The Cosmic Origins Spectrograph (COS) was installed into the Hubble Space Telescope (HST) during Servicing
Mission 4 (SM4) in May 2009. COS is designed to obtain spectra of faint objects at moderate spectral resolution (R >
16,000) in two channels: FUV, covering wavelengths from 1150 to 1450 Å; and NUV, covering 1700 - 3200 Å. Two
low resolution gratings (R > 1500) cover the < 900 - 2050 Å (FUV) and 1650 - 3200 Å (NUV) wavelength regions. An
imaging capability is also available on the NUV channel.
As part of the Hubble Servicing Mission Observatory Verification (SMOV) program, an extensive period of checkout,
fine-tuning and preliminary characterization began after the installation of COS. The COS SMOV program was a
cooperative effort between the Space Telescope Science Institute and the Instrument Definition Team based at the
University of Colorado. Nearly 2800 COS exposures in 34 separate observing programs were obtained during the course
of SMOV. Early activities included an initial instrument functional checkout, turn-on and initial characterization of the
detectors, NUV and FUV channel focus and alignment, and target acquisition verification and assessment. Once this
initial period was completed, science-related calibrations and verifications were performed in order to prepare the
instrument for normal science operations. These activities included wavelength calibration, flux calibration, detector flat
field characterization, spectroscopic performance verification, high S/N operation, and thermal and structural stability
measurements. We discuss the design, execution and results of the SMOV program, including the interrelationships
between the various tasks, and how the pre-launch plan was adjusted in real-time due to changing conditions.
PRIME (The Primordial Explorer) is a proposed Explorer-class mission. It will carry out a deep sky survey from space in four near-infrared bands between ~0.9-3.5 μm. It surveys a quarter of the sky to AB magnitude of ~24, which is ~600 times deeper than 2MASS and ~ five million times deeper than COBE at long wavelengths. Deeper surveys in selected sky regions are also planned. PRIME will reach an epoch during which the first quasars, galaxies and clusters of galaxies were formed in the early universe, map the large-scale structure of the dark matter, discover Type-Ia supernovae to be used in measuring the acceleration of the expanding universe, and detect thousands of brown dwarfs and even Jupiter-size planets in the vicinity of the solar system. Most of these objects are so rare that they may be identified only in large and deep surveys. PRIME will serve as the precursor for the Next Generation Space Telescope (NGST), supplying rare targets for its spectroscopy and deep imaging. It is more than capable of providing targets for the largest ground-based telescopes (10-30m). Combining PRIME with other surveys (SDSS, GALEX) will yield the largest astronomical database ever built.
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