanti; Steve Buckley; Gerardo Capobianco; Ileana Cernica; V. Dániel; Radoslav Darakchiev; Marcin Darmetko; Arnaud Debaize; François Denis; Richard Desselle; Lieve De Vos; Adrian Dinescu; Silvano Fineschi; Karl Fleury-Frenette; M. Focardi; A. Fumel; Damien Galano; Camille Galy; Jean-Marie Gillis; Tomasz Górski; Estelle Graas; Rafal Graczyk; Konrad Grochowski; Jean-Philippe A. Halain; Aline Hermans; Russ Howard

The “sonic region” of the Sun corona remains extremely difficult to observe with spatial resolution and sensitivity sufficient to understand the fine scale phenomena that govern the quiescent solar corona, as well as phenomena that lead to coronal mass ejections (CMEs), which influence space weather. Improvement on this front requires eclipse-like conditions over long observation times. The space-borne coronagraphs flown so far provided a continuous coverage of the external parts of the corona but their over-occulting system did not permit to analyse the part of the white-light corona where the main coronal mass is concentrated. The proposed PROBA-3 Coronagraph System, also known as ASPIICS (Association of Spacecraft for Polarimetric and Imaging Investigation of the Corona of the Sun), with its novel design, will be the first space coronagraph to cover the range of radial distances between ~1.08 and 3 solar radii where the magnetic field plays a crucial role in the coronal dynamics, thus providing continuous observational conditions very close to those during a total solar eclipse. PROBA-3 is first a mission devoted to the in-orbit demonstration of precise formation flying techniques and technologies for future European missions, which will fly ASPIICS as primary payload. The instrument is distributed over two satellites flying in formation (approx. 150m apart) to form a giant coronagraph capable of producing a nearly perfect eclipse allowing observing the sun corona closer to the rim than ever before. The coronagraph instrument is developed by a large European consortium including about 20 partners from 7 countries under the auspices of the European Space Agency. This paper is reviewing the recent improvements and design updates of the ASPIICS instrument as it is stepping into the detailed design phase.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2005

SWAP: an EUV imager for solar monitoring on board of PROBA2

Athanassios Katsiyannis; David Berghmans; Jean-François Hochedez; Bogdan Nicula; Gareth Lawrence; Jean-Marc Defise; A. BenMoussa; Véronique Delouille; Marie Dominique; Jean-Hervé Lecat; Werner Schmutz; Armin Theissen; Vladimir A. Slemzin

PROBA2 is an ESA technology demonstration mission to be launched in early 2007. The two primary scientific instruments on board of PROBA2 are SWAP (Sun Watcher using Active Pixel System detector and Image Processing) and the LYRA VUV radiometer. SWAP provides a full disk solar imaging capability with a bandpass filter centred at 17.5 nm (FeIX-XI) and a fast cadence of ≈1 min. The telescope is based on an off-axis Ritchey Chretien design while an extreme ultraviolet (EUV) enhanced APS CMOS will be used as a detector. As the prime goal of the SWAP is solar monitoring and advance warning of Coronal Mass Ejections (CME), on-board intellige nce will be implemented. Image recognition software using experimental algorithms will be used to detect CMEs during the first phase of eruption so the event can be tracked by the spacecraft without huma n intervention. LYRA will monitor solar irradiance in four different VUV passbands with a cadence of up to 100 Hz. The four channels were chosen for their relevance to solar physics, aeronomy and space weather: 115-125 nm (Lyman-α), 200-220 nm Herzberg continuum, the 17-70 nm Aluminium filter channel (that includes the HeII line at 30.4 nm) and the 1-20 nm Zirconium filter channel. On-board calibration sources will monitor the stability of the detectors and the filters throughout the duration of the mission.


Advances in Space Research | 2006

LYRA, a solar UV radiometer on Proba2

Jean-François Hochedez; Werner Schmutz; Yvan Stockman; U. Schühle; A. BenMoussa; Silvio Koller; Ken Haenen; David Berghmans; Jean-Marc Defise; Jean-Philippe Halain; A. Theissen; Véronique Delouille; Vladimir A. Slemzin; Didier Gillotay; Didier Fussen; M. Dominique; Filip Vanhellemont; D. McMullin; Matthieu Kretzschmar; A. Mitrofanov; Bogdan Nicula; Laurence Wauters; Hansjörg Roth; E. Rozanov; I. Rüedi; Christoph Wehrli; A. Soltani; H. Amano; R. A. M. Van der Linden; Andrei Zhukov


Advances in Space Research | 2006

SWAP onboard PROBA 2, a new EUV imager for solar monitoring ☆

David Berghmans; J.-F. Hochedez; Jean-Marc Defise; J. H. Lecat; Bogdan Nicula; V. A. Slemzin; Gareth Lawrence; A. C. Katsyiannis; R. A. M. Van der Linden; Andrei Zhukov; F. Clette; P. Rochus; Emmanuel Mazy; Tanguy Thibert; P. Nicolosi; Maria Guglielmina Pelizzo; U. Schühle


Solar Physics | 2013

The SWAP EUV Imaging Telescope Part I: Instrument Overview and Pre-Flight Testing

Daniel B. Seaton; David Berghmans; Bogdan Nicula; Jean-Philippe Halain; A. De Groof; Tanguy Thibert; D. S. Bloomfield; Claire Raftery; Peter T. Gallagher; F. Auchère; Jean-Marc Defise; Elke D’Huys; J. H. Lecat; Emmanuel Mazy; P. Rochus; Laurence Rossi; U. Schühle; V. Slemzin; M. S. Yalim; J. Zender


Solar Physics | 2008

CMOS-APS Detectors for Solar Physics: Lessons Learned during the SWAP Preflight Calibration

Anik De Groof; David Berghmans; Bogdan Nicula; Jean-Philippe Halain; Jean-Marc Defise; Tanguy Thibert; U. Schühle

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David Berghmans

Royal Observatory of Belgium

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Anik De Groof

Katholieke Universiteit Leuven

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Marie Dominique

Royal Observatory of Belgium

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Daniel B. Seaton

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration

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A. BenMoussa

Royal Observatory of Belgium

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