1. Alignment and integration plan for the off-plane grating rocket experiment
- Author
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Kim D. Allgood, James H. Tutt, Benjamin D. Donovan, Peter M. Solly, Karen Holland, Fabien Grisé, Bridget C. O'Meara, James R. Mazzarella, Andrew D. Holland, Randall L. McEntaffer, William W. Zhang, Ryan S. McClelland, Matthew R. Soman, Raul E. Riveros, Michal Hlinka, Kai-Wing Chan, Michael P. Biskach, Timo T. Saha, Daniel Evan, Ai Numata, and John D. Kearney
- Subjects
Monocrystalline silicon ,business.product_category ,Optics ,Spectrometer ,Rocket ,Computer science ,Payload ,business.industry ,Launched ,Reflection (physics) ,System integration ,Grating ,business - Abstract
The Off-plane Grating Rocket Experiment is a soft X-ray grating spectrometer payload to be launched on a suborbital rocket. The spectrometer will use three technologies – monocrystalline silicon X-ray optics (NASA Goddard Space Flight Center), X-ray reflection gratings (The Pennsylvania State University), and electron-multiplying CCDs (XCAM Ltd., The Open University) – to achieve the highest performance on-sky soft X-ray spectrum to date when launched. To realize this performance, not only must each of the three individual spectrometer components perform at their required level, but these components also must be aligned to one another to the required tolerances and integrated into the payload. In this manuscript, we report on the alignment and integration plan for each component within the spectrometer.
- Published
- 2021