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Calibration of the Berkeley EUV Airglow Rocket Spectrometer
- Publication Year :
- 1989
- Publisher :
- United States: NASA Center for Aerospace Information (CASI), 1989.
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Abstract
- The Berkeley Extreme-ultraviolet Airglow Rocket Spectrometer (BEARS), a multiinstrument sounding rocket payload, made comprehensive measurements of the earth's dayglow. The primary instruments consisted of two near-normal Rowland mount spectrometers: one channel to measure several atomic oxygen features at high spectral resolution (about 1.5 A) in the band passes 980-1040 and 1300-1360 A, and the other to measure EUV dayglow and the solar EUV simultaneously in a much broader bandpass (250-1150 A) at moderate resolution (about 10 A). The payload also included a hydrogen Lyman-alpha photometer to monitor the solar irradiance and goecoronal emissions. The instrument was calibrated at the EUV calibration facility at the University of California at Berkeley, and was subsequently launched successfully on September 30, 1988 aboard a four-stage experimental sounding rocket, Black Brant XII flight 12.041 WT. The calibration procedure and resulting data are presented.
- Subjects :
- Instrumentation And Photography
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- Database :
- NASA Technical Reports
- Notes :
- NGL-05-003-497, , NAG5-646
- Publication Type :
- Report
- Accession number :
- edsnas.19900063229
- Document Type :
- Report