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The Far Ultraviolet Imaging Spectrograph on Spartan-281

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 February 2017

George R. Carruthers
Affiliation:
E. O. Hulburt Center for Space Research Naval Research Laboratory Washington, DC 20375-5000
Harry M. Heckathorn
Affiliation:
E. O. Hulburt Center for Space Research Naval Research Laboratory Washington, DC 20375-5000
John C. Raymond
Affiliation:
Center for Astrophysics 60 Garden Street Cambridge, MA 02138
Reginald J. Dufour
Affiliation:
Department of Space Physics and Astronomy Rice University Houston, TX 77001
Adolf N. Witt
Affiliation:
Ritter Observatory, University of Toledo 2801 W. Bancroft Toledo, OH 43606
Chet B. Opal
Affiliation:
McDonald Observatory University of Texas Austin, TX 78712

Extract

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The study of diffuse celestial sources in the ground-inaccessible ultraviolet spectral range is less advanced than UV studies of point and compact sources. The main reason is that the characteristics of instrumentation optimized for the two types of objects are quite different. Studies of diffuse objects are best made with fast focal ratio optics with wide fields of view, whereas studies of point and compact objects are best made with large telescope aperture and high angular resolution. As a result, most space ultraviolet instruments to date (such as the International Ultraviolet Explorer and the forthcoming Hubble Space Telescope) are not well suited to the study of faint, extended diffuse objects in the ultraviolet.

Type
V. Future Plans and Approaches
Copyright
Copyright © Kluwer 1990 

References

REFERENCES

Carruthers, G. R., Heckathorn, H. M., Dufour, R. J., Opal, C. B., Raymond, J. C., and Witt, A. N, 1988a, “Spartan-281 Far-UV Imaging Spectrograph,” Ultraviolet Technology II, 932 (or Proceedings of the SPIE), 87.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carruthers, G. R., Opal, C. B., Jenkins, E. B., Lowrance, J. L., and Heckathorn, H. M., 1988b, “Development of EBCCD Cameras for the Far Ultraviolet,” Advances in Electronics and Electron Physics, 74 (Morgan, B. L., ed.), Academic Press, New York, 181.Google Scholar