10,889 research outputs found
Helioseismology with Solar Orbiter
The Solar Orbiter mission, to be launched in July 2017, will carry a suite of
remote sensing and in-situ instruments, including the Polarimetric and
Helioseismic Imager (PHI). PHI will deliver high-cadence images of the Sun in
intensity and Doppler velocity suitable for carrying out novel helioseismic
studies. The orbit of the Solar Orbiter spacecraft will reach a solar latitude
of up to 21 deg (up to 34 deg by the end of the extended mission) and thus will
enable the first local helioseismology studies of the polar regions. Here we
consider an array of science objectives to be addressed by helioseismology
within the baseline telemetry allocation (51 Gbit per orbit, current baseline)
and within the science observing windows (baseline 3 x 10 days per orbit). A
particularly important objective is the measurement of large-scale flows at
high latitudes (rotation and meridional flow), which are largely unknown but
play an important role in flux transport dynamos. The full range of
Earth-Sun-spacecraft angles provided by the orbit will enable helioseismology
from two vantage points by combining PHI with another instrument: stereoscopic
helioseismology will allow the study of the deep solar interior and a better
understanding of the physics of solar oscillations in both quiet Sun and
sunspots. We have used a model of the PHI instrument to study its performance
for helioseismology applications. As input we used a 6 hr time-series of
realistic solar magneto-convection simulation (Stagger code) and the SPINOR
radiative transfer code to synthesize the observables. The simulated power
spectra of solar oscillations show that the instrument is suitable for
helioseismology. In particular, the specified point spread function, image
jitter, and photon noise are no obstacle to a successful mission.Comment: 35 pages, 12 figures. Accepted for publication in Space Science
Review
Workshop on Advanced Technologies for Planetary Instruments, part 1
This meeting was conceived in response to new challenges facing NASA's robotic solar system exploration program. This volume contains papers presented at the Workshop on Advanced Technologies for Planetary Instruments on 28-30 Apr. 1993. This meeting was conceived in response to new challenges facing NASA's robotic solar system exploration program. Over the past several years, SDIO has sponsored a significant technology development program aimed, in part, at the production of instruments with these characteristics. This workshop provided an opportunity for specialists from the planetary science and DoD communities to establish contacts, to explore common technical ground in an open forum, and more specifically, to discuss the applicability of SDIO's technology base to planetary science instruments
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The FIELDS Instrument Suite for Solar Probe Plus: Measuring the Coronal Plasma and Magnetic Field, Plasma Waves and Turbulence, and Radio Signatures of Solar Transients.
NASA's Solar Probe Plus (SPP) mission will make the first in situ measurements of the solar corona and the birthplace of the solar wind. The FIELDS instrument suite on SPP will make direct measurements of electric and magnetic fields, the properties of in situ plasma waves, electron density and temperature profiles, and interplanetary radio emissions, amongst other things. Here, we describe the scientific objectives targeted by the SPP/FIELDS instrument, the instrument design itself, and the instrument concept of operations and planned data products
Compressive Sensing for Spectroscopy and Polarimetry
We demonstrate through numerical simulations with real data the feasibility
of using compressive sensing techniques for the acquisition of
spectro-polarimetric data. This allows us to combine the measurement and the
compression process into one consistent framework. Signals are recovered thanks
to a sparse reconstruction scheme from projections of the signal of interest
onto appropriately chosen vectors, typically noise-like vectors. The
compressibility properties of spectral lines are analyzed in detail. The
results shown in this paper demonstrate that, thanks to the compressibility
properties of spectral lines, it is feasible to reconstruct the signals using
only a small fraction of the information that is measured nowadays. We
investigate in depth the quality of the reconstruction as a function of the
amount of data measured and the influence of noise. This change of paradigm
also allows us to define new instrumental strategies and to propose
modifications to existing instruments in order to take advantage of compressive
sensing techniques.Comment: 11 pages, 9 figures, accepted for publication in A&
Measurements of the Cosmic X-ray Background of the Universe and the MVN Experiment
The paper describes previous studies of the cosmic X-ray background (CXB) of
the Universe in the energy range 1-100 keV and outline prospects for its
investigation with the help of MVN (Monitor Vsego Neba) experiment. The nature
of the CXB and its use for studying the cosmological evolution of black holes
are briefly discussed. The bulk of the paper is devoted to the methods of CXB
measurements, from the first pioneering rocket and balloon-borne experiments to
the measurements made with latest-generation orbital X-ray observatories.
Particular attention is given to the problems of allowance for the contribution
of background events to the measurements with X-ray and hard X-ray instruments.Comment: 20 pages, 17 figures, Published in Astronomy Letter
Project Tech Top study of lunar, planetary and solar topography Final report
Data acquisition techniques for information on lunar, planetary, and solar topograph
Radial Velocity Prospects Current and Future: A White Paper Report prepared by the Study Analysis Group 8 for the Exoplanet Program Analysis Group (ExoPAG)
[Abridged] The Study Analysis Group 8 of the NASA Exoplanet Analysis Group
was convened to assess the current capabilities and the future potential of the
precise radial velocity (PRV) method to advance the NASA goal to "search for
planetary bodies and Earth-like planets in orbit around other stars.: (U.S.
National Space Policy, June 28, 2010). PRVs complement other exoplanet
detection methods, for example offering a direct path to obtaining the bulk
density and thus the structure and composition of transiting exoplanets. Our
analysis builds upon previous community input, including the ExoPlanet
Community Report chapter on radial velocities in 2008, the 2010 Decadal Survey
of Astronomy, the Penn State Precise Radial Velocities Workshop response to the
Decadal Survey in 2010, and the NSF Portfolio Review in 2012. The
radial-velocity detection of exoplanets is strongly endorsed by both the Astro
2010 Decadal Survey "New Worlds, New Horizons" and the NSF Portfolio Review,
and the community has recommended robust investment in PRVs. The demands on
telescope time for the above mission support, especially for systems of small
planets, will exceed the number of nights available using instruments now in
operation by a factor of at least several for TESS alone. Pushing down towards
true Earth twins will require more photons (i.e. larger telescopes), more
stable spectrographs than are currently available, better calibration, and
better correction for stellar jitter. We outline four hypothetical situations
for PRV work necessary to meet NASA mission exoplanet science objectives.Comment: ExoPAG SAG 8 final report, 112 pages, fixed author name onl
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