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Featured researches published by Pierre Y. Bely.


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 1998

Advanced camera for the Hubble Space Telescope

Holland C. Ford; Frank Bartko; Pierre Y. Bely; Tom Broadhurst; Christopher J. Burrows; Edward S. Cheng; Mark Clampin; James H. Crocker; Paul D. Feldman; David A. Golimowski; George F. Hartig; Garth D. Illingworth; Randy A. Kimble; Michael P. Lesser; George H. Miley; Susan G. Neff; Marc Postman; W. B. Sparks; Zlatan I. Tsvetanov; Richard L. White; Pamela C. Sullivan; Carolyn A. Krebs; Douglas B. Leviton; Tom La Jeunesse; William Burmester; Sherri Fike; Rich Johnson; Robert B. Slusher; Paul Volmer; Robert A. Woodruff

The Advanced Camera for the Hubble Space Telescope has three cameras. The first, the Wide Field Camera, will be a high- throughput, wide field, 4096 X 4096 pixel CCD optical and I-band camera that is half-critically sampled at 500 nm. The second, the High Resolution Camera (HRC), is a 1024 X 1024 pixel CCD camera that is critically sampled at 500 nm. The HRC has a 26 inch X 29 inch field of view and 29 percent throughput at 250 nm. The HRC optical path includes a coronagraph that will improve the HST contrast near bright objects by a factor of approximately 10 at 900 nm. The third camera, the solar-blind camera, is a far-UV, pulse-counting array that has a relatively high throughput over a 26 inch X 29 inch field of view. The advanced camera for surveys will increase HSTs capability for surveys and discovery by a factor of approximately 10 at 800 nm.


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 1998

Wavefront sensing and control for a Next-Generation Space Telescope

David C. Redding; Scott A. Basinger; Andrew E. Lowman; Andrew Kissil; Pierre Y. Bely; Richard Burg; Richard G. Lyon; Gary E. Mosier; Michael Femiano; Mark E. Wilson; R. Greg Schunk; Lawrence Donald Craig; David N. Jacobson; John M. Rakoczy; James B. Hadaway

The Next Generation Space Telescope will depart from the traditional means of providing high optical quality and stability, namely use of massive structures. Instead, a benign orbital environment will provide stability for a large, flexible, lightweight deployed structure, and active wavefront controls will compensate misalignments and figure errors induced during launch and cool-down on orbit. This paper presents a baseline architecture for NGST wavefront controls, including initial capture and alignment, segment phasing, wavefront sensing and deformable mirror control. Simulations and analyses illustrate expected scientific performance with respect to figure error, misalignments, and thermal deformation.


The Astrophysical Journal | 1991

The imaging performance of the Hubble Space Telescope

Christopher J. Burrows; Jon A. Holtzman; S. M. Faber; Pierre Y. Bely; Hashima Hasan; C. R. Lynds; Daniel J. Schroeder

Problems with the HST instantaneous imaging performance and pointing performance are discussed. Optical tests have clearly demonstrated that the HST suffers from spherical aberration. The top level specification was that 70 percent of the energy be focused in a 0.1 in. radius, but the present, and close to optimum, focus setting gives only about 16 percent. The pointing control system also is having problems with the results that the spacecraft achieves a stability of about 0.007 rms in quiescent periods, falling short of specification which requires that such performance be maintained for 24 hr. The finite guidance sensors are not guiding well on faint stars. There is a loss of sky coverage at high Galactic latitude, especially for the Wide-Field/Planetary Camera. The consequences of these defects for the scientific program are examined.


SPIE's 1996 International Symposium on Optical Science, Engineering, and Instrumentation | 1996

Next Generation Space Telescope

John C. Mather; Bernard D. Seery; Pierre Y. Bely

We present the preliminary results of a feasibility study performed by a team of scientists and engineers from NASA, academia and industrial concerns. The candidate concept is a deployable 8 meter diameter telescope optimized for the near infrared region (1 - 5 microns), but with instruments capable of observing from the visible all the way to 30 microns. The observatory is radiatively cooled to about 30 K and would be launched on an Atlas II-AS to the Lagrange Point L2.


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 1998

Fine pointing control for a Next-Generation Space Telescope

Gary E. Mosier; Michael Femiano; Kong Ha; Pierre Y. Bely; Richard Burg; David C. Redding; Andrew Kissil; John M. Rakoczy; Lawrence Donald Craig

The Next Generation Space Telescope will provide at least ten times the collecting area of the Hubble Space Telescope in a package that fits into the shroud of an expendable launch vehicle. The resulting large, flexible structure provides a challenge to the design of a pointing control system for which the requirements are at the milli-arcsecond level. This paper describes a design concept in which pointing stability is achieved by means of a nested-loop design involving an inertial attitude control system (ACS) and a fast steering mirror (FSM). A key to the integrated control design is that the ACS controllers has a bandwidth well below known structural modes and the FSM uses a rotationally balanced mechanism which should not interact with the flexible modes that are within its control bandwidth. The ACS controller provides stable pointing of the spacecraft bus with star trackers and gyros. This low bandwidth loop uses nearly co-located sensors and actuators to slew and acquire faint guide stars in the NIR camera. This controller provides a payload reference stable to the arcsecond level. Low-frequency pointing errors due to sensor noise and dynamic disturbances are suppressed by a 2-axis gimbaled FSM locate din the instrument module. The FSM servo bandwidth of 6 Hz is intended to keep the guide star position stable in the NIR focal plane to the required milli-arcsecond level. The mirror is kept centered in its range of travel by a low-bandwidth loop closed around the ACS. This paper presents the result of parametric trade studies designed to assess the performance of this control design in the presence of modeled reaction wheel disturbances, assumed to be the principle source of vibration for the NGST, and variations in structural dynamics. Additionally, requirements for reaction wheel disturbance levels and potential vibration isolation subsystems were developed.


