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Design status of ASPIICS, an externally occulted coronagraph for PROBA-3

Authors :
Andres Alia
Jim Van der Meulen
Giuseppe Massone
Michał Mosdorf
Jean-Sébastien Servaye
Russell A. Howard
Michał Ładno
Joe Zender
Jean-Philippe A. Halain
Vít Lédl
Gianalfredo Nicolini
Serge Koutchmy
Carl Jackson
Mauro Focardi
Adrian Dinescu
Steve Buckley
Yvan Stockman
Gerardo Capobianco
Raluca Muller
Karel Patočka
Rafal Graczyk
Jean-Marie Gillis
Konrad Grochowski
Jan Rautakoski
Radek Peresty
Radek Lapáček
Antonios Paschalis
Camille Galy
Jacek Kosiec
Etienne Renotte
Radek Melich
Dominique Mollet
Aline Hermans
Radoslav Darakchiev
Kanaris Tsinganos
Tomáš Vít
Nico Van Vooren
Miroslaw Rataj
Michal Kurowski
Richard Desselle
Alessandro Bemporad
Marcin Darmetko
Tomasz Górski
Lucas Salvador
Estelle Graas
Damien Galano
Arkadiusz Swat
Vladimir Daniel
Łukasz Mosdorf
Piotr Orleanski
Mateusz Mroczkowski
Irina Popescu
Lieve de Vos
Pavel Psota
Roman Rybecký
Cristina Bramanti
Hubert Kasprzyk
Ileana Cernica
Cédric Thizy
Joseph Bernier
Jana Kovačičinová
Philippe Lamy
Brian McGarvey
Andrei Zhukov
Alicja Zarzycka
Maurizio Pancrazzi
Arnaud Debaize
Cornel Solomon
Davide Loreggia
Tomasz Walczak
Federico Landini
Karl Fleury-Frenette
Kevin O'Neill
Agnes Mestreau-Garreau
Michel Thome
François Denis
Marie-Catherine Palau
Bogdan Nicula
N. Kranitis
Sylvie Liébecq
A. Fumel
Emmanuel Janssen
Marco Romoli
Silvano Fineschi
ITA
Source :
SPIE Proceedings.
Publication Year :
2015
Publisher :
SPIE, 2015.

Abstract

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.

Details

ISSN :
0277786X
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
SPIE Proceedings
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....d9ccc5b53afe9a75107bdf6eaadf6132
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2186962