Presentation + Paper
3 October 2024 Design of the VenSpec-H instrument on ESA’s EnVision mission: development of critical elements, highlighting the FFCP, and grating
Roderick De Cock, Séverine Robert, Eddy Neefs, Justin Erwin, Michael Vervaeke, Hugo Thienpont, Etienne Renotte, Philippe Klinkenberg, Benoit Borguet, Solal Thomas, Wouter Moelans, Aaron Algoedt, Lieve De Vos, Ramatha Sørensen, Moshe Blau, Ann Carine Vandaele, Ian R. Thomas, Sophie Berkenbosch, Lars Jacobs, Pieter Bogaert, Bram Beeckman, Ansje Brassine, Neophytos Messios, Erwin De Donder, David Bolsée, Nuno Pereira, Bojan Ristic, Paul J. Tackley, Taras Gerya, Stefan Kögl, Paola Kögl, Hans-Peter Gröbelbauer, Florian Wirz, Gerhard Stefan Székely, Nick Eaton, Elena Roibás-Millán, Ignacio Torralbo, Higinio Rubio-Arnaldo, José Miguel Álvarez, Daniel Navajas Ortega, Daphne Stam, Jose M. Castro-Marin, Jaime Jiménez Ortega, Luisa Lara, Jörn Helbert, Giulia Alemanno, Emmanuel Marcq
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
EnVision is ESA’s upcoming mission to Venus with a launch scheduled in 2031. One of the payloads on board is the VenSpec suite,1 containing three spectrometer channels, one of which is VenSpec-H. VenSpec-H (Venus Spectrometer with High resolution) performs absorption measurements in the atmosphere of Venus in four near-infrared spectral bands. VenSpec-H is developed under Belgian management and builds on heritage from instruments on Venus-Express and TGO. Techniques used in these precursor instruments are improved and complemented with new technologies to comply with the scientific goals of the EnVision mission. The operating wavelength range (1.15 - 2.5 μm) imposes stringent temperature requirements on the instrument to make nightside measurements below the Venus clouds possible. Most importantly, the spectrometer’s optical components are held in a separate cold section inside the instrument, cooled down to −45°C, to remove thermal background from the signal. To avoid heat dissipation close to the spectrometer optics, the electronic boards are kept in a separate box. Besides that, some mechanisms, placed in the warmer part of the instrument at the entrance or exit of the cold section, had to be developed: a turn window unit to protect the interior of the instrument during the aerobraking phase of the mission, a filter wheel mechanism to select the spectral bands of interest, and an integrated detector-cooler-assembly to register the spectra. Some passive optical elements in the spectrometer had low technological readiness at the start of the project. One of them is a freeform corrector plate, used to compensate for aberrations introduced in the system by a parabolic mirror. This device is developed by the Brussels Photonics lab of VUB (Brussels) using a supply chain with shape adaptive corrective polishing and dedicated metrology. Another is the echelle grating, used to disperse the incoming light into its spectral components, which is built by AMOS. Both devices are highlighted in this article.
Conference Presentation
(2024) Published by SPIE. Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Roderick De Cock, Séverine Robert, Eddy Neefs, Justin Erwin, Michael Vervaeke, Hugo Thienpont, Etienne Renotte, Philippe Klinkenberg, Benoit Borguet, Solal Thomas, Wouter Moelans, Aaron Algoedt, Lieve De Vos, Ramatha Sørensen, Moshe Blau, Ann Carine Vandaele, Ian R. Thomas, Sophie Berkenbosch, Lars Jacobs, Pieter Bogaert, Bram Beeckman, Ansje Brassine, Neophytos Messios, Erwin De Donder, David Bolsée, Nuno Pereira, Bojan Ristic, Paul J. Tackley, Taras Gerya, Stefan Kögl, Paola Kögl, Hans-Peter Gröbelbauer, Florian Wirz, Gerhard Stefan Székely, Nick Eaton, Elena Roibás-Millán, Ignacio Torralbo, Higinio Rubio-Arnaldo, José Miguel Álvarez, Daniel Navajas Ortega, Daphne Stam, Jose M. Castro-Marin, Jaime Jiménez Ortega, Luisa Lara, Jörn Helbert, Giulia Alemanno, and Emmanuel Marcq "Design of the VenSpec-H instrument on ESA’s EnVision mission: development of critical elements, highlighting the FFCP, and grating", Proc. SPIE 13144, Infrared Remote Sensing and Instrumentation XXXII, 131440E (3 October 2024); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.3027637
Advertisement
Advertisement
RIGHTS & PERMISSIONS
Get copyright permission  Get copyright permission on Copyright Marketplace
KEYWORDS
Equipment

Sensors

Spectroscopy

Optical filters

Optical gratings

Optical surfaces

Windows

Back to Top