Rosetta is one of the cornerstone missions of the European Space Agency for having a rendezvous with the comet 67P/Churyumov-Gerasimenko in 2014. The imaging instrument on board the satellite is OSIRIS (Optical, Spectroscopic and Infrared Remote Imaging System), a cooperation among several European institutes, which consists of two cameras: a Narrow (NAC) and a Wide Angle Camera (WAC).
The WAC optical design is an innovative one: it adopts an all reflecting, unvignetted and unobstructed two mirror configuration which allows to cover a 12° × 12° field of view with an F/5.6 aperture and gives a nominal contrast ratio of about 10–4.
The flight model of this camera has been successfully integrated and tested in our laboratories, and finally has been integrated on the satellite which is now waiting to be launched in February 2004.
In this paper we are going to describe the optical characteristics of the camera, and to summarize the results so far obtained with the preliminary calibration data. The analysis of the optical performance of this model shows a good agreement between theoretical performance and experimental results.
The WAC is a telescope developed by University of Padova for the OSIRIS experiment, mainly composed by two instruments, Narrow Angle Camera and Wide Angle Camera, and the related electronics. The payload will fly on board of the Rosetta ESA scientific mission, that will be flown to encounter Comet Wirtanen after about 10 years of flight in 2013. WAC main scientific objectives are to follow structure evolution in the coma and monitor their dynamics. To fulfill scientific requirements, the optical characteristics of the WAC telescope may be summarized as follows: wide field of view of 12° X 12°, focal length of 140 mm, operate in the wave-length range 240-1000nm after 10 years in space, Encircled Energy greater than 70% over the entire FoV, contrast ratio of 10-4 to detect coma activities against a bright nucleus, minimum exposure time of 10 msec with a repeatability better than 1/500, scattered light rejection for sources inside and outside FoV. This paper deals with the design optimization of critical parts and acceptance test campaign performed to validate the thermo-structural behavior of the WAC. The functional and performance tests carried out at experiment and system level demonstrated the overall capability of the telescope to satisfy the system and scientific requirements.
Rosetta is the cornerstone mission of ESA devoted to the study of minor bodies of Solar System. The mission will be launched on January 2003 and has the rendez-vous with P/Wirtanen comet (on November 2011) as primary target. The final aim of the mission will be a better understanding of the formation and composition of early Solar System and of its evolution over the last 4.5 billion years. Rosetta has a complex instrumentation devoted both to remote sensing and to in situ investigation. The authors were involved in the design and manufacturing of the Wide Angle Camera (WAC) of the OSIRIS imaging system. The WAC has a very peculiar optical system based on two aspherical mirrors in an off axis configuration, and will be principally devoted to the study of the very faint gas and dust cometary features. To reach this goal an innovative baffling system was designed and constructed in order to reach the stray-light suppression requirements both for source inside and outside the field of view of the camera. In particular a contrast ratio of 10-4 inside the field of view is needed in order to detect gaseous and dusty features close to the nucleus of the comet. In this paper the process of baffling design and manufacturing is described: the behavior of the baffle, previously calculated by numerical simulations from the mechanical and optical points of view, was assessed both for the single elements and for the complete assembly as described in this paper.
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