A preliminary optical design for the JANUS camera of ESA's space mission JUICE

DOI: 
10.1117/12.2056375
Publication date: 
01/08/2014
Main author: 
Greggio D.
IAA authors: 
Lara, L.
Authors: 
Greggio D., Magrin D., Ragazzoni R., Munari M., Cremonese G., Bergomi M., Dima M., Farinato J., Marafatto L., Viotto V., Debei S., Della Corte V., Palumbo P., Hoffmann H., Jaumann R., Michaelis H., Schmitz N., Schipani P., Lara L.
Journal: 
Proceedings of SPIE - The International Society for Optical Engineering
Publication type: 
Article
Volume: 
9143
Pages: 
Number: 
914343
Abstract: 
The JANUS (Jovis, Amorum ac Natorum Undique Scrutator) will be the on board camera of the ESA JUICE satellite dedicated to the study of Jupiter and its moons, in particular Ganymede and Europa. This optical channel will provide surface maps with plate scale of 15 microrad/pixel with both narrow and broad band filters in the spectral range between 0.35 and 1.05 micrometers over a Field of View 1.72 × 1.29 degrees2. The current optical design is based on TMA design, with on-axis pupil and off-axis field of view. The optical stop is located at the secondary mirror providing an effective collecting area of 7854 mm2 (100 mm entrance pupil diameter) and allowing a simple internal baffling for first order straylight rejection. The nominal optical performances are almost limited by the diffraction and assure a nominal MTF better than 63% all over the whole Field of View. We describe here the optical design of the camera adopted as baseline together with the trade-off that has led us to this solution. © 2014 SPIE.
Database: 
SCOPUS
ADS
URL: 
https://ui.adsabs.harvard.edu/#abs/2014SPIE.9143E..43G/abstract
ADS Bibcode: 
2014SPIE.9143E..43G
Keywords: 
Camera; JANUS; JUICE; Optical design; Space mission; TMA