ASC Calibration Plans
by Christine Jones
The frontier astrophysics which the AXAF-I and AXAF-S
missions will accomplish requires that the telescopes,
science instruments, and other spacecraft systems (such as
the aspect star cameras) be fully calibrated on the ground
and in orbit. The ASC is responsible for collecting and
archiving the calibration data, coordinating the analysis of
the data, archiving the results of the analysis, and making
the data and the analysis results available to AXAF users.
For the science instruments and the telescope, the
calibration activities are conducted in three sequential
stages:
- Subassembly Calibration:
This stage involves the separate calibration of the science
instruments and the telescope. Laboratory calibration of
each Science Instrument (SI) is conducted by the instrument
team as part of the SI development activities, under
Marshall Space Flight Center (MSFC) cognizance. The
calibrations include determinations of the detectors'
quantum efficiencies, spatial uniformity, and count-rate
linearity. The periods of the Low-Energy and High-Energy
Transmission Gratings will also be measured. The SI teams
are working with the AXAF Calibration Task Team (which is
chaired by the NASA AXAF Project Scientist, Martin
Weisskopf, and includes members from the MSFC AXAF Project,
the SAO Mission Support Team, the SI teams, TRW, and the
ASC) to formulate laboratory calibration plans for AXAF-I and -S.
The ASC will collect and archive the laboratory
data, together with algorithms and software for their
analysis, and will evaluate the calibration results. We
expect most of the laboratory test data on the AXAF-I flight
instruments will be obtained in 1995, but with significant
amounts of data available in 1994.
As part of the telescope calibration, the SAO AXAF Mission
Support Team is conducting a program of synchrotron
measurements to determine the reflectivity function of the
AXAF-I mirror coating, while Hughes Danbury Optical Systems
(HDOS) is characterizing the properties of the mirror
surface. Kodak will measure the alignment of the mirror
pairs. The ASC will archive these telescope calibration
data and the analysis results. We will begin collecting the
synchrotron measurements and the HDOS metrology in 1994.
- Calibration at the X-ray Calibration Facility:
The SIs and the telescope for AXAF-I will undergo
calibration at the MSFC X-ray Calibration Facility (XRCF).
This calibration is currently scheduled from October 1996 to
May 1997. At the XRCF, X-rays from a particular target
(e.g., aluminum), located 1700 feet from the telescope, are
focussed by the telescope onto a detector. The XRCF
calibration will determine the effective area of the
telescope/detector combination, the instrument scale, the
spectral resolution, and the point response function as a
function of energy and angle from the telescope axis. The
ASC will receive and archive these calibration data and the
analysis results, and make them accessible to users;
included in the results are models which will be used in the
ASC-developed software to assist users in planning proposals
and analyzing data from observations. The mirror assembly
and X-ray Spectrometer (XRS) for AXAF-S
will undergo an
integrated ground calibration to measure the instrument
alignment, the point response function, and the effective
area.
- On-orbit Calibration:
The ASC performs the initial and on-going on-orbit
calibrations. The on-orbit calibrations will involve
observations of celestial sources and the bright earth, as
well as observations where the instrument is not at the
telescope focus, in order to measure instrument backgrounds
and characteristics.
Our current work is concentrating on planning for the AXAF-I
calibration; a MSFC document which details the scientific
requirements for this calibration is in the final stages of
preparation.
eshepard@asc.harvard.edu