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2000

Wavefront Control for a Segmented Deployable Space Telescope

David C. Redding; Scott A. Basinger; David Cohen; Andrew E. Lowman; Fang Shi; Pierre Y. Bely; Charles W. Bowers; Richard Burg; Laura A. Burns; Pamela S. Davila; Bruce H. Dean; Gary E. Mosier; Todd A. Norton; Peter Petrone; Brendon D. Perkins; Mark E. Wilson

By segmenting and folding the primary mirror, quite large telescopes can be packed into the nose cone of a rocket. Deployed after launch, initial optical performance can be quite poor, due to deployment errors, thermal deformation, fabrication errors and other causes. We describe an automatic control system for capturing, aligning, phasing, and deforming the optics of such a telescope, going from initial cm-level wavefront errors to diffraction-limited observatory operations. This system was developed for the Next Generation Space Telescope and is being tested on the NGST Wavefront Control Testbed.


SPIE's 1995 Symposium on OE/Aerospace Sensing and Dual Use Photonics | 1995

High-altitude aerostats as astronomical platforms

Pierre Y. Bely; Robert Ashford; Charles D. Cox

The tropopause, typically at 16 to 18 km altitude at the lower latitudes, dips to 8 km in the polar regions. This makes the cold, dry, and nonturbulent lower stratosphere accessible to tethered aerostats. Tethered aerostats can fly as high as 12 km and are extremely reliable, lasting for many years. In contrast to free-flying balloons, they can stay on station for weeks at a time, and payloads can be safely recovered for maintenance and adjustment and relaunched in a matter of hours. We propose to use such a platform, located first in the Arctic (near Fairbanks, Alaska), and then later in the Antarctic, to operate a new technology 4-meter telescope with diffraction-limited performance in the near-IR. Thanks to the low ambient temperature (200 degrees K), thermal emission from the optics is of the same order as that of the zodiacal light in the 2 to 3 micron band. Since this wavelength interval is the darkest part of the zodiacal light spectrum from optical wavelengths to 100 microns, the combination of high resolution images and a very dark sky make it the spectral region of choice for observing the redshifted light from galaxies and clusters of galaxies at moderate to high redshifts.


Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentation | 2000

Advanced camera for surveys

Mark Clampin; Holland C. Ford; Frank Bartko; Pierre Y. Bely; Tom Broadhurst; Christopher J. Burrows; Edward S. Cheng; James H. Crocker; Marijn Franx; Paul D. Feldman; David A. Golimowski; George F. Hartig; Garth D. Illingworth; Randy A. Kimble; Michael P. Lesser; George K. Miley; Marc Postman; Marc D. Rafal; Piero Rosati; W. B. Sparks; Zlatan I. Tsvetanov; Richard L. White; Pamela C. Sullivan; Paul Volmer

The Advanced Camera for Surveys (ACS) is a third generation instrument for the Hubble Space Telescope (HST). It is currently planned for installation in HST during the fourth servicing mission in Summer 2001. The ACS will have three cameras.


The ultraviolet universe at low and high redshift | 2008

The next generation space telescope design reference mission

Eric P. Smith; John C. Mather; Pierre Y. Bely; Anuradha Purushottam Koratkar; Massino Stiavelli; Hervey S. Stockman

We review the Next Generation Space Telescope (NGST) design reference mission (DRM). The NGST DRM contains the scientific goals of the observatory and consists of primary and secondary targets and their characteristics. The purpose of the DRM is to establish a metric against which cost/capability trades, instrumental configurations, and operational scenarios can be tested.


1994 Symposium on Astronomical Telescopes & Instrumentation for the 21st Century | 1994

POST: A Polar Stratospheric Telescope

Holland C. Ford; Pierre Y. Bely; John Bally; James H. Crocker; Michael A. Dopita; James N. Tilley; Ronald J. Allen; Frank Bartko; Richard L. White; Richard Burg; Christopher J. Burrows; Mark C. Clampin; D. A. Harper; Garth D. Illingworth; Richard McCray; S. S. Meyer; Jeremy R. Mould; Colin Norman

The lower stratosphere in the polar regions offers conditions for observation in the near-infrared comparable to those obtained from space. We describe a concept for a 6-meter, diluted aperture, near-infrared telescope carried by a tethered aerostat flying at 12 km altitude, to serve as a testbed for future space astronomical observatories while producing frontier science.

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Richard Burg

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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Richard L. White

Space Telescope Science Institute

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Christopher J. Burrows

Space Telescope Science Institute

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Richard Burg

Jet Propulsion Laboratory

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Holland C. Ford

Space Telescope Science Institute

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James H. Crocker

Space Telescope Science Institute

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John C. Mather

Goddard Space Flight Center

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Frank Bartko

American Cancer Society

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Larry D. Petro

Johns Hopkins University

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