Bright Earth Occultation Test for the ACA, 2002-August-20

On 2002-August-20, a test was performed to occult the ACA field of view with the bright Earth, near orbital perigee. This test was performed to measure the minimum angle between the Earth limb and the ACA line of sight, above which the ACA can be used for normal pointing control on Chandra. The objective of the test is to re-define the Observatory constraint which states that the ACA cannot be used within 20 degrees of the Bright Earth limb.

Test Description

Chandra was maneuvered to an attitude through which the Earth would transit. Before the Earth transit, Chandra was put into Normal Maneuver Mode, and returned to Normal Point Mode after the test. During the transit the ACA tracked 4 monitor windows (one in each CCD quadrant), and 2 stars (in separate quadrants). 4 faint stars (magnitude 10.5 to 11.6) were chosen for the test, but the ACA was able to find only 2 of the 4 stars. The ACA lost track of the stars before the geometric limb transit, but the monitor windows continued to function through the test, although their output was saturated by Earthlight for much of the test.

The test time period only covered the entry transit onto the bright Earth limb.

Test details

Date: 20 August 2002
Obsid: 61077
Attitude (J2000): RA = 353.0 deg, Dec = -41.0 deg, Roll = 42.129485 deg
Test start (UTC): 2002:232:17:40:00
Test end   (UTC): 2002:214:18:16:00
Chandra geocentric altitude: 44800 km (start), 48900 km (end)
Earth angular radius: 8.2 deg (start), 7.5 deg (end)

ACA Images

---------------------------------------------------------------------------
 SLOT        ID   TYPE  SIZE    RA            DEC       MAG    YANG   ZANG
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
  0  1050674328   STAR  8x8 353.295799  -40.464566    10.49  1893.0   885.1 
  1  1050674136   STAR  8x8 352.055062  -40.797224    11.01 -1429.5  2258.6 <- not found by ACA
  2  1050678272   STAR  8x8 353.225869  -41.563353    11.03  -909.8 -1912.8 
  3  1050808072   STAR  8x8 353.668478  -41.239263    11.61   759.6 -1857.9 <- not found by ACA
  4        ---    MON   8x8   2100.00a    2100.00a     ---   2100.0  2100.0 
  5        ---    MON   8x8  -1000.00a    1000.00a     ---  -1000.0  1000.0
  6        ---    MON   8x8    250.00a    -250.00a     ---    250.0  -250.0 
  7        ---    MON   8x8  -1500.00a    -300.00a     ---  -1500.0  -300.0 

Analysis Assumptions

Earth Radius = 6371 km.
No velocity aberration.
No gyro drift during Maneuver Mode.

Monitor Window Analysis Results

The figure below shows the change in the median background level seen in each of the 4 monitor windows, as a function of angular distance from the bright Earth limb to center of the ACA field of view.

To compare the ACA performance for entry onto the bright Earth limb and exit from the bright Earth limb, the results from 3 separate tests are plotted.

For the most recent test, the entry into the earth limb shows the usual rapid rise in background level at an Earth limb angle of about 4.5 degrees. This angle is about 1 degree smaller than the data for the bright limb exit tests. One possible explanation is that the ACA takes longer to recover from saturation effects at exit from the bright Earth, compared to the onset of saturation effects at the approach to the bright Earth. Another possible explanation is the smaller angular size of the Earth for the obsid 61077 test. The proper motion of the Earth for the 61077 test is about 0.18 degrees/minute while the proper motion of the Earth for the other 2 tests is about 0.6 degrees/minute.

The overlaid red plot shows the point source transmission of the ACA and its stray light shade (SLS), as a function of angle from the ACA boresight, added in quadrature to a steady CCD dark current of 12 electrons/second/pixel. The point source transmission function has been arbitrarily scaled to match the occultation exit light curves at an angle of 4 to 5 degrees. The point source transmission data are from a Ball Aerospace model, and were obtained from the Ball System Engineering Report: S95.2879.OPT.223 "Stray Light Performance of Aspect Camera with SLS", J.C. Fleming, 3-Feb-1995.

In each test, it can be seen that the median signal per pixel at an Earth limb angle of 10 degrees is less than 20 DN/integration (60 e/second), about 2x or 3x higher than the intrinsic dark current. The instrinsic dark current from the ACA CCD dominates any Earthlight contribution at large angles above 15 degrees, and the stray light from the extended bright Earth dominates at intermediate angles.

The Individual ACA Image Slot Analysis provides details of the tracking and centroiding performance of the ACA for the faint stars, plus the time histories of the global and individual image status flags.

Conclusions

The results of this test and previous tests indicates that the ACA can successfully track faint stars to within 10 degrees of the bright Earth limb, with no perturbation of the ACA performance until limb angles of about 7 degrees.

Thus the CARD constraint on ACA operation near the bright Earth could be reduced from 20 degrees to 10 degrees.


Rob Cameron

Last modified: 2002-August-30