Hostname: page-component-78c5997874-ndw9j Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-19T03:59:51.571Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

HUBE: The Hopkins Ultraviolet Background Experiment

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 February 2017

Randy A. Kimble
Affiliation:
1Center for Astrophysical Sciences The Johns Hopkins University Baltimore, MD 21218 USA
Richard C. Henry
Affiliation:
1Center for Astrophysical Sciences The Johns Hopkins University Baltimore, MD 21218 USA
Francesco Paresce
Affiliation:
1Center for Astrophysical Sciences The Johns Hopkins University Baltimore, MD 21218 USA 2Space Telescope Science Institute The Johns Hopkins University Baltimore, MD 21218 USA

Abstract

Core share and HTML view are not available for this content. However, as you have access to this content, a full PDF is available via the ‘Save PDF’ action button.

The far-ultraviolet wavelength region between 1216 and ~2000 Å offers unusually favorable conditions for observing a variety of known or predicted diffuse emissions of both interstellar and extragalactic origin. We describe here a proposed instrument for studying those emissions, the Hopkins Ultraviolet Background Experiment (HUBE). HUBE consists of two compact, fast components: a broadband camera (1350-2000 Å) with 2′ resolution and an imaging spectrograph (1230-1800 Å) with 5 Å resolution. These complementary components will be utilized for both a sky survey and for sensitive deep pointings. As either a free-flying Scout-class satellite or as an attached payload on the Space Station, HUBE will make possible an investigation of unprecedented scope into the sources of the far ultraviolet background.

Type
V. Future Plans and Approaches
Copyright
Copyright © Kluwer 1990 

References

REFERENCES

Bowyer, S. 1989, in Proc. IAU 139, Galactic and Extragalactic Background Radiation, ed. Bowyer, S. and Leinert, Ch., Dordrecht, Kluwer Academic Publishers.Google Scholar
Jakobsen, P. 1982, Astr. Ap., 106, 375.Google Scholar
Jakobsen, P., and Paresce, F. 1981, Astr. Ap., 96, 23.Google Scholar
Martin, C., and Bowyer, S. 1989a, Ap. J., 338, 677.Google Scholar
Martin, C., and Bowyer, S. 1989b, Ap. J., in press.Google Scholar
Martin, C., Hurwitz, M., and Bowyer, S. 1989, in Proc. IAU 139, Galactic and Extragalactic Background Radiation, ed. Bowyer, S. and Leinert, Ch., Dordrecht, Kluwer Academic Publishers.Google Scholar
Martin, C., Jelinsky, P., Lampton, M., Malina, R. F., and Anger, H. 1981, Rev. Sci. Instrum., 52, 1067.Google Scholar
Murthy, J., Henry, R. C., Feldman, P. D., and Tennyson, P. D. 1989, Ap. J., 336, 954.Google Scholar
Paresce, F. 1989, in Proc. IAU 139, Galactic and Extragalactic Background Radiation, ed. Bowyer, S. and Leinert, Ch., Dordrecht, Kluwer Academic Publishers.Google Scholar
Paresce, F., Monsignori Fossi, B. C., and Landini, M. 1983, Ap. J. (Letters), 266, L107.Google Scholar
Siegmund, O. H. W., Lampton, M., Bixler, J., Chakrabarti, S., Vallerga, J., Bowyer, S., and Malina, R. F. 1986, J. Opt. Soc. Am. A, 3, 2139.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Witt, A. N., Stecher, T. P., Boroson, T. A., and Bohlin, R. C. 1989, Ap. J. (Letters), 336, L21.Google Scholar