Monday Plenary:
Don't miss it
>
16 - 21 June 2024
Yokohama, Japan
Conference 13093 > Paper 13093-20
Paper 13093-20

Investigation of the energetic and radiative transfer properties of exospheric hydrogen with the hydrogen emission line interferometric eXplorer (HELIX)

16 June 2024 • 16:40 - 17:00 Japan Standard Time | Room G414/415, North - 4F

Abstract

The Hydrogen Emission Line Interferometric eXplorer (HELIX) is a SmallSat mission concept to study the vertical distribution and transport flux of geocoronal hydrogen that is transitioning from Earth’s upper atmosphere into the exosphere. This investigation is conducted using a dual channel, all-reflective Spatial Heterodyne Spectrometer (SHS). A SHS is a type of Fourier Transform Spectrometer that divides incoming light into 2-beams with a diffraction grating that interfere to produce a linear fringe pattern from which spectral power is obtained. The HELIX SHS has a dual ruled grating that is can be simultaneously aligned to observe the Ly-alpha and Ly-beta transitions of hydrogen. It has a spectral resolving power of ~200000 that separates the geocoronal lines from contaminating background emissions and allows exploration of the thermal and non-thermal populations of hydrogen. HELIX is designed for incorporation into a high-heritage SmallSat spacecraft platform that would be launched into low Earth orbit for a 12 month mission. This presentation describes the SHS concept, the mission requirements for HELIX, and the expected on-orbit performance of the instrument.

Presenter

The Univ. of Arizona (United States)
Dr. Harris is a professor of in the Lunar and Planetary Laboratory of the University of Arizona. He has over 30 years of experience in the construction and flight of UV-Visible instrumentation for the study of planetary atmospheres, comets, and the interplanetary medium. His primary research emphasis is the high-resolving power/etendue spatial heterodyne spectrometers.
Presenter/Author
The Univ. of Arizona (United States)
Author
Jason B. Corliss
The Univ. of Arizona (United States)
Author
Embry-Riddle Aeronautical Univ. (United States)
Author
Univ. of Colorado Boulder (United States)
Author
NASA Goddard Space Flight Ctr. (United States)