Aspera is a NASA Pioneers SmallSat mission designed to detect and map the O VI emission (1032 Å) through long-slit spectroscopy in the halos of nearby galaxies for the first time. The spectrograph utilizes toroidal gratings with multilayer coatings of aluminum, lithium fluoride, and magnesium fluoride that optimize their throughput in the extreme ultraviolet EUV waveband of 1030 to 1040 Å. We discuss the grating verification test setup design, including optical alignment and reference measurement setup. We also present grating testing and grating efficiency simulation results using the target grating groove profile and the multi-layer coatings.
Aspera is a NASA Pioneers Mission designed to measure faint OVI emission around nearby galaxies with unprecedented sensitivity. The SmallSat payload consists of two identical co-aligned spectrographs, both operating in the Far Ultraviolet (FUV) between 1030−1040 Å. Missions operating at FUV wavelengths are particularly sensitive to contamination, as short wavelengths are easily scattered and absorbed by contaminants deposited on payload optical surfaces. A strict contamination control plan is critical to avoiding a severe loss in FUV throughput. Aspera contamination control efforts have been tailored to fit within the scope of a sub-Class D mission, a challenge that has become increasingly relevant as advances in FUV optics/detectors drive an uptick in smaller platform, contamination sensitive UV payloads. Contamination monitoring is used to audit the cleanroom environment, avoid outgassing contaminants under vacuum, and assess contaminant levels on payload optics. We present a detailed contamination budget through the mission end of life as well as our ongoing contamination monitoring efforts. We discuss protocols implemented for minimizing contamination-related performance degradation.
Aspera is a NASA-funded UV SmallSat mission designed to detect and map warm-hot phase halo gas around nearby galaxies. The Aspera payload is designed to detect faint diffuse O VI emission at around 103.2 nm, satisfying the sensitivity requirement of 5×10−19 erg/s/cm2/arcsec2 over 179 hours of exposure. In this manuscript, we describe the overall payload design of Aspera. The payload comprises two identical co-aligned UV long-slit spectrograph optical channels sharing a common UV-sensitive microchannel plate detector. The design delivers spectral resolution R ∼ 2,000 over the wavelength range of 101 to 106 nm. The field of view of each channel is 1 degree by 30 arcsec, with an effective area of 1.1 cm2. The mission is now entering the payload integration and testing phase, with the projected launch-ready date set for late 2025 or early 2026. The mission will be launched into low-Earth orbit via rideshare.
Aspera is a NASA-funded UV SmallSat Mission in development with a projected launch in 2025. The goal of the mission is to detect and map warm-hot gas in the circumgalactic medium of nearby galaxies traced by the Ovi emission line at 103.2 nm. To that goal, Aspera will conduct long-exposure observations at one or more spatial fields around each target galaxy, employing two long-slit spectrographs. Spectra from both channels are focused on a single micro-channel plate detector. In preparation of the mission’s launch, we are developing a data reduction pipeline, the goal of which is to reconstruct a calibrated 3D IFU-like data cube by combining the photon event lists obtained during each observation for a given target galaxy. In this proceedings paper, we present an outline for the data reduction pipeline and describe the data flow through the processing of science observations. We will further discuss individual steps to be applied to the data during the processing and show how our final data cubes shall be reconstructed. Finally, we will present our planned data products and discuss how simulations of the Aspera data cubes are being used to develop the pipeline.
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