Paper
13 December 2000 Sounding rocket mission to study the solar soft x-ray and EUV emission using transition-edge sensor technology
Kolo D. Wamba, Arthur B. C. Walker II, Dennis S. Martinez-Galarce, Sae Woo Nam, Kent D. Irwin, Steven W. Deiker, Blas Cabrera, Lawrence Lesyna, Stephen F. Powell, Aaron J. Miller, David W. Robertson, Paul F. X. Boerner, Phillip C. Baker, Troy W. Barbee Jr., Richard B. Hoover
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
We are developing a new sounding rocket payload, the Advanced Technology Solar Spectroscopic Imager (ATSSI), that will use an 8 X 8 array of transition edge sensors (TES) to obtain true spectroheliograms in a spectral bandpass spanning approximately 50 eV to approximately 3 keV. The TES array will be flown at the focus of a Wolter I telescope, where it will image as 3 arc-min by 3 arc-min field of view with a pixel resolution of approximately 6 arc-sec. In this way, it will obtain approximately 1000 individual spectra with an expected average energy resolution of approximately 3 eV FWHM. In addition to the TES array, the ATSSI will employ six multilayer telescopes with bandpasses centered on atomic lines at 17.1 angstrom (Fe XVII), 195.1 angstrom (Fe XII), 171.1 angstrom (Fe IX), 57.9 angstrom (Mg X), 98.3 angstrom (Ne VIII), and 150.1 angstrom (O VI). Two additional telescopes with bandpasses centered at 1550 angstrom (C IV) and 1216 angstrom (H I) will also be used. The eight narrowband telescopes will provide high spatial resolution (<EQ 1 arc- sec), full-disk solar images and will be complemented by two grating slit spectroheliographs. One grating will obtain high resolution spectroheliograms between 2750 angstrom and 2850 angstrom (for Mg II h- and k-line studies), and the other will be multilayer-based and will probe the Fe IX/X - O V/VI complex around 171 Angstrom (73 eV). With this set of instruments, we expect to explore more fully the nature of the energy flow between small-scale coronal, chromospheric and transition region structures, as well as to address the issue of what mechanisms are responsible for heating the quiescent solar atmosphere.
© (2000) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Kolo D. Wamba, Arthur B. C. Walker II, Dennis S. Martinez-Galarce, Sae Woo Nam, Kent D. Irwin, Steven W. Deiker, Blas Cabrera, Lawrence Lesyna, Stephen F. Powell, Aaron J. Miller, David W. Robertson, Paul F. X. Boerner, Phillip C. Baker, Troy W. Barbee Jr., and Richard B. Hoover "Sounding rocket mission to study the solar soft x-ray and EUV emission using transition-edge sensor technology", Proc. SPIE 4140, X-Ray and Gamma-Ray Instrumentation for Astronomy XI, (13 December 2000); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.409134
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Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Telescopes

Plasma

Sensors

Iron

Extreme ultraviolet

Multilayers

Rockets

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