ﻻ يوجد ملخص باللغة العربية
The Colorado Ultraviolet Transit Experiment (CUTE) is a near-UV (2550 - 3300 Angstrom) 6U cubesat mission designed to monitor transiting hot Jupiters to quantify their atmospheric mass loss and magnetic fields. CUTE will probe both atomic (Mg and Fe) and molecular (OH) lines for evidence of enhanced transit absorption, and to search for evidence of early ingress due to bow shocks ahead of the planets orbital motion. As a dedicated mission, CUTE will observe more than 100 spectroscopic transits of hot Jupiters over a nominal seven month mission. This represents the equivalent of more than 700 orbits of the only other instrument capable of these measurements, the Hubble Space Telescope. CUTE efficiently utilizes the available cubesat volume by means of an innovative optical design to achieve a projected effective area of 28 sq. cm, low instrumental background, and a spectral resolving power of 3000 over the primary science bandpass. These performance characteristics enable CUTE to discern transit depths between 0.1 - 1% in individual spectral absorption lines. We present the CUTE optical and mechanical design, a summary of the science motivation and expected results, and an overview of the projected fabrication, calibration and launch timeline.
HaloSat is a small satellite (CubeSat) designed to map soft X-ray oxygen line emission across the sky in order to constrain the mass and spatial distribution of hot gas in the Milky Way. The goal of HaloSat is to help determine if hot gas gravitation
With the advent of the nanosat/cubesat revolution, new opportunities have appeared to develop and launch small ($sim$ts 1000 cm$^3$), low-cost ($sim$ts US$ 1M) experiments in space in very short timeframes ($sim$ 2ts years). In the field of high-ener
Aims. We describe the design and first light observations from the $beta$ Pictoris b Ring (bRing) project. The primary goal is to detect photometric variability from the young star $beta$ Pictoris due to circumplanetary material surrounding the direc
Gamma-Ray Integrated Detectors (GRID) mission is a student project designed to use multiple gamma-ray detectors carried by nanosatellites (CubeSats), forming a full-time all-sky gamma-ray detection network that monitors the transient gamma-ray sky in
The Star-Planet Activity Research CubeSat (SPARCS) is a NASA-funded astrophysics mission, devoted to the study of the ultraviolet (UV) time-domain behavior in low-mass stars. Given their abundance and size, low-mass stars are important targets in the