Jean-Philippe Halain
University of Liège
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Publication
Featured researches published by Jean-Philippe Halain.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2008
N. R. Sheeley; A.D. Herbst; C.A. Palatchi; Y.-M. Wang; Russell A. Howard; John Daniel Moses; Angelos Vourlidas; Jeffrey Scott Newmark; Dennis G. Socker; Simon P. Plunkett; C. M. Korendyke; L. F. Burlaga; Joseph M. Davila; William T. Thompson; O. C. St. Cyr; R. A. Harrison; C. J. Davis; C. J. Eyles; Jean-Philippe Halain; N. B. Rich; K. Battams; E. Esfandiari; Guillermo Stenborg
During relatively quiet solar conditions throughout the spring and summer of 2007, the SECCHI HI2 white-light telescope on the STEREO B solar-orbiting spacecraft observed a succession of wave fronts sweeping past Earth. We have compared these heliospheric images with in situ plasma and magnetic field measurements obtained by near-Earth spacecraft, and we have found a near perfect association between the occurrence of these waves and the arrival of density enhancements at the leading edges of high-speed solar wind streams. Virtually all of the strong corotating interaction regions are accompanied by large-scale waves, and the low-density regions between them lack such waves. Because the Sun was dominated by long-lived coronal holes and recurrent solar wind streams during this interval, there is little doubt that we have been observing the compression regions that are formed at low latitude as solar rotation causes the high-speed wind from coronal holes to run into lower speed wind ahead of it.
Solar Physics | 2013
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.
The Astrophysical Journal | 2007
M. Fulle; François Leblanc; Richard A. Harrison; C. J. Davis; C. J. Eyles; Jean-Philippe Halain; Russell A. Howard; Dominique Bockelee-Morvan; G. Cremonese; T. Scarmato
In 2007 January, at the heliocentric distance r < 0.3 AU, comet McNaught 2006P1 became the brightest comet since C/Ikeya-Seki 1965S1 and was continuously monitored by space-based solar observatories. We provide strong evidence that an archlike tail observed by the Heliospheric Imager aboard the STEREO spacecraft is the first ever detected tail composed of neutral Fe atoms. We obtain an Fe lifetime τ = (4.1 ± 0.4) × 104 s at r = 0.25 AU, in agreement with theoretical predictions of the photoionization lifetime. The expected dust temperature is inconsistent with iron sublimation, suggesting that Fe atoms are coming from troilite evaporation.
Solar Physics | 2013
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.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2013
Russell A. Howard; Angelos Vourlidas; C. M. Korendyke; Simon P. Plunkett; Michael T. Carter; N. B. Rich; Donald R. McMullin; Sean Lynch; Adam Thurn; Greg Clifford; Dennis G. Socker; A. F. Thernisien; Damien Chua; M. G. Linton; David Keller; James Robert Janesick; John Robertson Tower; Mark Grygon; Robert Hagood; William Bast; Paulett C. Liewer; Eric DeJong; Marco Velli; Zoran Mikic; V. Bothmer; Pierre Rochus; Jean-Philippe Halain; P. L. Lamy
The SoloHI instrument for the ESA/NASA Solar Orbiter mission will track density fluctuations in the inner heliosphere, by observing visible sunlight scattered by electrons in the solar wind. Fluctuations are associated with dynamic events such as coronal mass ejections, but also with the “quiescent” solar wind. SoloHI will provide the crucial link between the low corona observations from the Solar Orbiter instruments and the in-situ measurements on Solar Orbiter and the Solar Probe Plus missions. The instrument is a visible-light telescope, based on the SECCHI/Heliospheric Imager (HI) currently flying on the STEREO mission. In this concept, a series of baffles reduce the scattered light from the solar disk and reflections from the spacecraft to levels below the scene brightness, typically by a factor of 1012. The fluctuations are imposed against a much brighter signal produced by light scattered by dust particles (the zodiacal light/F-corona). Multiple images are obtained over a period of several minutes and are summed on-board to increase the signal-to-noise ratio and to reduce the telemetry load. SoloHI is a single telescope with a 40⁰ field of view beginning at 5° from the Sun center. Through a series of Venus gravity assists, the minimum perihelia for Solar Orbiter will be reduced to about 60 Rsun (0.28 AU), and the inclination of the orbital plane will be increased to a maximum of 35° after the 7 year mission. The CMOS/APS detector is a mosaic of four 2048 x 1930 pixel arrays, each 2-side buttable with 11 μm pixels.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2010
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.
Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2003
Jean-Marc Defise; Jean-Philippe Halain; Emmanuel Mazy; Pierre Rochus; Russell A. Howard; J. Daniel Moses; Dennis G. Socker; Richard A. Harrison; G. M. Simnett
The Heliospheric Imager (HI) is part of the SECCHI suite of instruments on-board the two STEREO spacecrafts to be launched in 2005. The two HI instruments will provide stereographic image pairs of solar coronal plasma and coronal mass ejections (CME) over a wide field of view (~90°), ranging from 13 to 330 R0. These observations compliment the 15 R0 field of view of the solar corona obtained by the other SECCHI instruments (2 coronagraphs and an EUV imager). The key challenge of the instrument design is the rejection of the solar disk light, with total straylight attenuation of the order of 10-13 to 10-15. A multi-vane diffractive baffle system has been theoretically optimized to achieve the lower requirement (10-13 for HI-1) and is combined with a secondary baffling system to reach the 10-15 rejection performance in the second camera system (HI-2). This paper presents the last updates of the SECCHI/HI design concept, with the expected performance. A verification program is currently in progress. The on-going stray-light verification tests are discussed. A set of tests has been conducted in air, and under vacuum. The results are presented and compared with the expected theoretical data.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2012
Jean-Philippe Halain; Pierre Rochus; Etienne Renotte; Thierry Appourchaux; David Berghmans; Louise K. Harra; U. Schühle; Werner Schmutz; F. Auchère; Andrei Zhukov; C. Dumesnil; F. Delmotte; T. Kennedy; Raymond Mercier; D. Pfiffner; Laurence Rossi; J. Tandy; A. BenMoussa; Phyllis Smith
The Solar Orbiter mission will explore the connection between the Sun and its heliosphere, taking advantage of an orbit approaching the Sun at 0.28 AU. As part of this mission, the Extreme Ultraviolet Imager (EUI) will provide full-sun and high-resolution image sequences of the solar atmosphere at selected spectral emission lines in the extreme and vacuum ultraviolet. To achieve the required scientific performances under the challenging constraints of the Solar Orbiter mission it was required to further develop existing technologies. As part of this development, and of its maturation of technology readiness, a set of breadboard and prototypes of critical subsystems have thus been realized to improve the overall instrument design. The EUI instrument architecture, its major components and sub-systems are described with their driving constraints and the expected performances based on the breadboard and prototype results. The instrument verification and qualification plan will also be discussed. We present the thermal and mechanical model validation, the instrument test campaign with the structural-thermal model (STM), followed by the other instrument models in advance of the flight instrument manufacturing and AIT campaign.
Proceedings of SPIE | 2010
Jean-Philippe Halain; Pierre Rochus; Thierry Appourchaux; David Berghmans; Louise K. Harra; U. Schühle; F. Auchère; Andrei Zhukov; Etienne Renotte; Jean-Marc Defise; Laurence Rossi; Karl Fleury-Frenette; Lionel Jacques; J.-F. Hochedez; Ali Ben Moussa
The Extreme Ultraviolet Imager (EUI) onboard Solar Orbiter consists of a suite of two high-resolution imagers (HRI) and one dual-band full Sun imager (FSI) that will provide EUV and Lyman-α images of the solar atmospheric layers above the photosphere. The EUI instrument is based on a set of challenging new technologies allowing to reach the scientific objectives and to cope with the hard space environment of the Solar Orbiter mission. The mechanical concept of the EUI instrument is based on a common structure supporting the HRI and FSI channels, and a separated electronic box. A heat rejection baffle system is used to reduce the Sun heat load and provide a first protection level against the solar disk straylight. The spectral bands are selected by thin filters and multilayer mirror coatings. The detectors are 10μm pitch back illuminated CMOS Active Pixel Sensors (APS), best suited for the EUI science requirements and radiation hardness. This paper presents the EUI instrument concept and its major sub-systems. The current developments of the instrument technologies are also summarized.
UV/EUV and Visible Space Instrumentation for Astronomy and Solar Physics | 2001
Jean-Marc Defise; Jean-Philippe Halain; Emmanuel Mazy; Pierre Rochus; Russell A. Howard; J. Daniel Moses; Dennis G. Socker; G. M. Simnett; David F. Webb
The Heliospheric Imager (HI) is part of the SECCHI suite of instruments on-board the two STEREO spacecrafts to be launched in 2005. The two HI instruments will provide stereographic image pairs of solar coronal plasma and address the observational problem of very faint coronal mass ejections (CME) over a wide field of view (~90 degree(s)) ranging from 13 to 330 R0. The key element of the instrument design is to reject the solar disk light, with straylight attenuation of the order of 10-13 to 10-15 in the camera systems. This attenuation is accomplished by a specific design of straylight baffling system, and two separate observing cameras with complimentary FOVs cover the wide FOV. A multi-vane diffractive system has been theoretically optimized to achieve the lower requirement (10-13 for HI-1) and is combined with a secondary baffling system to reach the 10-15 rejection performance in the second camera system (HI-2). This paper presents the design concept of the HI optics and baffles, and the preparation of verification tests that will demonstrate the instrument straylight performances. The baffle design has been optimized according to accommodation constrains on the spacecraft, and the optics were studied to provide adequate light gathering power and image quality. Straylight has been studied in the complete configuration, including the lens barrels and the focal plane assemblies. A specific testing facility is currently being studied to characterize the effective straylight rejection of the HI baffling. An overview of the developments for those tests is presented.