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  • 1
    Publication Date: 2004-12-03
    Description: The airborne infrared echelle spectrometer (AIRES) was proposed as a facility instrument for the stratospheric observatory for infrared astronomy (SOFIA) project. The preliminary AIRES design uses multiple two dimensional detector arrays and a 1.2 m long, 76 deg blaze angle echelle to combine high spectral resolution with diffraction limited imaging in the cross-dispersion direction. A preliminary optical design and the mechanical architecture are presented together with the analysis and prototyping of lightweight aluminum echelles. Instrument efficiencies are calculated and compared for different gratings, and the associated mechanical design tradeoffs are discussed.
    Keywords: Spacecraft Instrumentation
    Type: ; 57-60
    Format: text
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  • 2
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    In:  Other Sources
    Publication Date: 2019-07-18
    Description: This paper describes a numerical study of diffraction effects in the AIRES optical system using GLAD by Applied Optics Research. AIRES (or Airborne Infrared Echelle Spectrometer) employs two gratings in series. The small, first-order (i.e., predisperser) grating sorts orders for the large, high-order echelle grating, thus providing moderately high spectral resolution over 3.6 octaves in wavelength. The AIRES' optical design includes three field stops (i.e., a circular aperture and two long, narrow slits) and four pupil stops. A detailed diffraction analysis is required to evaluate critical trade-offs between spectral resolution, optical throughput, detector background, scattered light, and system size and weight. Such an analysis must consider diffraction effects at the pupil stops (edge diffraction), at the field stops (spatial filtering), and at intermediate positions where other optical elements are located. The effects of slit width, slit length, oversizing of the second slit relative to the first, baffling at the Lyot stop and subsequent pupil stops, and the necessity for oversizing other optical elements are presented and discussed. It is found that for narrow slits, the downstream energy distribution is significantly broadened relative to that for large slits, where telescope diffraction dominates, leading to significantly more light loss than anticipated, unless other key optical elements are oversized. The importance of performing a proper diffraction analysis is emphasized and the suitability of GLAD for this task is discussed.
    Keywords: Optics
    Type: SPIE Conference on Astronomical Telescopes and Instrumentaiton; Aug 22, 2002 - Aug 28, 2002; HI; United States
    Format: text
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