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Prospect for UV observations from the Moon. III. Assembly and ground calibration of Lunar Ultraviolet Cosmic Imager (LUCI)

Authors :
Mathew, Joice
Nair, B. G.
Safonova, Margarita
Sriram, S.
Prakash, Ajin
Sarpotdar, Mayuresh
Ambily, S.
K., Nirmal
Sreejith, A. G.
Murthy, Jayant
Kamath, P. U.
Kathiravan, S.
Prasad, B. R.
Brosch, Noah
Kappelmann, Norbert
Gadde, Nirmal Suraj
Narayan, Rahul
Mathew, Joice
Nair, B. G.
Safonova, Margarita
Sriram, S.
Prakash, Ajin
Sarpotdar, Mayuresh
Ambily, S.
K., Nirmal
Sreejith, A. G.
Murthy, Jayant
Kamath, P. U.
Kathiravan, S.
Prasad, B. R.
Brosch, Noah
Kappelmann, Norbert
Gadde, Nirmal Suraj
Narayan, Rahul
Publication Year :
2019

Abstract

The Lunar Ultraviolet Cosmic Imager (LUCI) is a near-ultraviolet (NUV) telescope with all-spherical mirrors, designed and built to fly as a scientific payload on a lunar mission with Team Indus - the original Indian entry to the Google Lunar X-Prize. Observations from the Moon provide a unique opportunity of a stable platform with an unobstructed view of the space at all wavelengths due to the absence of atmosphere and ionosphere. LUCI is an 80 mm aperture telescope, with a field of view of 27.6'x 20.4' and a spatial resolution of 5'', will scan the sky in the NUV (200-320 nm) domain to look for transient sources. We describe here the assembly, alignment, and calibration of the complete instrument. LUCI is now in storage in a class 1000 clean room and will be delivered to our flight partner in readiness for flight.<br />Comment: Accepted for publication in Astrophysics and Space Science. Added new references and corrected typo, in the updated version

Details

Database :
OAIster
Publication Type :
Electronic Resource
Accession number :
edsoai.on1363508681
Document Type :
Electronic Resource
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1007.s10509-019-3538-8