Colorado Ultraviolet Transit Experiment
Colorado Ultraviolet Transit Experiment (CUTE) is a small UV space telescope to study selected exoplanets.[1]
It was launched as a rideshare on the Atlas V that launched Landsat 9 on September 27, 2021.[1] Designed to operate for at least 8 months and study 10 exoplanets, CUTE remains operational as of December 2023, 27 months after launch. The spacecraft is expected to remain in orbit until 2027.[2]
CUTE can measure near-UV (255-330 nm) and do low resolution spectroscopy of atmospheric tracers (eg. Fe II, Mg II, Mg I, OH).[3]
The UV sensor is a 2048 x 515 pixel CCD array, with the spectrum lengthwise across the sensor.[4] The 515 pixel width provides tolerance from sensor damage.
See also
- Ultraviolet astronomy
References
- ^ a b Johnston, Scott Alan (25 September 2021). "A Tiny, Inexpensive Satellite Will be Studying the Atmospheres of hot Jupiters". Universe Today. Retrieved 13 December 2021.
- ^ Werner, Debra (12 December 2023). "Cubesat offers template for future astronomy missions". SpaceNews. Retrieved 13 December 2023.
- ^ "Colorado Ultraviolet Transit Experiment (CUTE)". LASP. University of Colorado Boulder. Retrieved 13 December 2023.
- ^ Fleming, Brian T.; et al. (2017). The Colorado Ultraviolet Transit Experiment (CUTE): a dedicated cubesat mission for the study of exoplanetary mass loss and magnetic fields. UV, X-Ray, and Gamma-Ray Space Instrumentation for Astronomy XX. Vol. 10397. Proceedings of SPIE. arXiv:1801.02673v1. doi:10.1117/12.2276138. ISBN 978-1-5106-1251-8.
External links
- CUTE homepage
- Instrument Design Overview
- v
- t
- e
- Türksat 5A
- PICS 1, PICS 2, Q-PACE, TechEdSat-7
- Tiantong-1 03
- Starlink V1.0-L16 (60 satellites)
- Starlink v1.0 R1 (10 satellites), ION-SCV 002 (Flock-4s × 8, SpaceBEE × 12), Capella 3, Capella 4, ICEYE × 3, Hawk × 3, Astrocast × 5, Flock-4s × 40, HYPSO-1, Kepler × 8, Lemur-2 × 8, PTD-1, SpaceBEE × 24
- Yaogan 31-02 (3 satellites)
- Kosmos 2549 / Lotos-S1 №4
- Starlink V1.0-L18 (60 satellites)
- TJS 6
- Progress MS-16
- Starlink V1.0-L19 (60 satellites)
- Cygnus NG-15 (MMSAT-1, GuaraniSat-1, Maya-2, OPUSAT-II, RSP-01, STARS-EC, WARP-01)
- Yaogan 31-03 (3 satellites)
- Amazônia-1, SpaceBEE × 12
- Starlink V1.0-L17 (60 satellites)
- Starlink V1.0-L20 (60 satellites)
- Shiyan 9
- Yaogan 31-04 (3 satellites)
- Starlink V1.0-L21 (60 satellites)
- CAS500-1, Suisen / Fukui Prefectural Satellite, Kepler 6, Kepler 7
- Photon Pathstone, BlackSky Global 9
- Starlink V1.0-L22 (60 satellites)
- OneWeb L5 (36 satellites)
- Gaofen 12-02
- Starlink V1.0-L23 (60 satellites)
- Shiyan 6-03
- Soyuz MS-18
- SpaceX Crew-2
- OneWeb L6 (36 satellites)
- USA-314 / KH-11 18
- Pléiades-Neo 3, Lemur-2 AMANDA-SVANTE, Lemur-2 SPECIAL K
- Tianhe
- Starlink V1.0-L24 (60 satellites)
- Yaogan 34
- Starlink V1.0-L25 (60 satellites)
- Yaogan 30-08 (3 satellites)
- Starlink V1.0-L27 (60 satellites)
- Starlink V1.0-L26 (52 satellites), Capella 6
- USA-315 / SBIRS-GEO 5
- HaiYang-2D
- Starlink V1.0-L28 (60 satellites)
- Tianzhou 2
- OneWeb L7 (36 satellites)
- Fengyun 4B
- SpaceX CRS-22
- SXM-8
- USA-316, USA-317, USA-318
- Shenzhou 12
- USA-319 / GPS IIIA-05
- Yaogan 30-09 (3 satellites)
- Kosmos 2550 / Pion-NKS №1
- Progress MS-17
- Brik-II, STORK-4, STORK-5
- Starlink V1.0-R2 (3 satellites), ION-SCV 003 (SPARTAN), SHERPA FX2 (Lynk 05, Astrocast × 5, Lemur-2 × 3, SpaceBEE × 12), SHERPA LTE1 (KSF1 × 4), Capella 5, ICEYE × 4, Hawk × 3, ÑuSat × 4, Lemur-2 × 3, LINCS A, LINCS B, SpaceBEE × 12, SpaceBEE NZ × 4, Tiger-2, TROPICS Pathfinder
- OneWeb L8 (36 satellites)
- Jilin-1 Kuanfu-01B, Jilin-1 Gaofen-03D x 3
- Fengyun-3E
- Tianlian I-05
- Yaogan 30-10 (3 satellites)
- Nauka (European Robotic Arm)
- Eutelsat Quantum, Star One D2
- Jilin-1 Mofang-01A†
- ChinaSat 2E
- Cygnus NG-16
- EOS-03 / GISAT-1†
- Pléiades Neo 4
- OneWeb L9 (34 satellites)
- TJS-7
- SpaceX CRS-23 (Maya-3, Maya-4)
- Gaofen 5-02
- ChinaSat 9B
- Kosmos 2551 / EO MKA №1
- Starlink G2-1 (51 satellites)
- OneWeb L10 (34 satellites)
- Inspiration4
- Tianzhou 3
- Jilin-1 Gaofen-02D
- Shiyan 10
- Landsat 9, CUTE
- Soyuz MS-19
- OneWeb L11 (36 satellites)
- CHASE
- Shenzhou 13
- Lucy
- Shijian 21
- SES-17, Syracuse 4A
- QZS-1R
- Jilin-1 Gaofen-02F
- Progress MS-18
- RAISE-2, HIBARI, Z-Sat, DRUMS, TeikyoSat-4, ASTERISC, ARICA, NanoDragon, KOSEN-1
- SpaceX Crew-3
- CERES x 3
- DART (LICIACube)
- Progress M-UM (Prichal)
- Yaogan 32-2 (2 satellites)
- Yaogan 35 (3 satellites)
- Starlink 24 (48 satellites)
- Soyuz MS-20
- IXPE
- Ekspress-AMU3
- Ekspress-AMU7
- Starlink 25 (52 satellites)
- Türksat 5B
- SpaceX CRS-24
- Inmarsat-6 F1
- James Webb Space Telescope
Crewed flights are underlined. Launch failures are marked with the † sign. Payloads deployed from other spacecraft are (enclosed in parentheses).
This astrobiology-related article is a stub. You can help Wikipedia by expanding it. |
- v
- t
- e