Metis is the visible light and UV light imaging coronagraph on board the ESA-NASA mission Solar Orbiter that has been launched February 10th, 2020, from Cape Canaveral. Scope of the mission is to study the Sun up close, taking high-resolution images of the Sun’s poles for the first time, and understanding the Sun-Earth connection. Metis coronagraph will image the solar corona in the linearly polarized broadband visible radiation and in the UV HI Ly-α line from 1.6 to 3 solar radii when at Solar Orbiter perihelion, providing a diagnostics, with unprecedented temporal coverage and spatial resolution, of the structures and dynamics of the full corona. Solar Orbiter commissioning phase big challenge was Covid-19 social distancing phase that affected the way commissioning of a spacecraft and its payload is typically done. Metis coronagraph on-board Solar Orbiter had its additional challenges: to wake up and check the performance of the optical, electrical and thermal subsystems, most of them unchecked since Metis delivery to spacecraft prime, Airbus, in May 2017. The roadmap to the fully commissioned coronagraph is here described throughout the steps from the software functional test, the switch on of the detectors of the two channels, UV and visible, to the optimization of the occulting system and the characterization of the instrumental stray light, one of the most challenging features in a coronagraph.
Ariel (Atmospheric Remote-Sensing Infrared Exoplanet Large Survey) has been adopted as the M4 mission for ESA “Cosmic Vision” program. Launch is scheduled for 2029. ARIEL will study exoplanet atmospheres through transit spectroscopy with a 1 m class telescope optimized in the waveband between 1.95 and 7.8 μm and operating in cryogenic conditions in the temperature range 40-50 K. Aluminum alloy 6061, in the T651 temper, was chosen as baseline material for telescope mirror substrates and supporting structures, following a trade-off study. To improve mirrors reflectivity within the operating waveband and to protect the aluminum surface from oxidation, a protected silver coating with space heritage was selected and underwent a qualification campaign during Phase B1 of the mission, with the goal of demonstrating a sufficient level of technology maturity. The qualification campaign consisted of two phases: a first set of durability and environmental tests conducted on a first batch of coated aluminum samples, followed by a set of verification tests performed on a second batch of samples coated alongside a full-size demonstrator of Ariel telescope primary mirror. This study presents the results of the verification tests, consisting of environmental (humidity and temperature cycling) tests and chemical/mechanical (abrasion, adhesion, cleaning) tests performed on the samples, and abrasion tests performed on the demonstrator, by means of visual inspections and reflectivity measurements.
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