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TIPS / COS Update The NUV Gratings 18 October 2007

SPACE TELESCOPE SCIENCE INSTITUTE. Operated for NASA by AURA. TIPS / COS Update The NUV Gratings 18 October 2007. Last COS TIPS presentation: 21 December 2006. NUV grating characteristics. COS NUV grating blanks coated with Au and Cr

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TIPS / COS Update The NUV Gratings 18 October 2007

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  1. SPACE TELESCOPE SCIENCE INSTITUTE Operated for NASA by AURA TIPS / COS UpdateThe NUV Gratings18 October 2007 Last COS TIPS presentation: 21 December 2006

  2. NUV grating characteristics • COS NUV grating blanks coated with Au and Cr • Original COS NUV gratings (G185M, G225M, G285M, and G230L) also were MgF2 coated over Al to protect reflective surface • Routine design process shifts Wood’s anomaly out of spectral region of interest to shorter wavelengths • Anomalous distribution of energy in diffracted light; highly polarization dependent; sensitive to groove spacing and depth comparable to wavelength diffracted • this is a resonance effect – it will not show up in bulk reflectivities, such as from flat-mirror witness samples, but as a complicated wavelength and polarization-dependent grating efficiency modulation. Keyes – 18 October 2007 Slide 2 of 19

  3. NUV Gratings • For COS NUV gratings the addition of the last layer of coating (MgF2) apparently shifts Wood’s anomaly directly into bandpass of interest decreasing throughput substantially • Solution 1: use MgF2-coated “longer-wavelength” grating in shorter wavelength region where throughput is nominal • Consequence: resolution degraded as Dl does not change • Shifting G225M for use in G185M region works well, G285M to G225M does not • Solution 2: do not apply MgF2 coating to Al surface; anomaly stays at design location • This is employed for G225M and G285M gratings • Consequence: Al oxidizes within days of deposition; forms thin coating; literature indicates oxide layer reaches maximum depth of ~5 nm. Keyes – 18 October 2007 Slide 3 of 19

  4. Variances in measured COS sensitivities in vacuum 2006/2003 Bare Al Bare Al Keyes – 18 January 2007 Slide 4 of 19

  5. Grating Efficiency Issues: • 2003 T/V data compared to 2006 T/V data - this data shows significant variations in efficiency between 2003 and 2006, including indications that some channels at some wavelengths improved in efficiency by as much as 40% and others diminished by ~25% - the majority, but not all, of these discrepancies can be explained by the polarization sensitivity of COS, and the difference in polarization generated by the 2003 Calibration delivery system and the 2006 calibration delivery system - this polarization sensitivity has been demonstrated on the flight spares, and in the flight optics

  6. COS polarization data

  7. Polarization and COS

  8. Grating Efficiency Monitoring • Grating efficiency monitoring tests of the NUV gratings (no monitoring is done of the FUV gratings) • a sequence of exposures are performed on the NUV gratings at various wavelength settings using the internal lamps, and the count rates are recorded – ratios of count rates in different channels at the same wavelength (when possible) are also calculated – this process should remove the possible effects of lamp variability • These tests indicate that the lamp is slowly losing brightness (not unexpected and at an acceptable rate) – and that G225M and G285M are experiencing steady and continuing degradation

  9. NUV MAMA PtNe Wavecal External Science C B A C B A COS Spectral Layout Internal Wavecals and Science Spectra • Obtain (continuous or flashed) internal PtNe spectra at same time as science exposure • Track internal PtNe lines and apply shifts to science spectrum (all events time-tagged) in COS data pipeline Keyes – 18 October 2007 Slide 9 of 14

  10. G185M / G225M G225M / G285M Left: G185M / G230L Both MgF2 Right: G225M / G230L G285M / G230L Keyes – 18 October 2007 Slide 10 of 19

  11. COS NUV Performance Changes Compare G285M and G225M to G230L, TA1, and to witness coupons (dashed)

  12. NUV Performance Summary • The degradation of the G225M and G285M gratings are real – at the rate of 1.4%/year and 4.4%/year respectively. To date no process has been identified that can explain the observed behavior • Over the past 3 years measurements of the flight spare gratings have shown very similar degradation rates (1% and 4.5%) • Measurements of the witness sample mirror coupons have shown no degradation over the past 5 years

  13. Little loss of efficiency in FUV channels Anomalous efficiency loss in G225M and G285M (high density, bare aluminum) – External and internal calibration data give similar results GSFC analysis shows gratings and coupons are very clean Summary of observations

  14. Possible explanations for loss of efficiency considered to date • Is efficiency loss due to simple hydrocarbon contamination? • This is not consistent with FUV, coupon or TA1 data – we would expect more loss in the FUV channels and in short wavelength coupon data than we see • wash/analysis of witness samples inside instrument revealed no significant contamination • Is loss due to migration of Au substrate into Al? • No gold was observed in GSFC analysis, not consistent with Al/MgF2 optic stability, and we would expect to see a similar reflectivity loss in the bare aluminum witness coupon data

