Paper
13 May 2010 High performance gratings for space applications
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Abstract
Different earth-observation and scientific space missions have the need for special spectrometer gratings. As satellite instruments typically operate close to the technologically accessible limits also the realization of the respective gratings is extremely demanding. Critical parameters are the diffraction efficiency and its polarization dependency, the wavefront error introduced by the grating, stray-light performance, and usability in a space environment. We show that it is necessary to include technological considerations into the design and specification of the grating in order to achieve the optimal performance of the complete optical system. We demonstrate this approach by two examples. The first one is the design and fabrication of the grating for the Radial-Velocity-Spectrometer of the GAIA-mission of the ESA using a novel approach based on an effective medium sub-structure within one grating period. The second example is a high dispersion NIR-spectrometer grating for an earth observation mission. Such gratings are typically realized as immersed structures in order to maximize the dispersion. We show that the same optical performance can be achieved with gratings operating in the resonance domain which can be realized by electron-beam lithography as well.
© (2010) COPYRIGHT Society of Photo-Optical Instrumentation Engineers (SPIE). Downloading of the abstract is permitted for personal use only.
U. D. Zeitner, D. Michaelis, E.-B. Kley, and M. Erdmann "High performance gratings for space applications", Proc. SPIE 7716, Micro-Optics 2010, 77161K (13 May 2010); https://doi.org/10.1117/12.854951
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Cited by 3 scholarly publications.
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KEYWORDS
Diffraction gratings

Diffraction

Polarization

Spectroscopy

Binary data

Lithography

Optical design

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