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Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

METIS: a novel coronagraph design for the Solar Orbiter mission

Silvano Fineschi; Ester Antonucci; Giampiero Naletto; Marco Romoli; D. Spadaro; G. Nicolini; Lucia Abbo; V. Andretta; A. Bemporad; Arkadiusz Berlicki; Gerardo Capobianco; Giuseppe Crescenzio; Vania Da Deppo; M. Focardi; Federico Landini; Giuseppe Massone; Marco Malvezzi; J. Dan Moses; P. Nicolosi; M. Pancrazzi; Maria Guglielmina Pelizzo; Luca Poletto; U. Schühle; S. K. Solanki; D. Telloni; L. Teriaca; M. Uslenghi

METIS (Multi Element Telescope for Imaging and Spectroscopy) METIS, the “Multi Element Telescope for Imaging and Spectroscopy”, is a coronagraph selected by the European Space Agency to be part of the payload of the Solar Orbiter mission to be launched in 2017. The mission profile will bring the Solar Orbiter spacecraft as close to the Sun as 0.3 A.U., and up to 35° out-of-ecliptic providing a unique platform for helio-synchronous observations of the Sun and its polar regions. METIS coronagraph is designed for multi-wavelength imaging and spectroscopy of the solar corona. This presentation gives an overview of the innovative design elements of the METIS coronagraph. These elements include: i) multi-wavelength, reflecting Gregorian-telescope; ii) multilayer coating optimized for the extreme UV (30.4 nm, HeII Lyman-α) with a reflecting cap-layer for the UV (121.6 nm, HI Lyman-α) and visible-light (590-650); iii) inverse external-occulter scheme for reduced thermal load at spacecraft peri-helion; iv) EUV/UV spectrograph using the telescope primary mirror to feed a 1st and 4th-order spherical varied line-spaced (SVLS) grating placed on a section of the secondary mirror; v) liquid crystals electro-optic polarimeter for observations of the visible-light K-corona. The expected performances are also presented.


Proceedings of the SPIE | 2012

Multi Element Telescope for Imaging and Spectroscopy (METIS) coronagraph for the Solar Orbiter mission

Ester Antonucci; Silvano Fineschi; Giampiero Naletto; Marco Romoli; D. Spadaro; G. Nicolini; P. Nicolosi; Lucia Abbo; V. Andretta; A. Bemporad; F. Auchère; Arkadiusz Berlicki; R. Bruno; Gerardo Capobianco; A. Ciaravella; Giuseppe Crescenzio; V. Da Deppo; Raffaella D'Amicis; M. Focardi; Fabio Frassetto; P. Heinzel; P. L. Lamy; Federico Landini; Giuseppe Massone; Marco Malvezzi; John Daniel Moses; M. Pancrazzi; Maria Guglielmina Pelizzo; Luca Poletto; U. Schühle

METIS, the “Multi Element Telescope for Imaging and Spectroscopy”, is a coronagraph selected by the European Space Agency to be part of the payload of the Solar Orbiter mission to be launched in 2017. The unique profile of this mission will allow 1) a close approach to the Sun (up to 0.28 A.U.) thus leading to a significant improvement in spatial resolution; 2) quasi co-rotation with the Sun, resulting in observations that nearly freeze for several days the large-scale outer corona in the plane of the sky and 3) unprecedented out-of-ecliptic view of the solar corona. This paper describes the experiment concept and the observational tools required to achieve the science drivers of METIS. METIS will be capable of obtaining for the first time: • simultaneous imaging of the full corona in polarized visible-light (590-650 nm) and narrow-band ultraviolet HI Lyman α (121.6 nm); • monochromatic imaging of the full corona in the extreme ultraviolet He II Lyman α (30.4 nm); • spectrographic observations of the HI and He II Ly α in corona. These measurements will allow a complete characterization of the three most important plasma components of the corona and the solar wind, that is, electrons, hydrogen, and helium. This presentation gives an overview of the METIS imaging and spectroscopic observational capabilities to carry out such measurements.


