8 research outputs found

    The Solar Mass Ejection Imager and Its Heliospheric Imaging Legacy

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    The development of a detector system for faint object spectroscopy on the Isaac Newton telescope

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    SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:D76043 / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo

    Design of a 3µm pixel linear CMOS sensor for earth observation

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    A visible wavelength linear photosensor featuring a pixel size of 3µm has been designed for fabrication using commercial 0.25µm CMOS technology. For the photo-sensing element, the design uses a special "deep N-well" in P-epi diode offered by the foundry for imaging devices. Pixel reset is via an adjacent p-FET, thus allowing high reset voltages for a wide pixel voltage swing. The pixel voltage is buffered using a voltage-follower op-amp and a sampling scheme is used to allow correlated double sampling (CDS) for removal of reset noise. Reset and signal levels are buffered through a 16:1 multiplexer to a switched capacitor amplifier which performs the CDS function. Incorporated in the CDS circuit is a programmable gain of 1-8 for increased signal-to-noise ratio at low signal levels. Data output is via 4 analogue output drivers for off-chip conversion. Each driver supplies a differential output voltage with a ± 1V swing for 6.25kHz. This gives a peak data rate at each output driver of 10M sample/s. The device will operate on a 3.3V supply and will dissipate approximately 950mW. Simulations indicate an equivalent noise charge at the pixel of 66.3e- for a full well capacity of 255,000e-, giving a dynamic range of 71.7dB

    Application of modified three parameter Weibull distributions to brittle material design

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    SIGLEAvailable from British Library Document Supply Centre- DSC:7595.51(RARDE--16/84) / BLDSC - British Library Document Supply CentreGBUnited Kingdo

    The Heliospheric Imagers onboard the STEREO mission

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    Mounted on the sides of two widely separated spacecraft, the two Heliospheric Imager (HI) instruments onboard NASA’s STEREO mission view, for the first time, the space between the Sun and Earth. These instruments are wide-angle visible-light imagers that incorporate sufficient baffling to eliminate scattered light to the extent that the passage of solar coronal mass ejections (CMEs) through the heliosphere can be detected. Each HI instrument comprises two cameras, HI-1 and HI-2, which have 20° and 70° fields of view and are off-pointed from the Sun direction by 14.0° and 53.7°, respectively, with their optical axes aligned in the ecliptic plane. This arrangement provides coverage over solar elongation angles from 4.0° to 88.7° at the viewpoints of the two spacecraft, thereby allowing the observation of Earth-directed CMEs along the Sun – Earth line to the vicinity of the Earth and beyond. Given the two separated platforms, this also presents the first opportunity to view the structure and evolution of CMEs in three dimensions. The STEREO spacecraft were launched from Cape Canaveral Air Force Base in late October 2006, and the HI instruments have been performing scientific observations since early 2007. The design, development, manufacture, and calibration of these unique instruments are reviewed in this paper. Mission operations, including the initial commissioning phase and the science operations phase, are described. Data processing and analysis procedures are briefly discussed, and ground-test results and in-orbit observations are used to demonstrate that the performance of the instruments meets the original scientific requirements
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