Paper
17 September 2009 Gaia: operational aspects and tests of Gaia Flight Model CCDs
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
ESA's cornerstone mission Gaia is planning to map 1% of the stellar population of our galaxy, around one thousand million objects, to micro-arcsecond accuracy. In addition to high precision astrometric information, prism dispersion optics will be used to provide multi-band photometry and a spectroscopic instrument provides information for deriving radial velocities. Gaia's focal plane will be the largest ever flown to space comprising an almost Giga-pixel mosaic of 106 specially designed CCDs, the e2v technologies CCD91-72, operated synchronously in TDI mode. This paper will address some operational aspects of these detectors in the Gaia focal plane array and report on recent test results with respect to calibration needs.
© (2009) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
R. Kohley, F. Raison, and J. M. Martin-Fleitas "Gaia: operational aspects and tests of Gaia Flight Model CCDs", Proc. SPIE 7439, Astronomical and Space Optical Systems, 74390F (17 September 2009); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.825617
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Cited by 11 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Sensors

Charge-coupled devices

Stars

Calibration

Photometry

Telescopes

Silicon

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