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 | 2013

Improved stray light suppression performance for the solar orbiter/METIS inverted external occulter

Federico Landini; Marco Romoli; Gerardo Capobianco; S. Vives; Silvano Fineschi; Giuseppe Massone; Davide Loreggia; Enzo Turchi; Christophe Guillon; C. Escolle; M. Pancrazzi; M. Focardi

The Solar Orbiter/METIS visible and UV coronagraph introduces the concept of occulter inversion in solar coronagraphy. Classical externally occulted coronagraphs usually have a disk in front of the telescope entrance pupil. According to the mission requirements, in order to reduce the amount of power entering the instrument and to limit the instrument dimensions, METIS is equipped with an inverted external occulter (IEO). The IEO consists of a circular aperture on the Solar Orbiter thermal shield that acts as coronagraph entrance pupil. A spherical mirror (M0), located ~800 mm behind the IEO, rejects back the disk-light through the IEO itself. A light-tight boom connects the IEO to the M0 through the thermal shield. In order to achieve high performance in stray light suppression, the IEO design needs optimization. Due to the novelty of the concept we can only use the heritage of past space-borne coronagraph occulters as a starting point to design a dedicated occulter optimization shape. A 1.5 years long, accurate test campaign has been carried out to evaluate the best optimization configuration for the IEO. Two prototypes were manufactured to take into account the impact of the boom geometry on the stray light suppression performance. Two optimization concepts were compared: the inverted cone (that derives from the conic optimization of classical occulting disks) and the serrated edge, of which several samples were manufactured, with different geometrical parameters, surface roughnesses and coatings. This work summarizes the activity we have been carrying on to define the flight specifications for the METIS occulter.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

An integrated payload design for the Atmospheric Remote-sensing Infrared Exoplanet Large-survey (ARIEL)

Paul Eccleston; Giovanna Tinetti; Jean-Philippe Beaulieu; M. Güdel; Paul Hartogh; G. Micela; Michiel Min; M. Rataj; T. P. Ray; Ignasi Ribas; B. Vandenbussche; Jean-Louis Augueres; Georgia Bishop; Vania Da Deppo; M. Focardi; Thomas Hunt; G. Malaguti; Kevin Middleton; G. Morgante; M. Ollivier; E. Pace; Enzo Pascale; William Taylor

ARIEL (the Atmospheric Remote-sensing Infrared Exoplanet Large-survey) is one of the three candidates for the next ESA medium-class science mission (M4) expected to be launched in 2026. This mission will be devoted to observing spectroscopically in the infrared a large population of warm and hot transiting exoplanets (temperatures from ~500 K to ~3000 K) in our nearby Galactic neighborhood, opening a new discovery space in the field of extrasolar planets and enabling the understanding of the physics and chemistry of these far away worlds. The three candidate missions for M4 are now in a Phase A study which will run until mid-2017 at which point one mission will be selected for implementation. ARIEL is based on a 1-m class telescope feeding both a moderate resolution spectrometer covering the wavelengths from 1.95 to 7.8 microns, and a four channel photometer (which also acts as a Fine Guidance Sensor) with bands between 0.55 and 1.65 microns. During its 3.5 years of operation from an L2 orbit, ARIEL will continuously observe exoplanets transiting their host star.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

A prototype of the UV detector for METIS on Solar Orbiter

M. Uslenghi; S. Incorvaia; M. Fiorini; U. Schühle; L. Teriaca; Erik Wilkinson; O. H. W. Siegmund; Ester Antonucci; Silvano Fineschi; Giampiero Naletto; G. Nicolini; G. Nicolosi; Marco Romoli; M. Focardi

