Proceedings Article10.1117/12.393958
SPIRE instrument for FIRST
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TL;DR: SPIRE, the Spectral and Photometric Imaging Receiver, will be a bolometer instrument for ESA's FIRST satellite as mentioned in this paper, whose main scientific goals are deep extragalactic and galactic imaging surveys and spectroscopy of star-forming regions in own and nearby galaxies.
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Abstract: SPIRE, the Spectral and Photometric Imaging Receiver, will be a bolometer instrument for ESA's FIRST satellite. Its main scientific goals are deep extragalactic and galactic imaging surveys and spectroscopy of star-forming regions in own and nearby galaxies. The SPIRE detectors are feedhorn- coupled NTD spider-web bolometers. The instrument comprises a three-band imaging photometer covering the 250 - 500 micrometers range, and an imaging Fourier Transform Spectrometer (FTS) covering 200 - 670 micrometers . The photometer has a field of view of 4 X 8 arcminutes which is observed simultaneously at 250, 350 and 500 micrometers with dichroic beam dividers separating the three spectral bands. Its angular resolution is determined by the telescope diffraction limit, with FWHM beam widths of approximately 17, 24 and 35 arcseconds at 250, 350 and 500 micrometers , respectively. An internal beam steering mirror can be used for spatial modulation of the telescope beam, and observations can also be made by scanning the telescope without chopping, providing better sensitivity for source confusion-limited deep surveys. The FTS has a field of view of 2.6 arcminutes and an adjustable spectral resolution of 0.04 - 2 cm-1 ((lambda) /(Delta) (lambda) equals 20 - 1000 at 250 micrometers ). It employs a dual-beam configuration with novel broad-band intensity beam dividers to provide high efficiency and separated output and input ports.© (2000) COPYRIGHT SPIE--The International Society for Optical Engineering. Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
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Citations
Spectroscopy in the Terahertz Spectral Region
Frank C. De Lucia
- 01 Jan 2003
TL;DR: The physical basis for the interctions between matter and radiation in the THz and the theoretical underpinnings of molecular rotational spectroscopy are discussed in this paper, along with representative results.
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Effect of clustering on extragalactic source counts with low-resolution instruments
Mattia Negrello,J. González-Nuevo,Manuela Magliocchetti,Lauro Moscardini,G. de Zotti,G. de Zotti,L. Toffolatti,Luigi Danese +7 more
TL;DR: In this article, the distribution of clump luminosities can be modelled in terms of the two-and three-point correlation functions, and apply their formalism to the Planck/HFI 850-μm surveys.
FIRST-SPIRE spectrometer: a novel imaging FTS for the submillimeter
Bruce Swinyard,Peter A. R. Ade,Matthew Joseph Griffin,Kjetil Dohlen,Jean-Paul Baluteau,D. Pouliquen,Diddier Ferand,Pascal Dargent,Guy Michel,J. Martignac,Louis Rodriguez,Donald E. Jennings,Martin E. Caldwell,Anthony G. Richards,Peter A. Hamilton,David A. Naylor +15 more
TL;DR: The SPIRE instrument for the FIRST mission will consist of a three band imaging submillimeter photometer and a two band imaging Fourier Transform Spectrometer (FTS) optimized for the 200 - 400 micrometers range, and with extended coverage out to 670 micrometer.
•Journal Article
The ESA FIRST Cornerstone Mission
TL;DR: FIRST as mentioned in this paper is the fourth cornerstone mission in the European Space Agency (ESA) science program, which performs photometry and spectroscopy in the far infrared and submillimetre part of the spectrum, covering approximately the 60-670 μm range.
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•Journal Article
Spectral characterization of the Herschel SPIRE photometer
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present a detailed CHARACTERIZATION of the HERSCHEL S P I R E PHOTOMETER (HRSP) camera.
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References
SCUBA: A Common - user submillimetre camera operating on the James Clerk Maxwell telescope
Wayne S. Holland,E. I. Robson,Walter Kieran Gear,Colin R. Cunningham,J. F. Lightfoot,Tim Jenness,Rob Ivison,Jamie Stevens,Peter A. R. Ade,Matthew Joseph Griffin,William Duncan,Jonathan Murphy,David A. Naylor +12 more
TL;DR: The Submillimetre Common-User Bolometer Array (SCUBA) as mentioned in this paper is the most versatile and powerful of a new generation of sub-millimeter cameras, which combines a sensitive dual-waveband imaging array with a three-band photometer, and is sky-background limited by the Mauna Kea atmosphere at all observing wavelengths from 350 μμto 2 mm.
FIRST-SPIRE spectrometer: a novel imaging FTS for the submillimeter
Bruce Swinyard,Peter A. R. Ade,Matthew Joseph Griffin,Kjetil Dohlen,Jean-Paul Baluteau,D. Pouliquen,Diddier Ferand,Pascal Dargent,Guy Michel,J. Martignac,Louis Rodriguez,Donald E. Jennings,Martin E. Caldwell,Anthony G. Richards,Peter A. Hamilton,David A. Naylor +15 more
TL;DR: The SPIRE instrument for the FIRST mission will consist of a three band imaging submillimeter photometer and a two band imaging Fourier Transform Spectrometer (FTS) optimized for the 200 - 400 micrometers range, and with extended coverage out to 670 micrometer.
SPIRE: a bolometer instrument for FIRST
TL;DR: The European Space Agency's first satellite will include a submillimeter direct detection instrument using bolometric detectors as mentioned in this paper, which is optimized for deep photometric surveys in the sub-millimeter (one of the main science goals of the FIRST mission).
Beam pattern (diffraction) aspects in design of the SPIRE instrument.
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors report on aspects of the SPIRE design, with beam simulation examples from trade-off studies on Lyot-stop design, and end-to-end computations of instrument field-of-view response.
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Composite infrared bolometers with Si_3N_4 micromesh absorbers
TL;DR: The design and performance of 300-mK composite bolometers that use micromesh absorbers and support structures patterned from thin films of low-stress silicon nitride are reported, which are four times smaller than previously achieved at 300 mK.
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