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The Origins Space Telescope

Authors :
Itsuki Sakon
C. Wu
John Steeves
D. Ramspacher
B. G. Beaman
Charles R. Lawrence
Karin Sandstrom
K. Sheth
Susanna Petro
Jeffrey R. Olson
T. Mooney
C. Sandin
Matthew East
Ruth Carter
Desika Narayanan
K. Harvey
Kate Y. L. Su
T. L. Roellig
John C. Mather
L. Dewell
Sean Carey
R. Bell
Denis Burgarella
Tracee L. Jamison
C. Lynch
Eric E. Mamajek
Lee Armus
Joseph M. Howard
C. P. Earle
Cassandra Webster
George Helou
Gregory E. Martins
Damon Bradley
J. S. Knight
Stefanie N. Milam
Samuel H. Moseley
M. Gerin
T. P. Greene
Margaret Meixner
Gary J. Melnick
Alexandra Pope
B. J. Gavares
Tiffany Kataria
M. J. Rieke
S. Edgington
P. Beltran
Jean L. Turner
E. Stoneking
Jon Arenberg
Louis G. Fantano
M. Petach
Asantha Cooray
J. D. Chi
Lenward T. Seals
David Leisawitz
S. Tompkins
Michael Jacoby
J. Bolognese
Arturo Giles Flores
Alex Griffiths
C. Derkacz
P. Lightsey
Mike DiPirro
Douglas Scott
G. Feller
Z. Granger
L. Hilliard
Frank Helmich
Kimberly Ennico
Edward L. Wright
Charles M. Bradford
Joaquin Vieira
George H. Rieke
Jonas Zmuidzinas
E. De Beck
D. Padgett
James A. Corsetti
Johannes G. Staguhn
A. Nordt
Kevin B. Stevenson
E. A. Bergin
D. Folta
K. Tajdaran
S. Lipscy
Cara Battersby
Lynn Allen
L. Stokowski
J. J. Fortney
Edward Amatucci
A. Rao
Joseph A. Generie
James Bauer
K. S. Denis
Susan G. Neff
J. Pohner
Martina C. Wiedner
Lisa Kaltenegger
Klaus M. Pontoppidan
Dominic Benford
G. Harpole
T. D'Asto
T. Nguyen
A. Jamil
P. Knollenberg
Barto, Allison A.
Breckinridge, James B.
Stahl, H. Philip
Publication Year :
2019
Publisher :
Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE), 2019.

Abstract

The Origins Space Telescope will trace the history of our origins from the time dust and heavy elements permanently altered the cosmic landscape to present-day life. How did galaxies evolve from the earliest galactic systems to those found in the universe today? How do habitable planets form? How common are life-bearing worlds? To answer these alluring questions, Origins will operate at mid- and far-infrared wavelengths and offer powerful spectroscopic instruments and sensitivity three orders of magnitude better than that of Herschel, the largest telescope flown in space to date. After a 3 ½ year study, the Origins Science and Technology Definition Team will recommend to the Decadal Survey a concept for Origins with a 5.9-m diameter telescope cryocooled to 4.5 K and equipped with three scientific instruments. A mid-infrared instrument (MISC-T) will measure the spectra of transiting exoplanets in the 2.8 – 20 μm wavelength range and offer unprecedented sensitivity, enabling definitive biosignature detections. The Far-IR Imager Polarimeter (FIP) will be able to survey thousands of square degrees with broadband imaging at 50 and 250 μm. The Origins Survey Spectrometer (OSS) will cover wavelengths from 25 – 588 μm, make wide-area and deep spectroscopic surveys with spectral resolving power R ~ 300, and pointed observations at R ~ 40,000 and 300,000 with selectable instrument modes. Origins was designed to minimize complexity. The telescope has a Spitzer-like architecture and requires very few deployments after launch. The cryo-thermal system design leverages JWST technology and experience. A combination of current-state-of-the-art cryocoolers and next-generation detector technology will enable Origins’ natural backgroundlimited sensitivity.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....fefcf21faa0fdcb5a443d44617a5148f