Marshall Technical Reports Server

Contamination Effects on EUV Optics

NASA/TP-209264, Tveekrem, J., Contamination Effects on EUV Optics, George C. Marshall Space Flight Center Marshall Space Flight Center, AL 35812, National Aeronautics and Space Administration Washington, DC 20546-0001, The SEE Program had a task agreement with GSFC as part of the 1994 NRA. As a result of the task agree, June 1999, pp. 34, Format(s): PDF 1620k

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During ground-based assembly and upon exposure to the space environment, optical surfaces accumulate both particles and molecular condensibles, inevitably resulting in degradation of optical instrument performance. Currently, this performance degradation (and the resulting end-of-life instrument performance) cannot be predicted with sufficient accuracy using existing software tools. Optical design codes exist to calculate instrument performance, but these codes generally assume uncontaminated optical surfaces. Contamination models exist which predict approximate end-of-life contamination levels, but the optical effects of contamination levels can not be quantified without detailed information about the optical constants and scattering properties of the contaminant. The problem is particularly pronounced in the extreme ultraviolet (EUV, 300-1,200 A) and far (FUV, 1,200-2,000 A) regimes due to lack of data and lack of knowledge of the detailed physical and chemical processes involved. Yet it is in precisely these wavelength regimes that accurate predictions are most important, because EUV/FUV instruments are extremely sensitive to contamination.
Keywords:contamination on optics, euv effects on optics, contamination, optics
Subjects:Physics: Optics: Optics
ID Code:488
Deposited On:24 July 2002