Archive for stray light

Euclid Update

Posted in Euclid, The Universe and Stuff with tags , , , , on October 7, 2023 by telescoper

Having settled in to my new apartment on the Gran Via I’ve got time for a another quick update on the European Space Agency’s Euclid mission. For full details about what follows you can see here. Everything I mention here is already in the public domain, so I am not disclosing any secrets!

The last update I posted contained some frustrating and potentially worrisome news: the Performance Verification (PV) phase of the mission had to be put on hold in order to troubleshoot an intermittent problem with the Fine Guidance Sensor (FGS), which is supposed to help to maintain correct pointing of the telescope. This wasn’t working correctly as demonstrated vividly by the following image:

Obviously the survey couldn’t proceed without accurate control of the pointing of the telescope so it was urgently necessary to find out what was going wrong and fix it. It turns out that the software was getting confused by the flashes caused by cosmic ray protons hitting the detectors, think they were the gude stars it was supposed to be steering by. After identifying the problem, new software was written and uploaded to the spacecraft.

I wasn’t sure how this had gone until I saw via an internal communication that the PV phase had restarted. That announcement would not have been made had the upgrade not worked and sure enough it has now been made public that all is well. Congratulations to the instrumentation and software teams for this success. They’ve been working phenomenally hard on this.

There was an additional problem with stray light in the telescope that I have also mentioned before. That was only an issue for specific orientations of the telescope and has been dealt with by simply redesigning the survey a little to minimize the occurrence of the effect.

So the gremlins have been dispelled, and we go on into the PV phase after a delay of about a month. The survey is due to last 6 year so this hiccup is not a big deal really. We can in fact anticipate some early science results from this phase in a month or so, although they will not be part of the full survey which will start after the PV phase is complete, after a few months.

Euclid Update

Posted in Euclid with tags , , , , , on August 15, 2023 by telescoper
ESA/Euclid/Euclid Consortium/NASA. Background galaxies: NASA, ESA, and S. Beckwith (STScI) and the HUDF Team.

Since I’ve been working today on stuff related to ESA’s Euclid mission, I thought I would post a brief update on the mission status before I go home. The official channel to which I refer you for full updates is here.

A message was sent out on Saturday to member of the Euclid Consortium indicating that the commissioning phase of the Euclid satellite was essentially completed, although with some issues still to be fixed. In particular, as has previously been reported, there is an issue with stray light in the VIS instrument, which will have to be coped with. To prevent stray sunlight getting onto VIS detectors, Euclid will be configured to operate at a range of specific angles with respect to the Sun. This means that the survey strategy will have to be adapted in order to be as optimal as possible with this new constraint.

The next phase after the commissioning phase is called performance verification, for which control switches over to the science ground segment. The operations team will then operate the spacecraft in the same way as required for the full survey in order to assess the performance of the instruments and obtain calibration data ahead of the start of the full survey.