CASTOR (spacecraft)

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CASTOR
Mission typeAstronomy
OperatorCanadian Space Agency
Mission duration5 years minimum[1]
Spacecraft properties
Launch mass1063 kg[2]
Payload mass618 kg
Start of mission
Launch datelate 2020s
Orbital parameters
Reference system
Geocentric
RegimeSun-synchronous orbit
Altitude800 km
Main telescope
TypeThree-mirror anastigmat
Diameter1.0 m
WavelengthsFrom 150 nm (ultraviolet) to 550 nm (visible light)[2]
Instruments
wide-field imaging, slitless spectroscopy, DMD spectroscopy, precision photometry
 

The Cosmological Advanced Survey Telescope for Optical and UV Research (CASTOR) is a proposed space telescope mission led by the

arcseconds), but over an instantaneous field of view about 100 times larger.[3] CASTOR was selected as Canada's highest priority for space astronomy in the 2020s in the 2020 Long Range Plan for Canadian Astronomy.[4]

Description

CASTOR will complement the upcoming Nancy Grace Roman Space Telescope, Euclid space telescope, and Vera C. Rubin Observatory. These three major wide-field imaging facilities will not have access to the UV portion of the electromagnetic spectrum. CASTOR has been specifically designed to provide this missing capability, with high sensitivity and observing efficiency at UV and blue-optical wavelengths.[3]

Using dichroics, CASTOR would enable simultaneous imaging of three bandpasses (UV from 150 to 300 nm, u from 300 to 400 nm, and g from 400 to 550 nm) over an instantaneous field of view of 0.25 square degrees. In addition to its imaging capabilities, CASTOR will also be equipped with additional instruments enabling high-precision photometry for the monitoring of bright targets, as well as two spectroscopic modes: low-spectral-resolution slitless spectroscopy over the entire imaging field and configurable DMD spectroscopy to provide intermediate resolution spectra in the UV in a parallel field.[2]

Objectives

Specific science drivers of CASTOR include:[5]

  • Studying dark energy and dark matter by enabling precise photometric redshift measurements[6]
  • Echo mapping of
    active galactic nuclei
  • Characterization of star formation histories on sub-galactic scales
  • Characterization of the chemical enrichment history of nearby galaxies and star clusters
  • Identification and characterization of new galactic satellites and stellar streams
  • UV characterization of multi-messenger events
  • Reconstruction of the stellar formation history of the
    white dwarfs and identification of white dwarfs polluted by rocky debris from their own planetary systems[7]
  • Characterization of the chromospheric activity of M dwarfs
  • Characterization of exoplanet atmospheres
  • Identification of distant
    Trans-Neptunian objects

References

External links