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UV STIG Seminar

UV Science and Technology Interest Group : Quorum for Ultraviolet Exploration of Science and Technology (QUEST) Seminar 12

DATE

Apr 26, 2024

TIME

2:00 pm EST

COMMUNITY

DGCE SIG

TYPE

Seminar

QUEST Seminar 12

The Smallsat Technology Accelerated Maturation Platform (STAMP): Advancing Ultraviolet Science, Workforce, and Technology for the Habitable Worlds Observatory

Kevin France (CU)

NASA’s Great Observatories Maturation Program (GOMAP) will advance the science definition, technology, and workforce needed for the Habitable Worlds Observatory (HWO) with the goal of a Phase A start by the end of the current decade. GOMAP offers long-term cost and schedule savings compared to the ‘TRL 6 by Preliminary Design Review’ paradigm historically adopted by large NASA missions. Many of the key technologies in the development queue for HWO require the combined activities of 1) facility and process development for validation of technologies at the scale required for HWO and 2) deployment in the ‘real world’ environments of mission Integration & Test and long duration on-orbit operations. In this talk, I will present a concept for the Smallsat Technology Accelerated Maturation Platform (STAMP), an integrated facility, laboratory, and instrument prototype development program that can be applied to any of NASA’s Future Great Observatories.

In this presentation, I will provide a background to the status and technology maturation needs for a UV instrument on HWO and describe of how the STAMP concept could be applied to advance new broadband optical coatings, high-sensitivity ultraviolet detector systems, and multi-object target selection technology to TRL 6 with a flight demonstration mission. I will present an outline of an ESPA Grande-class mission that could incorporate these critical path HWO technologies on an accelerated timescale, building on current ROSES SAT+APRA programs, to reduce cost and schedule risk for HWO while conducting a compelling program of preparatory science and workforce development with direct benefits for HWO mission implementation in the 2030s.

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An illustration of Sun-like star HD 181327 and its surrounding debris disk. The star is at top right. It is surrounded by a far larger debris disk that forms an incomplete ellpitical path and is cut off at right. There’s a huge cavity between the star and the disk. The debris disk is shown in shades of light gray. Toward the top and left, there are finer, more discrete points in a range of sizes. The disk appears hazier and smokier at the bottom. The star is bright white at center, with a hazy blue region around it. The background of space is black. The label Artist's Concept appears at lower left.