TY  - JOUR
AU  - Kaufmann, Martin
AU  - Olschewski, Friedhelm
AU  - Mantel, Klaus
AU  - Solheim, Brian
AU  - Shepherd, Gordon
AU  - Deiml, Michael
AU  - Liu, Jilin
AU  - Song, Rui
AU  - Chen, Qiuyu
AU  - Wroblowski, Oliver
AU  - Wei, Daikang
AU  - Zhu, Yajun
AU  - Wagner, Friedrich
AU  - Loosen, Florian
AU  - Fröhlich, Denis
AU  - Neubert, Tom
AU  - Rongen, Heinz
AU  - Knieling, Peter
AU  - Toumpas, Panos
AU  - Shan, Jinjun
AU  - Tang, Geshi
AU  - Koppmann, Ralf
AU  - Riese, Martin
TI  - A highly miniaturized satellite payload based on a spatial heterodyne spectrometer for atmospheric temperature measurements in the mesosphere and lower thermosphere
JO  - Atmospheric measurement techniques
VL  - 11
IS  - 7
SN  - 1867-8548
CY  - Katlenburg-Lindau
PB  - Copernicus
M1  - FZJ-2018-05791
SP  - 3861 - 3870
PY  - 2018
AB  - A highly miniaturized limb sounder for the observation of the O2 A-band to derive temperatures in the mesosphere and lower thermosphere is presented. The instrument consists of a monolithic spatial heterodyne spectrometer (SHS), which is able to resolve the rotational structure of the R-branch of that band. The relative intensities of the emission lines follow a Boltzmann distribution and the ratio of the lines can be used to derive the kinetic temperature. The SHS operates at a Littrow wavelength of 761.8nm and heterodynes a wavelength regime between 761.9 and 765.3nm with a resolving power of about 8000 considering apodization effects. The size of the SHS is 38 × 38 × 27mm3 and its acceptance angle is ±5°. It has an etendue of 0.01cm2sr. Complemented by front optics with an acceptance angle of ±0.65° and detector optics, the entire optical system fits into a volume of about 1.5L. This allows us to fly this instrument on a 3- or 6-unit CubeSat. The vertical field of view of the instrument is about 60km at the Earth's limb when operated in a typical low Earth orbit. Integration times to obtain an entire altitude profile of nighttime temperatures are on the order of 1min for a vertical resolution of 1.5km and a random noise level of about 1.5K. Daytime integration times are 1 order of magnitude shorter. This work presents the design parameters of the optics and a radiometric assessment of the instrument. Furthermore, it gives an overview of the required characterization and calibration steps. This includes the characterization of image distortions in the different parts of the optics, visibility, and phase determination as well as flat fielding.
LB  - PUB:(DE-HGF)16
UR  - <Go to ISI:>//WOS:000437054400001
DO  - DOI:10.5194/amt-11-3861-2018
UR  - https://juser.fz-juelich.de/record/856155
ER  -