VUV bandpass reflective coatings for the SMILE-UVI instrument

Conference Paper (2024)
Author(s)

Jérémy Brisbois (Université de Liège)

Frédéric Rabecki (Université de Liège)

Julien Rosin (Université de Liège)

Cédric Hardy (Université de Liège)

Alexandra Mazzoli (Université de Liège)

Pascal Blain (Université de Liège)

J.J.D. Loicq (Université de Liège, TU Delft - Aerospace Engineering)

Jean-François Vandenrijt (Université de Liège)

Cédric Lenaerts (Université de Liège)

Karl Fleury-Frenette (Université de Liège)

Research Group
Spaceborne Instrumentation
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1117/12.3018266 Final published version
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Publication Year
2024
Language
English
Research Group
Spaceborne Instrumentation
Article number
130933T
ISBN (electronic)
9781510675094
Event
SPIE Astronomical Telescopes + Instrumentation (2024-06-16 - 2024-06-21), Yokohama, Japan
Downloads counter
252
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Abstract

The Ultraviolet Imager (UVI) is a challenging instrument developed in the frame of the SMILE mission, a collaboration between ESA and CAS. The UVI instrument is a CMOS-based ultraviolet camera developed to image Earth's northern auroral regions. It is centered on the 160-180 nm UV waveband, with a 10° × 10° field of view. At the core of the instrument, four thin film-coated mirrors guide light into its detector and ensure most of the signal filtering, crucial to achieve an out-of-band rejection ratio as low as possible to reject light from solar diffusion, dayglow and unwanted atomic lines. We developed an interferometric coating based on an MgF2/LaF3 multilayer stack deposited by ion-assisted electron-beam deposition. We gradually improved our evaporation setup to reach a high degree of homogeneity, precision and repeatability on the material thicknesses, over the entire mirrors surface. The reflectivity maximum is above 85% and the wavelength at which it occurs is adjustable within 1 nm, while the out-of-band reflectivity between 120 and 155 nm and between 200 nm and 1100 nm is kept below 6% on average never exceeding 8 %. The coating has been space qualified and shows stable performances in conditions representative of the instrument operation environment (thermal cycling under vacuum, radiations, UV exposure…).

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