Bibcode
del Burgo, C.; Allende Prieto, C.; Peacocke, T.
Referencia bibliográfica
Journal of Instrumentation, Volume 01, Issue 01, pp. 01006 (2010).
Fecha de publicación:
1
2010
Número de citas
7
Número de citas referidas
3
Descripción
The Planet Hunting and Asteroseismology Explorer Spectrophotometer,
PHASES, is a concept for a space-borne instrument to obtain flux
calibrated spectra and measure micro-magnitude photometric variations of
nearby stars. The science drivers are the determination of the physical
properties of stars and the characterisation of planets orbiting them,
to very high precision. PHASES, intended to be housed in a
micro-satellite, consists of a 20 cm aperture modified Baker telescope
feeding two detectors: the tracking detector, with a field of 1 degree
square, and the science detector for performing spectrophotometry. The
optical design has been developed with the primary goal of avoiding
stray light on the science detector, while providing spectra in the
wavelength range 370-960 nm with a resolving power that ranges from ~
900 at 370 nm to ~ 200 at 960 nm. The signal to noise per resolution
element obtained for a V = 10 magnitude star in a 1 minute integration
varies between ~ 35 and 140. An analysis of the light curve constrains
the radii of the planets relative to their parent stars' radii, which
are, in turn, tightly constrained by the combination of absolute
spectrophotometry and trigonometric parallaxes. The provisional optical
design satisfies all the scientific requirements, including a ~ 1% rms
flux calibration strategy based on observations of bright A-type stars
and model atmospheres, allowing the determination of stellar angular
diameters for nearby solar-like stars to 0.5%. This level of accuracy
will be propagated to the stellar radii for the nearest stars, with
highly reliable Hipparcos parallaxes, and more significantly, to the
planetary radii.