Presentation
10 July 2018 The SAFARI grating spectrometer for the SPICA space observatory (Conference Presentation)
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The European/Japanese SPace Infrared telescope for Cosmology and Astrophysics, SPICA, will provide astronomers with a long awaited new window on the universe. Having a large cold telescope cooled to less than 8K above absolute zero, SPICA will provide a unique environment where instruments are limited only by the cosmic background itself. A consortium of European, north American and Asian institutes has been established to design and implement the SpicA FAR infrared Instrument SAFARI, an extremely sensitive spectrometer designed to fully exploit this extremely low far infrared background environment provided by the SPICA observatory. SAFARI’s extremely sensitive Transition Edge Sensing detectors will allow astronomers to very efficiently obtain moderate to high resolution spectra of many thousands of obscured celestial objects in the far infrared, allowing a full spectroscopic characterisation of this objects. Efficiently obtaining such a large number of complete spectra will be essential to address several fundamental questions in current astrophysics: how do galaxies form and evolve over cosmic time?, what is the true nature of our own Milky Way?, and why and where do planets like those in our own solar system come into being? The basic SAFARI instrument is a highly sensitive Grating Spectrometer with a spectral resolution R of about 300 and a line sensitivity of a few x 10^-20 W/√Hz (5σ-1h). By routing the signal through a Martin-Puplett interferometer a high resolution mode is implemented providing R~11000 at 34 μm to R~1500 at 230 μm. The instrument operates in four wavelength bands, simultaneously covering the full 34-230μm range. Each band has three arrays of about 300 TES sensors providing three spatial and 300 spectral outputs. To limit the number of signal wires between the cold focal plan and the warm electronics units a 160 pixel/channel Frequency Domain Multiplexing scheme is employed.
Conference Presentation
© (2018) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Gerhard de Lange, Peter Roelfsema, Martin Giard, Francisco Najarro, Kees Wafelbakker, Willem Jellema, Brian Jackson, Marc Audard, Matt Griffin, Franz Kerschbaum, David Naylor, Albrecht Poglitch, Matt Bradford, and Bart Vandenbussche "The SAFARI grating spectrometer for the SPICA space observatory (Conference Presentation)", Proc. SPIE 10708, Millimeter, Submillimeter, and Far-Infrared Detectors and Instrumentation for Astronomy IX, 107081N (10 July 2018); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.2313468
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KEYWORDS
Spectroscopy

Space observatories

Far infrared

Astrophysics

Sensors

Space telescopes

Infrared spectroscopy

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