Nearby Exo-Earth AstrometricTelescope (NEAT)
NEAT is a long focus 1m telescope that does relative astrometry over ~0.6 deg field of view with an accuracy of ~0.8 uas (microarcsec) in 1 hr and a mission accuracy of 0.04 uas. This level of performance is needed to search and detect an Earth twin around the nearest ~100 stars. This talk describes the concept and the techniques used to advance the state of the art in a few areas by 2-3orders of magnitude. Conventional star trackers can centroid a star's image to 1/100 of a pixel. Astrometry with the Hubble telescope CCD cameras has been demonstrated to 1/300 pixel. NEAT will centroid a star's position to 1e-5 pixels. To do this we need to calibrate the detector and the optical PSF to much higher accuracy than previously done. Also 1 uas over a ~2000 arcsec field means the geometry of the focal plane needs to be accurate/stable to 5e-10. The geometry of the focal plane (the location of all the pixels) will be measured to ~0.1nm, with a SIM derived metrology system.
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Speaker:Yan Gong (Max-Planck-Institute for Radio Astronomy)
Time:9:30am, August 01th, Tuesday
Location:Middle conference room, 3rd floor
Speaker:Junhao Liu (East Asian Observatory)
Time:9:30 am July 27th (Thursday)
Location:Middle conference room, 3rd floor
Speaker:Dr. Pinghui Huang (黄平辉)
Time:Wednesday, July 26th 3:00pm
Location:Middle conference room, 3rd floor
Speaker:闫大海(云南大学)
Time:7月14日,星期五,上午10点
Location:1715
Speaker:Shuang Zhou (University of Nottingham)
Time:3:00 pm July 13th (Thursday)
Location:Lecture Hall, 3rd floor
Speaker:Prof. Wen-Ping Chen (National Central University)
Time:1:30 pm July 6th (Thursday)
Location:Lecture Hall, 3rd floor