Kenneth Klaasen, Michael Belton, H. Breneman, Alfred McEwen, Merton Davies, Robert Sullivan, Clark Chapman, Gerhard Neukum, Catherine Heffernan, Ann Harch, James Kaufman, William Merline, Lisa Gaddis, William Cunningham, Paul Helfenstein, Timothy Colvin
Optical Engineering, Vol. 36, Issue 11, (November 1997) https://doi.org/10.1117/1.601525
TOPICS: Calibration, Charge-coupled devices, Jupiter, Image compression, Stars, Optical filters, Space operations, Cameras, Camera shutters, Image filtering
The solid-state imaging subsystem (SSI) on NASA’s Galileo Jupiter orbiter spacecraft has already demonstrated its superior performance as a scientific imager by returning stunning pictures of several planetary bodies as well as detailed inflight calibration data during its cruise to Jupiter. The SSI inflight performance remains excellent; the instrument calibration is stable and accurate. Improved determinations of the SSI’s absolute spectral radiometric response and scattered-light properties have been made. Evaluation of the camera’s point spread function suggests that the focus setting may be slightly nonoptimum, but the spatial resolution in returned images is still very good. The shielding of the SSI’s CCD detector against energetic particle radiation appears to be adequate for operation in Jupiter’s intense radiation field. New camera modes, onboard editing and data compression capabilities, and an adaptive mission operations plan have been implemented for the Jupiter orbital mission phase in order to mitigate the effects of a spacecraft anomaly that limits the allowable data return rate from Jupiter. These new capabilities are expected to allow the accomplishment of a historic scientific investigation of the Jupiter system using the SSI.