METIS (Multi Element Telescope for Imaging and Spectroscopy) is one of the instruments included in the science payload of the ESA mission Solar Orbiter: a coronograph able to perform broadband polarization imaging in the visible range, and narrow band imaging in UV (HI Lyman-α) and EUV (HeII Lyman-α). In addition, it will acquire spectra of the solar corona simultaneously to UV/EUV imaging. It will be equipped with two detectors: a hybrid APS dedicated to the visible channel and an Intensified APS for the UV/EUV channel. The spectroscopic channel will share the same detector as the UV/EUV corona imaging, with the spectrum imaged on a portion of the detector not used by the corona image. We present the development of the UV/EUV detector consisting of a CMOS APS imaging device to be coupled with a microchannel plate intensifier. Other than constraints related to the harsh environment (radiation, temperature, visible stray-light), the METIS UV detector has the additional challenge of managing different count rates associated with the three different kind of measurements (UV imaging, EUV imaging and spectroscopy). The required dynamic range is further extended since observations will be planned at different distances from the Sun, varying image scale over a fixed vignetting function. We will present the architecture of this UV detector, describing the prototype developed in order to optimize the performance on the overall dynamic range required by METIS.


Experimental Astronomy | 2017

The ARIEL Instrument Control Unit design: For the M4 Mission Selection Review of the ESA’s Cosmic Vision Program

M. Focardi; E. Pace; M. Farina; A. M. di Giorgio; J. Colomé Ferrer; Ignasi Ribas; C. Sierra Roig; J. C. Morales; Jérôme Amiaux; C. Cara; J. L. Augurés; Enzo Pascale; G. Morgante; V. Da Deppo; M. Pancrazzi; Vladimiro Noce; S. Pezzuto; M. Frericks; F. Zwart; Georgia Bishop; Kevin Middleton; Paul Eccleston; G. Micela; Giovanna Tinetti

The Atmospheric Remote-sensing Infrared Exoplanet Large-survey mission (ARIEL) (Tinetti et al. 2017) is one of the three present candidates for the ESA M4 (the fourth medium mission) launch opportunity. The proposed Payload (Eccleston et al. 2017; Morgante et al. 2017; Da Deppo et al. 2017) will perform a large unbiased spectroscopic survey from space concerning the nature of exoplanets atmospheres and their interiors to determine the key factors affecting the formation and evolution of planetary systems. ARIEL will observe a large number (> 500) of warm and hot transiting gas giants, Neptunes and super-Earths around a wide range of host star types, targeting planets hotter than 600 K to take advantage of their well-mixed atmospheres. It will exploit primary and secondary transits spectroscopy in the 1.2 − 8μm spectral range and broad-band photometry in the optical and Near IR (NIR). The main instrument of the ARIEL Payload is the IR Spectrometer (AIRS) (Amiaux et al. 2017) providing low-resolution spectroscopy in two IR channels: Channel 0 (CH0) for the 1.95 − 3.90μm band and Channel 1 (CH1) for the 3.90 − 7.80μm range. It is located at the intermediate focal plane of the telescope (Da Deppo et al. 2016, 2017, 2017) and common optical system and it hosts two IR sensors and two cold front-end electronics (CFEE) for detectors readout, a well defined process calibrated for the selected target brightness and driven by the Payload’s Instrument Control Unit (ICU).


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

The Atmospheric Remote-sensing Infrared Exoplanets Large-survey (ARIEL) payload electronic subsystems

M. Focardi; E. Pace; J. Colomé; I. Ribas; M. Rataj; Roland Ottensamer; M. Farina; A. M. di Giorgio; P. Wawer; M. Pancrazzi; V. Noce; S. Pezzuto; G. Morgante; B. Artigues; C. Sierra-Roig; L. Gesa; Paul Eccleston; M. Crook; G. Micela

