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16 - 21 June 2024
Yokohama, Japan
Conference 13094 > Paper 13094-137
Paper 13094-137

From SuperBIT to GigaBIT: informing next-generation balloon-borne telescope design with fine guidance system flight data

On demand | Presented live 18 June 2024

Abstract

The Super-pressure Balloon-borne Imaging Telescope (SuperBIT) is a near-diffraction-limited 0.5m telescope that launched via NASA’s super-pressure balloon technology on April 16, 2023. SuperBIT achieved precise pointing control through the use of three nested frames in conjunction with an optical Fine Guidance System (FGS), resulting in an average image stability of 0.055” over 300-second exposures. The SuperBIT FGS includes a tip-tilt fast-steering mirror that corrects for jitter on a pair of focal plane star cameras. In this paper, we leverage the empirical data from SuperBIT’s successful 39-day stratospheric mission to inform the FGS design for the next-generation balloon-borne telescope. The Gigapixel Balloon-borne Imaging Telescope (GigaBIT) is designed to be a 1.35m wide-field, high resolution imaging telescope, with specifications to extend the scale and capabilities beyond those of its predecessor SuperBIT. A description and analysis of the SuperBIT FGS will be presented along with methodologies for extrapolating this data to enhance GigaBIT’s FGS design and fine pointing control algorithm. We employ a systems engineering approach to outline and formalize the design constraints and specifications for GigaBIT’s FGS. GigaBIT, building on the SuperBIT legacy, is set to enhance high-resolution astronomical imaging, marking a significant advancement in the field of balloon-borne telescopes.

Presenter

Philippe Voyer
Univ. of Toronto Institute for Aerospace Studies (Canada)
Philippe Voyer is a Master’s student at the University of Toronto studying Aerospace Engineering and Robotics. He works jointly in the Institute for Aerospace Studies and the Dunlap Institute for Astronomy and Astrophysics on the development of balloon-borne telescopes. Philippe received his B.Eng. in Mechanical Engineering from McGill University in 2022.
Presenter/Author
Philippe Voyer
Univ. of Toronto Institute for Aerospace Studies (Canada)
Author
Steven J. Benton
Princeton Univ. (United States)
Author
Christopher J. Damaren
Univ. of Toronto Institute for Aerospace Studies (Canada)
Author
Jet Propulsion Lab., Caltech (United States)
Author
Aurelien A. Fraisse
Princeton Univ. (United States)
Author
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (United States)
Author
John W. Hartley
StarSpec Technologies Inc. (Canada)
Author
Ecole Polytechnique Fédérale de Lausanne (France)
Author
Univ. of Toronto Institute for Aerospace Studies (Canada)
Author
Univ. of Toronto Institute for Aerospace Studies (Canada)
Author
Eric M. Huff
Jet Propulsion Lab., Univ. of California, Berkeley (United States)
Author
Institute for Computational Cosmology, Durham Univ. (United Kingdom)
Author
Princeton Univ. (United States)
Author
Institute for Computational Cosmology, Durham Univ. (United Kingdom)
Author
Univ. of Toronto (Canada), Dunlap Institute for Astronomy and Astrophysics (Canada)
Author
StarSpec Technologies Inc. (Canada)
Author
Thuy Vy T. Luu
Princeton Univ. (United States)
Author
Richard Massey
Durham Univ. (United Kingdom), Institute for Computational Cosmology (United Kingdom)
Author
Jacqueline E. McCleary
Northeastern Univ. (United States)
Author
Johanna M. Nagy
Case Western Reserve Univ. (United States)
Author
C. Barth Netterfield
Univ. of Toronto (Canada), Dunlap Institute for Astronomy and Astrophysics (Canada)
Author
Univ. of Toronto (Canada)
Author
Caltech (United States), Jet Propulsion Lab. (United States)
Author
Jason D. Rhodes
Jet Propulsion Lab., Caltech (United States)
Author
Jet Propulsion Lab., Caltech (United States)
Author
L. Javier Romualdez
StarSpec Technologies Inc. (Canada)
Author
Institute for Computational Cosmology, Durham Univ. (United Kingdom)
Author
Palantir Technologies (United States), Univ. of Toronto (Canada)
Author
Ellen L. Sirks
The Univ. of Sydney (Australia)
Author
Northeastern Univ. (United States)
Author
Jet Propulsion Lab., Caltech (United States)