James H. Burge
Goddard Space Flight Center
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Featured researches published by James H. Burge.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2006
Olivier Guyon; James Roger P. Angel; Charles W. Bowers; James H. Burge; Adam S. Burrows; Johanan L. Codona; Thomas P. Greene; Masanori Iye; James F. Kasting; Hubert M. Martin; Donald W. McCarthy; Victoria S. Meadows; Michael R. Meyer; Eugene Pluzhnik; Norman H. Sleep; Tony Spears; Motohide Tamura; Domenick J. Tenerelli; Robert J. Vanderbei; Bruce E. Woodgate; Robert A. Woodruff; Neville J. Woolf
The Telescope to Observe Planetary Systems (TOPS) is a proposed space mission to image in the visible (0.4- 0.9 μm) planetary systems of nearby stars simultaneously in 16 spectral bands (resolution R≈20). For the ≈10 most favorable stars, it will have the sensitivity to discover 2RΕ rocky planets within habitable zones and characterize their surfaces or atmospheres through spectrophotometry. Many more massive planets and debris discs will be imaged and characterized for the first time. With a 1.2m visible telescope, the proposed mission achieves its power by exploiting the most efficient and robust coronagraphic and wavefront control techniques. The Phase-Induced Amplitude Apodization (PIAA) coronagraph used by TOPS allows planet detection at 2λ/d with nearly 100% throughput and preserves the telescope angular resolution. An efficient focal plane wavefront sensing scheme accurately measures wavefront aberrations which are fed back to the telescope active primary mirror. Fine wavefront control is also performed independently in each of 4 spectral channels, resulting in a system that is robust to wavefront chromaticity.
UV/Optical/IR Space Telescopes and Instruments: Innovative Technologies and Concepts VIII 2017 | 2017
Sara R. Heap; W. C. Danchi; James H. Burge; Kelly J. Dodson; Anthony B. Hull; Steven Kendrick; Stephan R. McCandliss; Gregory V. Mehle; Lloyd Purves; David A. Sheikh; Martin J. Valente; Robert A. Woodruff
We report on the early phases of a NASA-sponsored study of CETUS (Cosmic Evolution Through Ultraviolet Spectroscopy), a Probe-class mission concept. By definition, the full lifecycle cost of a Probe mission is greater than
Archive | 1996
James H. Burge; David S. Anderson
400M (i.e. Explorer missions) and less than
International Optical Design Conference and Optical Fabrication and Testing (2010), paper OTuB3 | 2010
Peng Su; Robert E. Parks; Lirong Wang; Roger Angel; James H. Burge
1.00B (“Flagship” missions). The animating idea behind our study is that CETUS can help answer fundamental questions about galaxy evolution by carrying out a massive UV imaging and spectroscopic survey of galaxies and combining its findings with data obtained by other survey telescopes of the 2020’s. The CETUS mission concept comprises a 1.5-m wide-field telescope and three scientific instruments: a near-UV multi-object slit spectrograph with a micro-shutter array as the slit device; a near-UV and far-UV camera with angular resolution of 0.42” (near-UV) or 0.55” (far-UV); and a near-UV or far-UV single-object spectrograph aimed at providing access to the UV after Hubble is gone. We describe the scientific rationale for CETUS and the telescope and instruments in their early design phase.
Archive | 1999
Roger Angel; James H. Burge; Neville J. Woolf
Archive | 2001
James Roger P. Angel; Charles F. Claver; Roland J. Sarlot; Hubert M. Martin; James H. Burge; J. Anthony Tyson; David Michael Wittman; Kem Holland Cook
Archive | 1992
Hubert M. Martin; David S. Anderson; James Roger P. Angel; James H. Burge; Warren B. Davison; Scott T. DeRigne; B. B. Hille; Dean A. Ketelsen; W. C. Kittrell; Robert W. McMillan; Robert H. Nagel; Thomas J. Trebisky; Steve C. West; Brandy Young
ASPE Summer Topical Meeting on Precision Interferometric Metrology, ASPE 2010 | 2010
Peng Su; Robert E. Parks; Roger Angel; Lirong Wang; James H. Burge
Archive | 2006
Charles F. Claver; Victor L. Krabbendam; John Andrew; Jeffrey D. Barr; James H. Burge; William J. Gressler; Douglas R. Neill; Scot S. Olivier; D. W. Phillion; Jacques Sebag; Lynn G. Seppala; R. Upton
Archive | 2006
Hubert M. Martin; Roger Angel; James H. Burge; Joseph Talghader