  15. Possible explanations for loss of efficiency considered to date (cont) • Is the ‘loss’ due to change in test setups – change in polarization of calibration signal? • Polarization testing of COS indicates that this cannot explain all of the loss in apparent efficiency • NUV efficiency monitoring indicates continuing, steady degradation • Could in-air NUV testing be polymerizing hydrocarbons onto mirrors and gratings, with stronger effect on high line density optics than on low density or purely reflective optics? • GSFC testing rules this out

  16. Possible explanations for loss of efficiency considered to date (cont) • Could pin-holes be forming in Al coating or could mixing of Au through Cr layer into Al be degrading reflectivity? • pin-holing and layer mixing cannot be ruled out on flight gratings without examination of flight units ; however no indications of either in detailed special tests of spare gratings at GSFC • JY modeling of gratings with a thick (9nm) Al2O3 layer is consistent with our observed performance. • This thickness is twice what is suggested likely by literature • Continuing effort at GSFC to determine actual thickness of oxide layer – possible update at Oct COS MSR next week

  17. Current Status Summary – Oct 2007 • Degradation is real for G225M and G285M; no effect seen for MgF2 coated NUV or FUV optics • COS gratings show definite polarization sensitivity which will be evaluated on orbit; most polarized astronomical sources <5% polarized • Current degradation rate projects to COS ≥ 4x STIS efficiencies per exposure at launch (for likely COS target flux-levels) • Contamination has been ruled out • Observational uncertainty and systematics have been ruled out

  18. Current Status Summary – Oct 2007(cont) • JY modeling with a thick (9nm) Al2O3 layer is consistent with the observed G225M/G285M performance; literature suggests that this is thicker than we should expect to see by ~2x; effort continues at GSFC to determine oxide layer thickness • Will it continue on orbit? – unknown at present • Spare gratings have been fabricated and coated; are in testing at GSFC at present • No grating swap is likely at this point Keyes – 18 October 2007 Slide 18 of 19

  19. Background Information Keyes – 18 October 2007 Slide 19 of 19

  20. G285M flight and spare grating performancechanges

  21. The Degradation Projection Scenario • Linear extrapolation of observed degradation to 9/11/2008 launch date at ~ 0.5% per month yields additional ~11% loss of sensitivity before COS gets to orbit; compared to TV I values: • G285M will have lost ~25% throughput waiting to fly • G225M will have lost ~20% throughput waiting to fly • In comparisons to follow, we have assumed 25% degradation (i.e., launch throughput = 0.75 x TV I throughput) Keyes – 18 October 2007 Slide 21 of 19

  22. Observing Efficiency Comparison: COS vs STIS – darks included Keyes – 18 January 2007 Slide 22 of 19

  23. Impacts: Ratios of exposure to achieve same S/N with degraded sensitivity Keyes – 18 October 2007 Slide 23 of 19

  24. Impacts – Single COS grating setting used • Single COS grating setting used: • Bright limit (ignore background): simply increase science exposures to compensate for sensitivity loss: 1.25-1.3x to achieve same S/N • In bright limit: STIS/COS(no-loss) exposure ratio ~3x; so COS Sλ must degrade to 0.33 TV I level for COS=STIS efficiency • Faint “limit”: • For a 40-orbit COS observation to achieve S/N=10 at 2500 Ǻ.: • No-loss case with ground dark: Fλ=2.0 e-16 • No-loss case with worst-case dark: Fλ=4.0 e-16 • With 25% degradation and ground dark: Fλ=2.5 e-16; however, this flux requires 26 orbits in no-loss case (1.5x longer with degradation) • With 25% degradation and worst-case dark: Fλ=5.5 e-16 ; however, this flux requires 24 orbits in no-loss case (1.7x longer with degradation) • the limiting flux for a STIS 40-orbit observation is 1.2e-15 Keyes – 18 October 2007 Slide 24 of 19

  25. Impacts: Summary and Questions • For observing the fainter targets with degraded Sλ, two considerations important: • Brighter limiting flux for observation at a particular S/N • Increase of exposure time to reach a target at a specific S/N • For most STIS targets the modest difference in COS limiting flux due to the degradation does not appear to be an important consideration • Targets with the faintest fluxes attempted by STIS (~1.e-15) in 40 orbits are important, but with 25% degradation and worst-case background would require ~12-13 orbits for a single grating setting with COS (or ~7-8 orbits if no degradation). • Question: is 8 versus 12 orbits significant for science at this flux level? • Depends on number of targets and/or COS grating settings required • In most cases where multiple COS grating settings are needed; COS probably would not be chosen as the SI of choice • The difference in limiting flux between 25% degradation and no degradation (for S/N=10 at 2500 Å and worst-case background) is 6. e-16 versus 4. e-16 (or for best-case dark, 2. e-16) Keyes – 18 October 2007 Slide 25 of 19

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