The ARIEL mission has been proposed to ESA by an European Consortium as the first space mission to extensively perform remote sensing on the atmospheres of a well defined set of warm and hot transiting gas giant exoplanets, whose temperature range between ~600 K and 3000 K. ARIEL will observe a large number (~500) of warm and hot transiting gas giants, Neptunes and super-Earths around a range of host star types using transit spectroscopy in the ~2-8 μm spectral range and broad-band photometry in the NIR and optical. ARIEL will target planets hotter than 600 K to take advantage of their well-mixed atmospheres, which should show minimal condensation and sequestration of high-Z materials and thus reveal their bulk and elemental composition. One of the major motivations for exoplanet characterisation is to understand the probability of occurrence of habitable worlds, i.e. suitable for surface liquid water. While ARIEL will not study habitable planets, its major contribution to this topic will results from its capability to detect the presence of atmospheres on many terrestrial planets outside the habitable zone and, in many cases, characterise them. This represents a fundamental breakthrough in understanding the physical and chemical processes of a large sample of exoplanets atmospheres as well as their bulk properties and to probe in-space technology. The ARIEL infrared spectrometer (AIRS) provides data on the atmospheric composition; these data are acquired and processed by an On-Board Data Handling (OBDH) system including the Cold Front End Electronics (CFEE) and the Instrument Control Unit (ICU). The Telescope Control Unit (TCU) is also included inside the ICU. The latter is directly connected to the Control and Data Management Unit (CDMU) on board the Service Module (SVM). The general hardware architecture and the application software of the ICU are described. The Fine Guidance Sensor (FGS) electronics and the Cooler Control Electronics are also presented.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2016

Design of an afocal telescope for the ARIEL mission

Vania Da Deppo; Kevin Middleton; M. Focardi; G. Morgante; E. Pace; R. U. Claudi; G. Micela

ARIEL (Atmospheric Remote-sensing Infrared Exoplanet Large-survey) is one of the three candidates for the next ESA medium-class science mission (M4) expected to be launched in 2026. This mission will be devoted to observe spectroscopically in the infrared (IR) a large population of known transiting planets in our Galaxy. ARIEL is based on a 1-m class telescope ahead of two spectrometer channels covering the band 1.95 to 7.8 microns. In addition there are four photometric channels: two wide band, also used as fine guidance sensors, and two narrow band. During its 3.5 years operations from L2 orbit, ARIEL will continuously observe exoplanets transiting their host star. The ARIEL design is conceived as a fore-module common afocal telescope that will feed the spectrometer and photometric channels. The telescope optical design is an off-axis portion of a two-mirror classic telescope coupled to a tertiary off-axis paraboloidal mirror providing a collimating output beam. The telescope and optical bench operating temperatures, as well as those of some subsystems, will be monitored and fine tuned/stabilised mainly by means of a thermal control subsystem (TCU - Telescope Control Unit) working in closed-loop feedback and hosted by the main Payload electronics unit, i.e. the Instrument Control Unit (ICU). In this paper the telescope requirements will be given together with the foreseen design. The technical solution chosen to passively cool the telescope unit will be detailed discussed.


Proceedings of SPIE | 2012

The Exoplanet Characterisation Observatory (EChO) payload electronics

M. Focardi; M. Pancrazzi; A. M. di Giorgio; S. Pezzuto; G. Micela; E. Pace

The EChO Payload is an integrated spectrometer designed to cover the 0.55-16 μm (11 to 16 μm as a goal) wavelength band, subdivided into 5 channels from visible to thermal IR with a common set of optics spectrally dividing the field of view by means of dichroics and a unique electronics interface to the spacecraft, the Data Control Unit (DCU). DCU is mainly a digital unit with processing capabilities based on a rad-hard space qualified processor running the main Application SW (the scientific SW) and some programmable logics. DCU will host the detector’s warm front-end electronics (FEEs) and its main tasks are to implement the payload instruments commanding, the science and housekeeping (HK) data acquisition, conversion and packetisation, the onboard spectra pre-processing, and, finally, to provide finely regulated voltage levels to FEEs. Detector’s proximity cold electronics send analog data and HKs to DCU for digital conversion by sharing a redundant ADC aboard DCU. Analog HKs are previously multiplexed, elaborated and converted to digital format before sending them to the satellite platform, via the SpaceWire (SpW) links. DCU controls the FEEs syncronization (interpreting and routing sync signals and time stamps sent by OBC by means of SpW Time Codes) and runs the main logics to perform all the required tasks and memory management. The EChO DCU electronics basically focuses on the data and command flows, the clock/synchronization and power distribution network and on an overall architecture for a trade-off solution removing or reducing any electronics single-point failure.

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E. Pace

University of Florence

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