Paper
18 December 2000 In-flight performance of the Very high Angular resolution ULtraviolet Telescope sounding rocket payload
Clarence M. Korendyke, A. Vourlidas, John W. Cook, Kenneth P. Dere, R. Feldman, Russell A. Howard, D. N. Lilley, Jeff S. Morrill, J. Daniel Moses, Norman E. Moulton, Robert W. Moye II, D. E. Roberts, E. L. Shepler, J. K. Smith, Dennis George Socker, T. R. Spears, R. S. Waymire, Wayne E. Brown, Theodore D. Tarbell, Tom Berger, Brian N. Handy
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
The Very high Angular Resolution ULtraviolet Telescope experiment was successfully launched on May 7, 1999 on a Black Brant sounding rocket vehicle from White Sands Missile Range. The instrument consists of a 30 cm UV diffraction limited telescope followed by a double grating spectroheliograph tuned to isolate the solar Lyman (alpha) emission line. During the flight, the instrument successfully obtained a series of images of the upper chromosphere with a limiting resolution of approximately 0.33 arc-seconds. The resulting observations are the highest resolution images of the solar atmosphere obtained from space to date. The flight demonstrated that subarc-second ultraviolet images of the solar atmosphere are achievable with a high quality, moderate aperture space telescope and associated optics. Herein, we describe the payload and its in- flight performance.
© (2000) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Clarence M. Korendyke, A. Vourlidas, John W. Cook, Kenneth P. Dere, R. Feldman, Russell A. Howard, D. N. Lilley, Jeff S. Morrill, J. Daniel Moses, Norman E. Moulton, Robert W. Moye II, D. E. Roberts, E. L. Shepler, J. K. Smith, Dennis George Socker, T. R. Spears, R. S. Waymire, Wayne E. Brown, Theodore D. Tarbell, Tom Berger, and Brian N. Handy "In-flight performance of the Very high Angular resolution ULtraviolet Telescope sounding rocket payload", Proc. SPIE 4139, Instrumentation for UV/EUV Astronomy and Solar Missions, (18 December 2000); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.410533
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KEYWORDS
Space telescopes

Telescopes

Spatial resolution

Rockets

Ultraviolet telescopes

Solar processes

Ultraviolet radiation

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