Osmium coated diffraction grating in the Space Shuttle environment - Performance
Abstract
Samples coated with osmium were flown on the early Shuttle test flights, and on the return of these samples, the osmium coating was found to have disappeared, evidently due to the oxidation of the material in the atomic oxygen atmosphere. An instrument flown on the Spacelab 1 mission comprised an array of five spectrometers covering the extreme ultraviolet (EUV) to near-IR wavelengths. The EUV spectrometer contained an osmium-coated reflective grating located fairly deep within the instruments. Here, results of an assessment of the reflectivity and stability of the osmium surface over the course of the ten-day mission are reported. It is concluded that the osmium reflective coating remained stable relative to the spectrometer coated with MgF2 over the course of the mission. In addition, the ratio of sensitivity of these two spectrometers did not change in any major way from the time of the laboratory calibration until the time of flight two years later. Any changes are within the 50-percent calibration uncertainty.
- Publication:
-
Applied Optics
- Pub Date:
- September 1985
- DOI:
- Bibcode:
- 1985ApOpt..24.2959T
- Keywords:
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- Astronomical Spectroscopy;
- Gratings (Spectra);
- Metal Coatings;
- Osmium;
- Spacelab Payloads;
- Ultraviolet Spectrometers;
- Efficiency;
- Extreme Ultraviolet Radiation;
- Oxidation;
- Optics