Aspera is a NASA Astrophysics Pioneers SmallSat mission designed to study diffuse Ovi emission from the warm-hot phase gas in the halos of nearby galaxies. Its payload consists of two identical Rowland Circle-type long-slit spectrographs, sharing a single MicroChannel plate detector. Each spectrograph channel consists of an off-axis parabola primary mirror and a toroidal diffraction grating optimized for the 1013-1057 Å bandpass. Despite the simple configuration, the optical alignment/integration process for Aspera is challenging due to tight optical alignment tolerances, driven by the compact form factor, and the contamination sensitivity of the Far-Ultraviolet optics and detectors. In this paper, we discuss implementing a novel multi-phase approach to meet these requirements using state-of-the-art optical metrology tools. For coarsely positioning the optics we use a blue-laser 3D scanner while the fine alignment is done with a Zygo interferometer and a custom computer-generated hologram. The detector focus requires iterative in-vacuum alignment using a Vacuum UV collimator. The alignment is done in a controlled cleanroom facility at the University of Arizona.
Aspera is a NASA-funded UV SmallSat Mission in development with a projected launch in 2025. The goal of the mission is to detect and map warm-hot gas in the circumgalactic medium of nearby galaxies traced by the Ovi emission line at 103.2 nm. To that goal, Aspera will conduct long-exposure observations at one or more spatial fields around each target galaxy, employing two long-slit spectrographs. Spectra from both channels are focused on a single micro-channel plate detector. In preparation of the mission’s launch, we are developing a data reduction pipeline, the goal of which is to reconstruct a calibrated 3D IFU-like data cube by combining the photon event lists obtained during each observation for a given target galaxy. In this proceedings paper, we present an outline for the data reduction pipeline and describe the data flow through the processing of science observations. We will further discuss individual steps to be applied to the data during the processing and show how our final data cubes shall be reconstructed. Finally, we will present our planned data products and discuss how simulations of the Aspera data cubes are being used to develop the pipeline.
Aspera is the UV small-satellite mission to detect and map the warm-hot phase gas in nearby galaxy halo. Aspera was chosen as one of NASA's Astrophysics Pioneers missions in 2021 and employs a FUV long-slit spectrograph payload, optimized for low-surface brightness O VI emission line detection at 103-104 nm. The mission incorporates state-of-the-art UV technologies such as high-efficiency micro-channel plates and enhanced LiF coating to achieve a high level of diffuse-source sensitivity of the payload, down to 5.0E-19 erg/s/cm^2/arcsec^2. The combination of the high sensitivity and a 1-degree by 30-arcsecond long-slit field of view enables efficient 2D mapping of diffuse halo gas through step and stare concept observation. Aspera is presently in the critical design phase, with an expected launch date in mid-2025. This work provides a current overview of the Aspera payload design.
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