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Optical alignment of contamination-sensitive Far-Ultraviolet spectrographs for Aspera SmallSat mission

Authors :
Khan, Aafaque R.
Hamden, Erika
Chung, Haeun
Choi, Heejoo
Kim, Daewook
Melso, Nicole
Hoadley, Keri
Vargas, Carlos J.
Truong, Daniel
Garcia, Elijah
Verts, Bill
Coronado, Fernando
Noenickx, Jamison
Corliss, Jason
Tanquary, Hannah
Mcmahon, Tom
Hamara, Dave
Agarwal, Simran
Augustin, Ramona
Behroozi, Peter
Bradley, Harrison
Brendel, Trenton
Burchett, Joe
Castillo, Jasmine Martinez
Chambers, Jacob
Corlies, Lauren
Davis, Greyson
Dettmar, Ralf-Jürgen
Douglas, Ewan
Ghidoli, Giulia
Goodwin, Alfred
Harris, Walter
Hergenrother, Carl
Howk, J. Christopher
Keppler, Miriam
Kerkeser, Nazende Ipek
Kidd Jr., John N.
Li, Jessica S.
Noriega, Gabe
Park, Sooseong
Pecha, Ryan
Sauve, Cork
Schiminovich, David
Selznick, Sanford
Siegmund, Oswald
Su, Rebecca
Uppnor, Sumedha
Vider, Jacob
Wolcott, Ellie
Yescas, Naomi
Zaritsky, Dennis
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Aspera is a NASA Astrophysics Pioneers SmallSat mission designed to study diffuse OVI emission from the warm-hot phase gas in the halos of nearby galaxies. Its payload consists of two identical Rowland Circle-type long-slit spectrographs, sharing a single MicroChannel plate detector. Each spectrograph channel consists of an off-axis parabola primary mirror and a toroidal diffraction grating optimized for the 1013-1057 Angstroms bandpass. Despite the simple configuration, the optical alignment/integration process for Aspera is challenging due to tight optical alignment tolerances, driven by the compact form factor, and the contamination sensitivity of the Far-Ultraviolet optics and detectors. In this paper, we discuss implementing a novel multi-phase approach to meet these requirements using state-of-the-art optical metrology tools. For coarsely positioning the optics we use a blue-laser 3D scanner while the fine alignment is done with a Zygo interferometer and a custom computer-generated hologram. The detector focus requires iterative in-vacuum alignment using a Vacuum UV collimator. The alignment is done in a controlled cleanroom facility at the University of Arizona.<br />Comment: Manuscript submitted for Proceedings of Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation 2024, Paper no. 13093-9

Details

Database :
arXiv
Publication Type :
Report
Accession number :
edsarx.2407.15391
Document Type :
Working Paper