Author
Drake, J.J.Cheimets, P.
Garraffo, C.

Wargelin, B.
Youngblood, A.
Kashyap, V.L.
Testa, P.
Caldwell, D.
Mason, J.
Fleming, B.
France, K.

Wolk, S.
Siegmund, O.
Koskinen, T.
Alvarado-Gomez, J.
Lopez-Morales, M.M.
Gronoff, G.
Bookbinder, J.
Barstow, M.
Windt, D.
Gladstone, R.
Loghry, C.
Yarbrough, R.
Affiliation
Lunar and Planetary Laboratory, University of ArizonaIssue Date
2021
Metadata
Show full item recordPublisher
SPIECitation
Drake, J. J., Cheimets, P., Garraffo, C., Wargelin, B., Youngblood, A., Kashyap, V. L., Testa, P., Caldwell, D., Mason, J., Fleming, B., France, K., Wolk, S., Siegmund, O., Koskinen, T., Alvarado-Gomez, J., Lopez-Morales, M. M., Gronoff, G., Bookbinder, J., Barstow, M., … Yarbrough, R. (2021). NExtUP: The Normal-incidence Extreme Ultraviolet Photometer. Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering.Rights
Copyright © 2021 SPIE.Collection Information
This item from the UA Faculty Publications collection is made available by the University of Arizona with support from the University of Arizona Libraries. If you have questions, please contact us at repository@u.library.arizona.edu.Abstract
The Normal-incidence Extreme Ultraviolet Photometer (NExtUP) is a smallsat mission concept designed to measure the EUV radiation conditions of exoplanet host stars, and F-M type stars in general. EUV radiation is absorbed at high altitude in a planetary atmosphere, in the exosphere and upper thermosphere, where the gas can be readily heated to escape temperatures. EUV heating and ionization are the dominant atmospheric loss drivers during most of a planets life. There are only a handful of accurately measured EUV stellar fluxes, all dating from Extreme Ultraviolet Explorer (EUVE) observations in the †90s. Consequently, current models of stellar EUV emission are uncertain by more than an order of magnitude and dominate uncertainties in planetary atmospheric loss models. NExtUP will use periodic and aperiodic multilayers on off-Axis parabolic mirrors and a prime focus microchannel plate detector to image stars in 5 bandpasses between 150 and 900°A down to flux limits two orders of magnitude lower than reached by EUVE. NExtUP may also accomplish a compelling array of secondary science goals, including using line-of-sight absorption measurements to understand the structure of the local interstellar medium, and imaging EUV emission from energetic processes on solar system objects at unprecedented spatial resolution. NExtUP is well within smallsat weight limits, requires no special orbital conditions, and would be flown on a spacecraft supplied by MOOG Industries. It draws on decades of mission heritage expertise at SAO and LASP, including similar instruments successfully launched and operated to observe the Sun. © COPYRIGHT SPIE. Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.Note
Immediate accessISSN
0277-786XISBN
9781510644809Version
Final published versionae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
10.1117/12.2594408