Soft X-Ray Telescope (SXRT)
Abstract
The soft X-ray telescope (SXRT) will provide direct images of the solar corona with spatial resolution of about 1 arcsecond. These images will show the global structure of the corona, the location and area of coronal holes, and the presence of even the smallest active regions and flares. The good spatial resolution will show the fine scale magnetic structure and changes in these phenomena. These observations are essential for monitoring, predicting, and understanding the solar magnetic cycle, coronal heating, solar flares, coronal mass ejections, and the solar wind. These observations complement those of the White Light Coronagraph and Ultra-Violet Coronal Spectrometer; the SXRT will detect active regions and coronal holes near the east limb, thereby giving a week or more of advanced warning for disturbed geomagnetic conditions at Earth. The instrument consists of a grazing incidence collecting mirror with a full disk film camera at the primary focus, and a secondary relay optic that feeds a CCD camera with a field of view about the size of an average active region.
- Publication:
-
In Alabama Univ. Coordinated Study of Solar-Terrestrial Payloads on Space Station 2 p (SEE N85-34158 23-19
- Pub Date:
- 1985
- Bibcode:
- 1985tpss.procQ....M
- Keywords:
-
- Grazing Incidence Telescopes;
- Solar Corona;
- Solar Observatories;
- Space Stations;
- Sun;
- X Ray Telescopes;
- Cameras;
- Charge Coupled Devices;
- Ejection;
- Geomagnetism;
- Mirrors;
- Solar Flares;
- Solar Magnetic Field;
- Solar Wind;
- Spatial Resolution;
- Spacecraft Instrumentation