Paper
1 February 1985 Implications Of Orbital Inclination For Sirtf Design And Operations
Harold J. Reitsema, R. A. Woodruff, R. L. Poley, A. R. Urbach
Author Affiliations +
Abstract
SIRTF is a planned cryogenically-cooled earth orbiting telescope mission for infrared astronomy. The selection of orbital inclination for the long-life SIRTF mission will have significant impacts for both telescope design and mission operations because the orientation of the inclined orbit plane slowly changes, affecting the relative positions of the earth, sun and SIRTF and influencing aperture sunshade design, cryogen consumption and telescope pointing constraints. These considerations provide useful insight for mission planning and orbit selection.
© (1985) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
Harold J. Reitsema, R. A. Woodruff, R. L. Poley, and A. R. Urbach "Implications Of Orbital Inclination For Sirtf Design And Operations", Proc. SPIE 0509, Cryogenic Optical Systems and Instruments I, (1 February 1985); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.944974
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Cited by 2 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Sun

Telescopes

Space telescopes

Cryogenics

Optical instrument design

Space operations

Optical cryogenics

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